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WELCOME to FALL 2015 Edition BUREAU of ARTS and CULTURE MAGAZINE. This Edition contains The BUREAU ICON Essay: BOB DYLAN. Interviews + Photographic Essays with Alex HARRIS on The INUIT, Kanayo ADIBE in Baltimore, Lynn SAVILLE in New York City, Mike MILLER on West Coast Style, Ryan SCHIERLING in AUSTIN and BUREAU  GUEST Artist: Melissa Ann PINNEY ART Interview with David BURKE in Bay Area.  Plus: Michelle HANDELMAN. New FICTION: THEY CALL IT THE CITY of ANGELS Part III  MUSIC Contributor: Sarah Rose PERRY on The Femme PUNK Scene. MUSIC Interview with JAHI. Plus US MUSEUMS: Detroit's 30 ARTISTS Exhibit, Milwaukee's Larry SULTAN, Photo LA, BOOK Stores Across US: BookPeople, Anderson's, City Lights, Book Reviews from STRAND NYC. Classical MUSIC and Rock & Roll: Not So Different After All.  Elliott  Landy and The BAND.  Edward  Hopper at The Cantor. All This and More Plus BUREAU On Line Links to The ART Fairs in MIAMI 2015 with Exclusive Audio Interviews, Reviews & New Online Articles All Year Round at The New BUREAU CITY SITES Across America an The World Through Internet. BUREAU is MEDIA Partner for PHOTO LA . RED NATION FILM FEST + MORE...

WELCOME to FALL 2015 Edition BUREAU of ARTS and CULTURE MAGAZINE. This Edition contains The BUREAU ICON Essay: BOB DYLAN. Interviews + Photographic Essays with Alex HARRIS on The INUIT, Kanayo ADIBE in Baltimore, Lynn SAVILLE in New York City, Mike MILLER on West Coast Style, Ryan SCHIERLING in AUSTIN and BUREAU  GUEST Artist: Melissa Ann PINNEY ART Interview with David BURKE in Bay Area.  Plus: Michelle HANDELMAN. New FICTION: THEY CALL IT THE CITY of ANGELS Part III  MUSIC Contributor: Sarah Rose PERRY on The Femme PUNK Scene. MUSIC Interview with JAHI. Plus US MUSEUMS: Detroit's 30 ARTISTS Exhibit, Milwaukee's Larry SULTAN, Photo LA, BOOK Stores Across US: BookPeople, Anderson's, City Lights, Book Reviews from STRAND NYC. Classical MUSIC and Rock & Roll: Not So Different After All.  Elliott  Landy and The BAND.  Edward  Hopper at The Cantor. All This and More Plus BUREAU On Line Links to The ART Fairs in MIAMI 2015 with Exclusive Audio Interviews, Reviews & New Online Articles All Year Round at The New BUREAU CITY SITES Across America an The World Through Internet. BUREAU is MEDIA Partner for PHOTO LA . RED NATION FILM FEST + MORE...

BUREAU of ARTS and CULTURE IS EDITED BY J. A. TRILIEGI 


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THE BUREAU ICON ESSAY
BOB DYLAN

