• In Print
  • Online
  • Artists
  • Photo of the Day
  • Exhibitions
  • About
Menu

Don't Take Pictures

Street Address
Brooklyn, NY 11201
info@donttakepictures.com

Your Custom Text Here

Don't Take Pictures

  • In Print
  • Online
  • Artists
  • Photo of the Day
  • Exhibitions
  • About
DTP-6 cover.jpg

Online

Authenticity and a #metoo Moment at the 2019 Outsider Art Fair

January 23, 2019 Roger Thompson

Photo by Nikolay Bakharev

Every year, I go to the Outsider Art Fair, and every year, I am reminded why it is my favorite annual show. Displays of self-taught art browsed by collectors of the strange and unique—more than a few of whom are themselves bedecked in sumptuous, feathered, and outrageous artistic fashion—the OAF is as great an art scene in New York as I go to each year. It’s a place where the low and the high collide and create the sublime, and this year was no different. Indeed, over the past couple of years, the scene (dare I say spectacle?) has heated back up, and while it may be hard to recreate the halcyon days of yore about which many of the more seasoned gallerists reminisce, it’s hard to imagine a livelier show than was on display this year. Packed with people in the aisles and emblazoned with red dots on walls, the OAF popularity has surged, built by a savvy front office with singular focus as well as the growing worldwide reputation of artists like Bill Traylor, Martin Ramírez, and Madge Gill, whose works now hang in most prestigious museums around the world.

But, the OAF’s resurgence is also the result of a newer development: the expanding popularity of artists that bridge the old divide between outsider and fine art. Artists like Leopold Strobl, JJ Cromer, David Zeldis, Frank Walter (whose work on polaroid cartridges we have previously reviewed), and William Hall have found audiences in exhibitions, museums, monographs, and magazines beyond the outsider art world. The bridging effect reflects the artists’ astonishing self-trained talent, but it also, importantly, reflects the professionalism of astute gallerists who have recognized that native and self-nurtured talent appeals to people seeking authenticity in their lives and in their homes. Outsider artists are considered, if nothing else, authentic, and in today’s age, few things seem to be so highly valued. Authenticity, in the most profound sense of that word, has found its home at the OAF.

Photos by Mark Hogancamp

Interestingly, this year’s fair also seemed to have an embarrassment of riches for photography buffs. Photography has always had a presence, and I have continued to write about its significance in the show even as other artistic media has stolen the spotlight. Still, it’s clear this medium is getting more attention as the fair experiences a well-deserved surge of popularity. For example, Julie Saul Gallery exhibited the portraits of Nikolay Bakharev, whose intimacy and subjects are akin to Larry Clark’s Tulsa series, and Winter Works on Paper had a wall of Weegee’s documentarian photos within steps of the front entrance to the show. Once again this year, One Mile Gallery exhibited Mark Hogancamp’s war scenes. Hogancamp creates dioramas of compelling war imagery and then photographs them in cinematic ways. The results are surprisingly moving. While the project might in the hands of lesser talent border on kitsch or devolve into a juvenile, back-room project, it instead treads a line between reality and fantasy that is easy to be absorbed by. That the images remain startlingly realistic despite the large format of the print testifies to the soft hand and keen eye of the artist.

A similar keen eye could be found in the Mason Fine Art booth, which hung a grouping of the social-realist images of Oraien E. Catledge. Once the subject of books, Catledge’s work has essentially faded from public eye, but the gallerists have done us a favor by bringing this artist to the attention of self-taught art aficionados. It’s hard to see these images without thinking about people like Shelby Lee Adams, yet some of the images of children in particular have a softer touch—I would even say a deeper intimacy—than Adams’ more famous work. We are on the same level as the kids in many of the images, and without the crisp lines of a more studied artist, we get a blurry edge that conveys gentleness. These are portraits of families facing hardship, but the social condition seems secondary to the humanity of the laborers and their families. Such claims, of course, are hard to make when class distinctions obliterate the humanity of so many people, and yet here, in Catledge’s Cabbagetown’s series, the children, at least, force us to face their humanity because of their disenfranchisement and poverty. That, in turns, forces a question for us as viewers: what do we do with this humanity? How do we respond to others in need?