                        By BUREAU OF ARTS AND CULTURE MAGAZINE EDITOR J. A. TRILIEGI  Bob Dylan transformed the idea of what it is to be hip, deep, cool, sexy, funny, ironic and intelligent, all the while, retaining a purist style that remained true to himself. Each step of the way, each level of transcendence, each pitfall, each breakthrough moment has it's challenges, it's problems, its rewards. Success in the creative field can mean as many things to as many performers, songwriters and those who fall in the center of the American spotlight of popularity. Few can survive it, even fewer are able to retain a sense of self and even protect that idea publicly. Dylan took the name of a poet, hopped on a bus, looked at America and told the world truths, that have to this day, remain truer and truer as time  passes. The songs he wrote fifty years ago are more relevant now than ever, they will be more relevant in 100 years. The international press corp came at Dylan with the headlights on high beam. Instead of stare like a deer, he treated the alliance like a musketeer might approach a formal fencing match: Touché. The American Poet & wordsmith extraordinaire had become The Folkie, The Beatnik, The Rocker, The Philosopher, The Historian, The Cowboy, The Hermit, The Leader, The Champion of Underdogs, The Christian, The Anonymous, The Legend, The Icon and through it all, he's still Bob Dylan. An American guy from The Midwest who started with nothing but a blank piece of paper and a few ideas. For every title, there also came a group of admirers and detractors, who wanted something. They wanted more than the music, more than the lyrics, more than the concert, more than the records, they wanted a symbol they could use for their own parade, their own arcade, their own charade and Dylan denied the puppet strings, denied the sacrificial position, denied the groups that had latched onto him and he remained true to the only thing a human has from the very beginning to the very end: Oneself. He has understood that selling albums, performing, having a contract to support the self expression is where it's at, and all the while, Dylan has offered us what he has. Critics through the years have expressions and titles and adjectives that glibly describe the various stages of Dylan's career: A Major Album, A Minor Album, Etc… His voice was laughable, compared to entertainers like Frank Sinatra, his stage presence was stiff, compared to singers such as Elvis Presley,  his looks were nerdy, compared to performers like Johnny Cash and yet, he competed, sold millions of albums, and wrote anthems that have defined, to it's very core, what it is to Be : American. Bob Dylan is incomparable to other performers in the industry, he is an anomaly, he is the exception to the rule, there is no parallel story that can live up to Bob Dylan, so, please, don't even try. Today, we honor Bob Dylan, not for who you wanted him to be, not for what might have been, not for any ideas outside the realm of his oeuvre but, we honor him for what he actually is : The Great Independent American Artist.


THE BUREAU ICON ESSAY BOB DYLAN

By BUREAU OF ARTS AND CULTURE MAGAZINE EDITOR J. A. TRILIEGI

Bob Dylan transformed the idea of what it is to be hip, deep, cool, sexy, funny, ironic and intelligent, all the while, retaining a purist style that remained true to himself. Each step of the way, each level of transcendence, each pitfall, each breakthrough moment has it's challenges, it's problems, its rewards. Success in the creative field can mean as many things to as many performers, songwriters and those who fall in the center of the American spotlight of popularity. Few can survive it, even fewer are able to retain a sense of self and even protect that idea publicly. Dylan took the name of a poet, hopped on a bus, looked at America and told the world truths, that have to this day, remain truer and truer as time  passes. The songs he wrote fifty years ago are more relevant now than ever, they will be more relevant in 100 years. The international press corp came at Dylan with the headlights on high beam. Instead of stare like a deer, he treated the alliance like a musketeer might approach a formal fencing match: Touché. The American Poet & wordsmith extraordinaire had become The Folkie, The Beatnik, The Rocker, The Philosopher, The Historian, The Cowboy, The Hermit, The Leader, The Champion of Underdogs, The Christian, The Anonymous, The Legend, The Icon and through it all, he's still Bob Dylan. An American guy from The Midwest who started with nothing but a blank piece of paper and a few ideas. 

 "They wanted more than the music, more than the lyrics, more than the concert, more than the records, they wanted a symbol they could use for their own parade, their own arcade, their own charade and Dylan denied the puppet strings, denied the sacrificial position, denied the groups that had latched onto him and he remained true to the only thing a human has from the very beginning to the very end: Oneself."

For every title, there also came a group of admirers and detractors, who wanted something. They wanted more than the music, more than the lyrics, more than the concert, more than the records, they wanted a symbol they could use for their own parade, their own arcade, their own charade and Dylan denied the puppet strings, denied the sacrificial position, denied the groups that had latched onto him and he remained true to the only thing a human has from the very beginning to the very end: Oneself. He has understood that selling albums, performing, having a contract to support the self expression is where it's at, and all the while, Dylan has offered us what he has. Critics through the years have expressions and titles and adjectives that glibly describe the various stages of Dylan's career: A Major Album, A Minor Album, Etc… His voice was laughable, compared to entertainers like Frank Sinatra, his stage presence was stiff, compared to singers such as Elvis Presley,  his looks were nerdy, compared to performers like Johnny Cash and yet, he competed, sold millions of albums, and wrote anthems that have defined, to it's very core, what it is to Be : American. Bob Dylan is incomparable to other performers in the industry, he is an anomaly, he is the exception to the rule, there is no parallel story that can live up to Bob Dylan, so, please, don't even try. Today, we honor Bob Dylan, not for who you wanted him to be, not for what might have been, not for any ideas outside the realm of his oeuvre but, we honor him for what he actually is : The Great Independent American Artist. 





CATHERINE OPIE  Untitled #5 (Elizabeth Taylor's Closet) 2012 Pigment Print 40 x 30 inches (101.6 x 76.2 cm)
Edition of 3, 1 AP Courtesy of REGEN PROJECTS  /  BUREAU PICK for PHOTO LA  INSTALLATION  / TBA



READ ALL OF SEASON THREE Plus The Final CHAPTER in
THE FALL EDITION OF BUREAU of ARTS and CULTURE ...

The Original Fiction Series: " THEY CALL  IT  THE  CITY  OF  ANGELS," began in 2013 with Season One. A Literary experiment that originally introduced five fictional families, through dozens of characters that came to life before our readers eyes, when Editor Joshua Triliegi, improvised an entire novel on a daily basis and publicly published each chapter on-line. Season Two was an entire smash hit with readers in Los Angeles, where the novel is set and quickly spread to communities around the world through translations. Season III began in August 2015 and the same rules applied.  The entire Final season was Improvised without Any Notes : A Chapter a Day

The Original Fiction Series: " THEY CALL  IT  THE  CITY  OF  ANGELS," began in 2013 with Season One. A Literary experiment that originally introduced five fictional families, through dozens of characters that came to life before our readers eyes, when Editor Joshua Triliegi, improvised an entire novel on a daily basis and publicly published each chapter on-line. Season Two was an entire smash hit with readers in Los Angeles, where the novel is set and quickly spread to communities around the world through translations. Season III began in August 2015 and the same rules applied.  The entire Final season was Improvised without Any Notes : A Chapter a Day.




 FIRE + ICE PHOTO ESSAY and Article
By ALEX HARRIS


Three parka-clad men, their backs to the camera, stand on an ice–covered field. Their body language – what we can see of it – implies rest, perhaps resignation, as they watch a building burn. Minutes earlier, inside a Quaker church in the Alaskan Inuit village of Selawik, these same men heard screams of “fire!” Outside, there was nothing to be done. The burning building, a schoolhouse, contained the only running water in the village, and regardless, the blaze was too far-gone to be fought. 

On that April day of 1974, I was part of the crowd watching the schoolhouse burn. I was also a photographer with one roll of film in my camera, eight exposures left, trying quickly to make sense of the moment. Instinctively, I used my lens to see the fire and smoke through the bodies of the men in front of me, the way someone in the crowd would see the fire, the way the men themselves might be experiencing this moment. My instincts were to break most of the rules being taught in photojournalism school at the time. No faces are evident. No action is depicted. People standing in front of my camera mostly obscure the event itself. Yet this same photograph manages to suggest something larger than the moment, hints at the Inuit’s relationship to their environment;  implies their acceptance of the power of nature. 

Between 1973 and 1978 I made five trips to Alaska, living cumulatively for over a year in several Inuit villages above the Arctic Circle along the Kobuk River as well as other villages on the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta of the southern Bering Sea coast. I often arrived on a single engine weekly mail plane, and if visiting a village for the first time, would be greeted by a small group eager to see relatives who might be on the flight, or anxious to retrieve mail and supplies from the outside. Invariably someone would ask, “Why are you here?” When I said I was there to take pictures, a second question followed. “Where are you staying?” I would respond that I didn’t know. “Then stay with us.” 


I learned that there was nothing naïve about the invitation. The Inuit were hospitable and trusting in this sense: they gave me time and a chance to prove myself to be a person they wanted to have around. And I wanted very much to be that person. I believe I became that person. At the time, I was a few years out of college and beginning my second education. For one thing, I was learning the craft of photography, and starting to have control of the medium. I had studied Adams’s zone system for film exposure and development, and knew how to compact into visible detail the range of light in Alaska – from bright sun on snow to deep shadow on parkas – falling on my film. Still, I had quite a distance to go to master the medium technically. 