Photos by Oraien E. Catledge

Of course, photography in its most powerful forms often invites these questions, and it’s along these lines that I sense a brewing question for galleries and outsider art admirers like myself to consider, one that is especially important in the #metoo era: how do we account for the cultural work of photographers whose own predilections offend and challenge? Perhaps more pointedly: should we see their artwork as a challenge to cultural norms if their work is not self-consciously created as art, but is instead the activities of a person whose motivations may be murky, unknown, or even suspect?

I think here of work by people like Miroslav Tichý. Tichý’s work might be categorized these days as “blue chip.” A standard of outsider art shows and auctions and the subject of many exhibits in fine art galleries as well as much media coverage, Tichý is a complicated figure to consider today. Tichý’s work is often beautiful and haunting. Made from a hand-fashioned cardboard box camera, they are often ghostly, the stuff of an imperfect man with an imperfect tool but a keen eye. Still, they remain also the objects of a voyeur, a man who photographed women without their consent, and indeed in places where he was sometimes forbidden to be, and who did so for his own satisfaction. These are not the images of a journalist snapping photos of historical moments for public consumption, but instead the work of a man collecting beauty for his own pleasure. When we interact with them, then, we are essentially peeking into the life of not only the women he collected with his camera, but into the life of a man unable to connect with them. They are, in that way, the very embodiment of objectification that is being so pointedly challenged today.

Photo by Miroslav Tichý

Of course, the fine art world has a history of negotiating this terrain. It’s hard to view Robert Mapplethorpe’s work without a sense of the objectification (and in some instances subjugation) of an image’s subject. Critics of Sally Mann made cultural hay over the images of her children (then later her husband), and Jock Sturges will likely always face similar critiques. Mona Kuhn has been granted a bit more poetic license of this front because of her home country, which has a considerably different sense of things like the “age of consent,” and yet in American markets, similar critiques are easy to imagine. Still, these artists are often protected by a sense of artistic purpose. The reasoning goes that the artist, in making provocative images, is purposefully challenging norms in order to get audiences to think through their own assumptions and broaden the sense of what constitutes “humanity.” This is not a thin veil of deception or an academic point—artists like these quite explicitly challenge cultural norms. Larry Clark, mentioned above, belongs here as well, and draws closer parallels to artists like Tichý. The difference is that unlike Mapplethorpe or Clark, Tichý, despite his training in painting, has little background upon which to ground what might be called an “art defense” against critique of the work. If Tichý’s work is reduced to simply the work of a vagrant with a predilection toward photographing unaware women, the idea of an art defense is absurd. And yet, the work retains all the hallmarks of beautiful art and was made by a person with an artist’s background, resourceful enough to cobble together his own camera, and talented enough to frame images in striking ways. That he was repeatedly arrested for taking images of women without their consent is only complicated by the fact that he lived in a Soviet state which saw art of most any form a threat to social order and as worthy of re-education. Throw dementia into the mix, and the waters become even cloudier.

Photo by Miroslav Tichý

Still, this is one territory ahead, I think, for outsider photography, and it strikes at the heart of what art means to so many people. Tichý’s work was shown by at least three exhibitors, and others had exhibited photographs of anonymous women in bondage or up-skirt images seemingly made without consent by someone with a mirror on the ground or on a shoe. One might even look at the work of Morton Bartlett, which we have covered before and whose work appeared in two booths this year, and wonder why the images of little girl dolls are to be taken as something other than the obsession of a person with far-from-mainstream tastes. Should we take these, in other words, as art?

Photos by Miroslav Tichý

I don’t mean that as aggressively skeptical, nor do I mean that as a challenge to a particular artist’s aesthetic—we might disagree on the artistic talents of one artist or the other while both agreeing they are still artists. I mean it simply in terms of the way that art represents some sort of muddy zone between aesthetic production, native talent, and artistic purpose. It’s that last part that makes outsider art so compelling but also, in cases like Tichý, so complicated and difficult. If one says that someone like the carver of an anonymous coat rack wasn’t intending to create art but made a stunningly beautiful piece of folk art, there isn’t much at stake. But if one is to say that an unkempt voyeur made stunningly beautiful images of unaware women, we are on considerably different territory than either the folk art coat rack artist or Larry Clark. We’re in challenging territory indeed, and one that will be negotiated in the years ahead, likely at times on the floor of the fair itself, where audiences see and discuss the work. The OAF allows us to encounter such imagery and to confront such questions. By making space for them and for other art that emerges from surprising quarters, the OAF is doing precisely what all artistic organizations should aspire to do—forcing us to look inward, ask hard questions, and then live our lives differently because of the answers we find.

Roger Thompson is Senior Editor for Don't Take Pictures. His features have appeared in The Atlantic.com, Quartz, Raw Vision, The Outsider, and many others. He currently resides on Long Island, NY, where he is a professor at Stony Brook University.