Mostly what I had to offer was my eagerness to get to know the people and places I photographed. I hoped that my familiarity would be reflected in the pictures I made. I was shooting black–and–white film, some 35mm but primarily medium format, and storing my exposed rolls under my bed inside a red tin coffee can with a plastic top.  But in another sense, I had to store the photographs in my mind, as I wouldn’t see any of my pictures until I returned to the “lower 48” and developed my film. So I often brought with me a couple of photographic books for inspiration, looking not so much to answer questions about technique, framing, or exposure, but to try to understand what a photographer’s work could tell me about how to get inside another world with a camera. 



In 1975 one book I brought with me was Koudelka’s The Gypsies. Whether the Gypsies looked back at Koudelka with recognition, or ignored him entirely, I was enormously drawn to the implied intimacy of the pictures he made.  Koudelka was absolutely present in his own pictures, yet his own likeness never appears. He made photographs full of life and also full of mystery. Though I didn’t take on Koudelka’s high–contrast, wide–angle style, I did begin to understand from him how to get inside another world with a camera. In Alaska I came know people in a way that allowed me to participate in their lives. On each successive trip to the villages, I saw it was possible to immerse myself in a world and at the same time to observe it, to step back from the moment I was experiencing and take a photograph.  I learned to make pictures – like those I’d seen in The Gypsies – pictures that hinted at more than I saw, more than I knew, more than we can ever know about another person, place or culture. 

                                                              - Alex Harris


Alex Harris is a photographer and writer teaching at Duke University. He is one of the founders of DoubleTake Magazine, of the Lewis Hine Documentary Fellows Program http://documentarystudies.duke.edu/projects/hine, and of the Center for Documentary Studies (CDS) http://documentarystudies.duke.edu . This fall CDS celebrates its twenty-fifth anniversary http://www.cdsfirst25.com/ with a number of events in Durham North Carolina including a November 20th-22nd Documentary Forum   http://www.cdsfirst25.com/docforum2015/

[ Entire PHOTO ESSAY  With many More Images Continues in The FREE FALL Edition ]





BUREAU OF ARTS AND CULTURE MAGAZINE Supports

VISIT THE FILM FESTIVAL SITE : REDNATIONFF.COM 
    


NATIVE FILM MARKET AT AFM 2015 : AmericanFilmMarket.com



KANAYO ADIBE
The BALTIMORE PHOTO ESSAY



From The Street Scene Photographs of Everyday Life in Baltimore to The Weddings & Parties of Washington DC, Kanayo Adibe has gone from utilizing a cell phone to a professional camera and launched an unexpected career in less than a few years. He has a bold eye for balance, time and place. His subjects inhabit their city with a flare for life. His images capture the goings on in a way that is alive and well. He has a growing catalogue that is both valuable and interesting. We discovered his work through a special program at The Baltimore Sun Newspaper and have become a solid part of his growing audience. Today, we give you Five Questions, a Photo Essay from Mr. Kanayo Adibe's Black & White Images and a glimpse inside Baltimore.




Joshua TRILIEGI :   Discuss how you approach photographing a Wedding versus a Street Shoot ?

Kanayo ADIBE : Photographing a wedding is pretty straightforward, there is a storyline, all the characters are present and all you have to do is work the timeline and capture the moments as they unfold. You are able to help shape the story, you are able to enhance it through great imagery or manipulate it by adding in poses. With street you are forced to find order in variability and chaos. You rely on variables beyond your control to tell a story as you see it. You have to act quickly when you find a moment unfolding or anticipate something occurring and hold your composition till it does. 


Despite the differences between wedding and street photography a lot of the skills carry over, there is an unscripted part of weddings that remain naturally occurring and random. The difference is they occur frequently and the more attentive you are the more of them you capture.  In the streets it’s a lot harder to find those moments because there are no predetermined characters to follow or a defined storyline, you have to pick and choose your subjects and hope that the right elements come together to give you that image you are looking for.