In Review
← Newer Posts Older Posts →

ONLINE ARCHIVE

FEATURES
Once in a Blue Moon
Once in a Blue Moon
A Brief History of Blue Photographs
A Brief History of Blue Photographs
Noelle Mason: Blueprints at the Border
Noelle Mason: Blueprints at the Border
Brenton Hamilton: A Blue Idyll, Cyanotypes and Dreams
Brenton Hamilton: A Blue Idyll, Cyanotypes and Dreams
Yojiro Imasaka Takes Us to the Blue Bayou
Yojiro Imasaka Takes Us to the Blue Bayou
John Dugdale: A Man of Vision
John Dugdale: A Man of Vision
Blue Poems for National Poetry Month
Blue Poems for National Poetry Month
Living in the Light of Oli Kellett’s Crossroad Blues
Living in the Light of Oli Kellett’s Crossroad Blues
Anna Atkins: A Woman Ahead of Her Time
Anna Atkins: A Woman Ahead of Her Time
Issue 16 Is Here! The Blue Issue is Now Available!
Issue 16 Is Here! The Blue Issue is Now Available!
Only Ophelia
Only Ophelia
The Exodusters at the Black Archives Museum
The Exodusters at the Black Archives Museum
Dusk to Dawn Exhibition
Dusk to Dawn Exhibition
Fiction to Photo
Fiction to Photo
Fiction: The White Ball
Fiction: The White Ball
The Demise of Patty Carroll’s Anonymous Women
The Demise of Patty Carroll’s Anonymous Women
Fiction to Photo
Fiction to Photo
Fiction: Two and One
Fiction: Two and One
Thomas Allen: Assembling Life, Crafting Fictions
Thomas Allen: Assembling Life, Crafting Fictions
2020: The Year in Review
2020: The Year in Review
A Mind of Winter
A Mind of Winter
Santaphobia
Santaphobia
Fiction to Photo
Fiction to Photo
Fiction: Cigarettes
Fiction: Cigarettes
Fabienne Rivory: On the Digital-Analog
Fabienne Rivory: On the Digital-Analog
A Show of Hands Exhibition
A Show of Hands Exhibition
Fiction to Photo
Fiction to Photo
Fiction: Trigger Warning
Fiction: Trigger Warning
Imagining the End
Imagining the End
A Yellow Rose Project
A Yellow Rose Project
RULE BREAKERS
Rule Breakers: Judith Nangala Crispin
Rule Breakers: Judith Nangala Crispin
Rule Breakers: Tyler Gourley
Rule Breakers: Tyler Gourley
Rule Breakers: Walter Crump
Rule Breakers: Walter Crump
Rule Breakers: Moira McDonald
Rule Breakers: Moira McDonald
Rule Breakers: Meghann Riepenhoff
Rule Breakers: Meghann Riepenhoff
Rule Breakers: Helena Blomqvist
Rule Breakers: Helena Blomqvist
Rule Breakers: Albarrán Cabrera
Rule Breakers: Albarrán Cabrera
Rule Breakers: L. Kasimu Harris
Rule Breakers: L. Kasimu Harris
Rule Breakers: Angélica Dass
Rule Breakers: Angélica Dass
Rule Breakers: Cru Camara
Rule Breakers: Cru Camara
Rule Breakers: Michael Wolf
Rule Breakers: Michael Wolf
Rule Breakers: Jen Ervin
Rule Breakers: Jen Ervin
Rule Breakers: Nadezda Nikolova-Kratzer
Rule Breakers: Nadezda Nikolova-Kratzer
Rule Breakers: Lissa Rivera
Rule Breakers: Lissa Rivera
Rule Breakers: Justin Solomon
Rule Breakers: Justin Solomon
Rule Breakers: Bjoern Obst
Rule Breakers: Bjoern Obst
Rule Breakers: Maia Flore
Rule Breakers: Maia Flore
Rule Breakers: Florian Van Roekel
Rule Breakers: Florian Van Roekel
Rule Breakers: Kensuke Koike
Rule Breakers: Kensuke Koike
Rule Breakers: Carla Gannis
Rule Breakers: Carla Gannis
Rule Breakers: Brandon Thibodeaux
Rule Breakers: Brandon Thibodeaux
Rule Breakers: Carolina Montejo
Rule Breakers: Carolina Montejo
Rule Breakers: Kelly Kristin Jones
Rule Breakers: Kelly Kristin Jones
Rule Breakers: Nancy Rexroth
Rule Breakers: Nancy Rexroth
Rule Breakers: Thomas Condon
Rule Breakers: Thomas Condon
Rule Breakers: Willie Osterman
Rule Breakers: Willie Osterman
Rule Breakers: Kris Graves
Rule Breakers: Kris Graves
Rule Breakers: Christopher Russell
Rule Breakers: Christopher Russell
Rule Breakers: Elizabeth M. Claffey
Rule Breakers: Elizabeth M. Claffey
Rule Breakers: Arden Surdam
Rule Breakers: Arden Surdam
BOOKMARKS
Bookmarks: Trash Press
Bookmarks: Trash Press
Bookmarks: Meteoro Editions
Bookmarks: Meteoro Editions
Bookmarks: dienacht
Bookmarks: dienacht
Bookmarks: Disko Bay
Bookmarks: Disko Bay
Bookmarks: Hartmann Projects and Books
Bookmarks: Hartmann Projects and Books
Bookmarks: NoRoutine Books
Bookmarks: NoRoutine Books
Bookmarks: Kozu Books
Bookmarks: Kozu Books
Bookmarks: Dais Books
Bookmarks: Dais Books
Bookmarks: Miss Rosen
Bookmarks: Miss Rosen
Bookmarks: Blow Up Press
Bookmarks: Blow Up Press
Bookmarks: Ice Fog Press
Bookmarks: Ice Fog Press
Bookmarks: September Books
Bookmarks: September Books
Bookmarks: Imageless
Bookmarks: Imageless
DC library 2.jpg
Bookmarks: Dust Collective
Bookmarks: Seaton Street Press
Bookmarks: Seaton Street Press
Bookmarks: Blue Tiger
Bookmarks: Blue Tiger
Bookmarks: Bemojake
Bookmarks: Bemojake
Bookmarks: Witty Kiwi
Bookmarks: Witty Kiwi
Bookmarks: Skylark Editions
Bookmarks: Skylark Editions
Bookmarks: Art Paper Editions
Bookmarks: Art Paper Editions
Bookmarks: Gnomic Book
Bookmarks: Gnomic Book
Bookmarks: Kris Graves Projects
Bookmarks: Kris Graves Projects
Bookmarks: Chose Commune
Bookmarks: Chose Commune
Bookmarks: cpress
Bookmarks: cpress
Bookmarks: Eriskay Connection
Bookmarks: Eriskay Connection
Bookmarks: Brown Owl Press
Bookmarks: Brown Owl Press
Bookmarks: RITA
Bookmarks: RITA
Bookmarks: Skinnerboox
Bookmarks: Skinnerboox
Bookmarks: Drittel Books
Bookmarks: Drittel Books
Bookmarks: Halfmoon Projects
Bookmarks: Halfmoon Projects
GOOD WORK
Good Work: Diversify Photo
Good Work: Diversify Photo
Good Work: See In Black
Good Work: See In Black
Good Work: Brown Art Ink
Good Work: Brown Art Ink
Good Work: Giving Tuesday
Good Work: Giving Tuesday
Good Work: #PhotographersVote
Good Work: #PhotographersVote
Good Work: The Veterans Workshops
Good Work: The Veterans Workshops
Good Work: Change The Museum
Good Work: Change The Museum
Good Work: The Photographer’s Green Book
Good Work: The Photographer’s Green Book
Good Work: Black Lunch Table
Good Work: Black Lunch Table
IN MOTION
In Motion: Inside the Book Maker’s Studio
In Motion: Inside the Book Maker’s Studio
In Motion: In Love’s Shadow
In Motion: In Love’s Shadow
In Motion: Mystery Photos Found in 60-Year-Old-Camera
In Motion: Mystery Photos Found in 60-Year-Old-Camera
In Motion: A Brief History of John Baldessari
In Motion: A Brief History of John Baldessari
In Motion: San Francisco Shut Down
In Motion: San Francisco Shut Down
In Motion: Alec Soth
In Motion: Alec Soth
In Motion: 1997: Birth of the Camera Phone
In Motion: 1997: Birth of the Camera Phone
In Motion: Ghosts of the Arctic
In Motion: Ghosts of the Arctic
In Motion: 100 Years of Olympus Cameras
In Motion: 100 Years of Olympus Cameras
In Motion: How I Spy Books are Made
In Motion: How I Spy Books are Made
In Motion: Gandolfi & Sons: England’s Oldest Camera Manufacturers
In Motion: Gandolfi & Sons: England’s Oldest Camera Manufacturers
In Motion: Jay Myself
In Motion: Jay Myself
In Motion: Do Not Bend: The Photographic Life of Bill Jay
In Motion: Do Not Bend: The Photographic Life of Bill Jay
In Motion: Wim Wenders on Mobile Photography
In Motion: Wim Wenders on Mobile Photography
In Motion: Hamburger Eyes
In Motion: Hamburger Eyes
In Motion: The Society of Camera Operators
In Motion: The Society of Camera Operators
In Motion: Ghat: A Pinhole Movie Project
In Motion: Ghat: A Pinhole Movie Project
In Motion: Alfred Stieglitz: The Eloquent Eye
In Motion: Alfred Stieglitz: The Eloquent Eye
In Motion: Remains
In Motion: Remains
In Motion: Master of Camera
In Motion: Master of Camera
In Motion: The Camera Collection
In Motion: The Camera Collection
In Motion: Patrick Nagatani: Living in the Story
In Motion: Patrick Nagatani: Living in the Story
In Motion: Derek Beck’s WALK Project: A Portrait of Neighborhood in 36 Frames