Joshua TRILIEGI : How important is representing our communities in America today and give us some examples in dealing with your subjects, creating relationships and being a strong part of the diAspora in America's culture today ?

Kanayo ADIBE :  I think it’s really important to represent our communities accurately, not leaning towards what is more popular or less favorable just to get a rise out of people. As we know the traditional  media is skewed in it's representation of certain demographics and usually just say and show things for higher ratings. As for my street work, I honestly photograph anything that stands out to me, good or bad. I’m not in constant search of that angle that will draw more attention to my work; I just shoot from the heart. It could be a special moment between strangers, amazing architecture, a homeless person on the street, it doesn’t matter. As long as it gives me that feeling, I will create that image. Relationship building is important, I have formed lots of bonds with other creatives, some of which have helped me grow creatively and as a business, I have also made new friends in my commercial subjects, my street subject still remain anonymous to me. As a Nigerian living in America and having to deal with the culture as it stands today is pretty interesting, I’m no different from any African American in the eyes of everyone else, so whatever they experience, I experience. 





[ Entire Interview Continues in The FREE FALL Edition ]



The BUREAU Guest ArtisMelissa Ann PINNEY

Joshua Triliegi : How Did The New Book "TWO" Come To Fruition ?  

Melissa Ann Pinney : In a funny way, you could say that TWO came about because I finally organized my work, cleaned up my studio and pinned up dozens of prints on the walls.  In the spring of 2013, I had been working on the project for a while but this was the first time the images were  collected all together. Ann Patchett happened to visit, loved the photographs and proposed that we make a book together.  Ann is a an award-winning, best-selling author with a gift for friendship and the ability to make big things happen. Ann is also a bookseller and she wanted to get the book out to an larger audience. To do so, Ann’s thought was to invite ten of our most distinguished contemporary writers ( aka, her friends) to contribute a short essay on the idea of two.  HarperCollins loved the idea as did the writers. The images and text are meant to inform one another rather than illustrate in the usual way we think of words and images. For instance, there are no photographs opposite a page of text. Ann wrote the introduction and also is the editor. 



Joshua Triliegi : Can You Remember Your First Impressions and Interest in Images early on In Life ? 


Melissa Ann Pinney : As a young girl, I remember feeling compelled to make something, to have a work that was my own. Painting seemed too grand and intimidating, sewing- too mundane and stereotypically feminine. It was not until college that I stumbled into photography and it felt like mine. I bought my first photography book there– the 1969 MOMA edition of The Americans, and later books of Dorothea Lange and Julia Margaret Cameron’s work.  Peter Hales, the brilliant cultural historian and photographer, was my photography history professor at University of Illinois, Chicago, for my MFA. Peter had studied with Garry Winogrand. Winogrand also was a great influence on my work, along with Helen Levitt. 




"I am looking for pictures – everywhere and always, with or without my camera. The pictures I want most are those I see in passing; the unexpected ways light, people and objects come together.  If I am ready and quick it’s sometimes possible to get the picture; if I had to approach, explain and ask permission the picture I wanted would be already gone. It’s the unstudied, uninterrupted sense of theater in the everyday that drew me to make the image in the first place."     
                                                        -  Melissa Ann PINNEY


[ Entire Interview Continues in The FREE FALL Edition ]





BUREAU MUSIC INTERVIEW: JAHI

Joshua TRILIEGI : When I first discovered Rap at The Radio Club in 1982, I was still in High school, when did You first hear a Live MC and Did you ever think the Music would have such a long staying power ?

JAHI : 1982 was also an important year for me because of Sucker MC's by Run- DMC and Jam Master Jay and in my neighborhood of East Cleveland, Ohio we had DJ's on our block and had community block parties just like NYC.  I remember my sister bringing home the vinyl to "Rappers Delight" in 1979 and it marks a time where I felt like I heard the term "rappers" more frequently.  There was no doubt in my mind that Hip Hop music would have staying power.  Deeper than the music, it was the building of culture.