In Motion: Derek Beck’s WALK Project: A Portrait of Neighborhood in 36 Frames
In Motion: Witkin & Witkin
In Motion: Witkin & Witkin
In Motion: The Life of a Camera
In Motion: The Life of a Camera
In Motion: Tour of the Kodak Facotry
In Motion: Tour of the Kodak Facotry
In Motion: The Photographer
In Motion: The Photographer
In Motion: Shutter speed, Aperture and ISO: What do these mean and how do cameras work?
In Motion: Shutter speed, Aperture and ISO: What do these mean and how do cameras work?
In Motion: The Many Lives of William Klein
In Motion: The Many Lives of William Klein
In Motion: Meags Fitzgerald's Photobooth Animation
In Motion: Meags Fitzgerald's Photobooth Animation
STUDIO SOUNDTRACK
Studio Soundtrack: The Drive
Studio Soundtrack: The Drive
Studio Soundtrack: Psychogeography
Studio Soundtrack: Psychogeography
Studio Soundtrack: Gender Roll
Studio Soundtrack: Gender Roll
Studio Soundtrack: Home
Studio Soundtrack: Home
Studio Soundtrack: Gritty
Studio Soundtrack: Gritty
Studio Soundtrack: Evicting Time
Studio Soundtrack: Evicting Time
SOME ASSEMBLY REQUIRED
Some Assembly Required: Nils Aksnes’s Faroe Islands Camera
Some Assembly Required: Nils Aksnes’s Faroe Islands Camera
Some Assembly Required: Dick Haviland Is the Last of the Film Spoolers
Some Assembly Required: Dick Haviland Is the Last of the Film Spoolers
Some Assembly Required: Brendan Barry’s Garden Shed Camera
Some Assembly Required: Brendan Barry’s Garden Shed Camera
Some Assembly Required: Ursula Ferrara’s Camera Van
Some Assembly Required: Ursula Ferrara’s Camera Van
Some Assembly Required: Sean Hodgins’ DIY Camera Sensor
Some Assembly Required: Sean Hodgins’ DIY Camera Sensor
Some Assembly Required: Albertino’s Digital Camera Made From Lego
Some Assembly Required: Albertino’s Digital Camera Made From Lego
Some Assembly Required: Scott Yu-Jan’s 8x10 Pinhole Camera (With Instructions)
Some Assembly Required: Scott Yu-Jan’s 8x10 Pinhole Camera (With Instructions)
Some Assembly Required: Mathieu Stern’s Iceberg Lens
Some Assembly Required: Mathieu Stern’s Iceberg Lens
Some Assembly Required: Cameron Young's Underwater Pinhole Camera
Some Assembly Required: Cameron Young's Underwater Pinhole Camera
Some Assembly Required: Bailey Edward Russel’s Trailer Camera
Some Assembly Required: Bailey Edward Russel’s Trailer Camera
Some Assembly Required: Cameradactyl’s Self Developing Pinhole Camera
Some Assembly Required: Cameradactyl’s Self Developing Pinhole Camera
Some Assembly Required: George R. Lawrence Built the World’s Largest Camera
Some Assembly Required: George R. Lawrence Built the World’s Largest Camera
Some Assembly Required: Brendan Barry’s 4x5 Mannequin Camera
Some Assembly Required: Brendan Barry’s 4x5 Mannequin Camera
Some Assembly Required: Bob Lee’s Sardine Tin Camera
Some Assembly Required: Bob Lee’s Sardine Tin Camera
Some Assembly Required: John Sinclair’s Sliding Box Camera
Some Assembly Required: John Sinclair’s Sliding Box Camera
Some Assembly Required: Hugo Cardoso’s Panolgikon (panoramic + Holga + Nikon)
Some Assembly Required: Hugo Cardoso’s Panolgikon (panoramic + Holga + Nikon)
Martin Fitzpatrick's "Etch-a-Snap" Etch A Sketch Camera
Martin Fitzpatrick's "Etch-a-Snap" Etch A Sketch Camera
Some Assembly Required: Peter Wiklund’s Three-Pinhole Camera
Some Assembly Required: Peter Wiklund’s Three-Pinhole Camera
Some Assembly Required: Shane Balkowitsch’s Natural Light Collodion Studio
Some Assembly Required: Shane Balkowitsch’s Natural Light Collodion Studio
Some Assembly Required: Barbara Bosworth’s Telescope-Mounted View Camera
Some Assembly Required: Barbara Bosworth’s Telescope-Mounted View Camera
Some Assembly Required: Kiel Johnson’s Giant Cardboard Camera
Some Assembly Required: Kiel Johnson’s Giant Cardboard Camera
Some Assembly Required: Spiffy Tumbleweed’s Polaroid Pinhole Camera
Some Assembly Required: Spiffy Tumbleweed’s Polaroid Pinhole Camera
Some Assembly Required: Giles Clement's 16x20 Ambrotype Camera
Some Assembly Required: Giles Clement's 16x20 Ambrotype Camera
Some Assembly Required: David Mingay’s IKEA Hack Pinhole Camera
Some Assembly Required: David Mingay’s IKEA Hack Pinhole Camera
Some Assembly Required: Andreas Zieroth’s “Ugly Brick” 6x9 Camera
Some Assembly Required: Andreas Zieroth’s “Ugly Brick” 6x9 Camera
Some Assembly Required: Kurt Mottweiler’s 'Jules Verne' Swing Lens Camera
Some Assembly Required: Kurt Mottweiler’s 'Jules Verne' Swing Lens Camera
Some Assembly Required: Tim Alex Jacobs’ Polaroid Thermal Photographs
Some Assembly Required: Tim Alex Jacobs’ Polaroid Thermal Photographs
Some Assembly Required: Heather Oelklaus’ Russian Nesting Doll Cameras
Some Assembly Required: Heather Oelklaus’ Russian Nesting Doll Cameras
Some Assembly Required: Jeff McConnell’s Pinhole Street Photography
Some Assembly Required: Jeff McConnell’s Pinhole Street Photography
Some Assembly Required: Zev Hoover's DIY Large Format Video Camera
Some Assembly Required: Zev Hoover's DIY Large Format Video Camera
WEEKEND READING
Weekend Reading: How We See: Photobooks by Women
Weekend Reading: How We See: Photobooks by Women
Weekend Reading: Richard Samuel Roberts
Weekend Reading: Richard Samuel Roberts
Weekend Reading: The Black Civil War Soldier
Weekend Reading: The Black Civil War Soldier
Weekend Reading: It’s Raining…I Love You
Weekend Reading: It’s Raining…I Love You
Weekend Reading: Harvey Stein
Weekend Reading: Harvey Stein
Weekend Reading: Running Falling Flying Floating Crawling
Weekend Reading: Running Falling Flying Floating Crawling
Weekend Reading: Maura Sullivan
Weekend Reading: Maura Sullivan
Weekend Reading: Jesse Lenz
Weekend Reading: Jesse Lenz
Weekend Reading: Andrew Beckham
Weekend Reading: Andrew Beckham
Weekend Reading: Paolo Ventura
Weekend Reading: Paolo Ventura
Weekend Reading: Rachel Phillips
Weekend Reading: Rachel Phillips
Weekend Reading: Paula McCartney
Weekend Reading: Paula McCartney
Weekend Reading: Jessica Ingram
Weekend Reading: Jessica Ingram
Weekend Reading: Robbie Lawrence
Weekend Reading: Robbie Lawrence
Weekend Reading: Kwame Brathwaite
Weekend Reading: Kwame Brathwaite
Weekend Reading: Arnoldas Kubilius
Weekend Reading: Arnoldas Kubilius
Weekend Reading: Ralph Eugene Meatyard
Weekend Reading: Ralph Eugene Meatyard
Weekend Reading: Box Camera NOW
Weekend Reading: Box Camera NOW
Weekend Reading: Keeper of the Hearth
Weekend Reading: Keeper of the Hearth
Orlando Gili-cover.png
Weekend Reading: Orlando Gili
Weekend Reading: Cindy Sherman
Weekend Reading: Cindy Sherman
Weekend Reading: Charles Woodard
Weekend Reading: Charles Woodard
Weekend Reading: Nothing That Falls Away
Weekend Reading: Nothing That Falls Away
Weekend Reading: Joel Meyerowitz
Weekend Reading: Joel Meyerowitz
Weekend Reading: Good Pictures
Weekend Reading: Good Pictures
Weekend Reading: Arno Rafael Minkkinen
Weekend Reading: Arno Rafael Minkkinen
Weekend Reading: Camera Work
Weekend Reading: Camera Work
Weekend Reading: Sal Taylor Kydd
Weekend Reading: Sal Taylor Kydd
Weekend Reading: Amy Friend
Weekend Reading: Amy Friend
Weekend Reading: The Polaroid Book
Weekend Reading: The Polaroid Book

ARCHIVE

  • Alternative Processes
  • Ask the Experts
  • Book Arts
  • Crowd Funding
  • DTP Exhibitions
  • Feature
  • From the Collection
  • Good Work
  • Historical Photography
  • In Motion
  • Interview
  • News
  • Promo of the Week
  • Recommened Reading
  • Review
  • Rule Breakers
  • Some Assembly Required
  • Studio Soundtrack
  • Weekend Reading
You must select a collection to display.

Published by Don't Take Pictures
©2021