Joshua TRILIEGI : Lets discuss The Newest Project: Whats It all About ?

JAHI : insPirEd is the second album from PE 2.0.  I said to a friend yesterday that if I became an ancestor today I would leave happy knowing I was able to do this album.  Its simply social commentary over boombap.  It features my other mentor and friend KRS-One, and has incredible production from Divided Souls from Baton Rouge, the legendary Easy Mo Bee, and DJ Pain 1.  It is a call of action.  It's BLACK in scope and presentation.  We've always know that Black Lives Matter, but this album is also about Black LOVE in a conscious kind a way.  The love of my people who still stand strong in the face of tyranny by crooked police and judicial systems, out ability as Black people to still stand firm, grow, love, and live.  Music is universal so everyone in Hip Hop will attach to insPirEd if they dig lyricism and hard beats, but its dedicated to my people on the front lines all over the world.   

[ Entire Interview Continues in The FREE FALL Edition ]




THE BUREAU BOOK Reviews 
By The Staff of Strand Books in New York New York U S A


My Lunches with Orson: Conversations between Henry Jaglom & Orson Welles

by Peter Biskind   /  Review by Jim at  Strand Books NYC

My Lunches With Orson is a unique and hilarious peek at one of America's greatest and most notorious film directors and actors, Orson Welles. Forty years since his legendary debut film, Citizen Kane, and nearly a decade since audiences had seen a finished film of his, Welles sat at the Ma Maison in Los Angeles, treating the Parisian-themed restaurant as a pseudo-office while meeting with filmmaker Henry Jaglom for lunch to discuss business and various other topics. Taken from Jaglom's recordings long thought lost forever, Peter Biskind (famed film writer of Easy Riders, Raging Bulls and Down and Dirty Pictures) compiles this collection of lunch conversations between the two directors. In between discussing his own infamous career, Jaglom and Welles discuss nearly every major figure in American film between 1930 and 1975 - and Welles hates nearly all of them. Katherine Hepburn, John Ford, Pauline Kael, and Charlie Chaplan are amongst the many who are brought up and few survive his wrath. The candid conversations are a brilliant form of performance, as Welles was aware of the recorder but asked Jaglom simply to make it unseen. The legendary filmmaker vacillates often between showboating for his young friend with uproarious speeches, and speaking with the honest desperation of a man at his advanced age being unable to work, and the financial trouble that that situation places him in. All in all, Biskind's framing of the transcripts displays Welles as a dastardly charming man, bursting at the seams with knowledge while posing for his one-man audience as a charlatan. My Lunches With Orson may not be the most informative book there is to read about Welles, but it is one of the most entertaining - and it's all in his words.



Inside the Dream Palace 
by Sherill Tippins   /  Review by Maya at  Strand Books NYC

Inside the Dream Palace is an in-depth look at a New York institution full of great mini-biographies and quirky histories. From Mark Twain to Sid and Nancy, the Chelsea Hotel has hosted a wide variety of creative characters (Jack the Ripper may have even stayed in the Chelsea). It’s a great read if you want a book about New York that isn’t too dry or too gossipy. In fact it has very little gossip at all, but lots of interesting facts about the behavior of, mainly famous, creatives. It is a perfect beach book but also a great read for the historian looking to read something light that still has a great deal to say about New York history. I personally enjoyed the way that New York is shown through the eyes of writers, artists and musicians such as Dylan Thomas, Harry Smith, and Patti Smith. Sherill Tippins seamlessly weaves these separate stories together creating a biography of a building, a neighborhood and a city. It’s important to know the history of New York and specifically the history of it’s communities so that we can continue their work. In Dream Palace, Sherill Tippins exposes how creative havens can be fostered but also how they are often destroyed by non-creatives. Dream Palace joins the dialogue and the struggle of the book Black Mountain: An Exploration in Community, and the film The Art of the Steal. We need more voices to tell these histories of how spaces for artists, writers and musicians are being turned into money making schemes.



A Game of Thrones 
by George R. R. Martin   /  Reviewed by Toni at  Strand Books NYC

One of the most used cliches in all of high fantasy is that of the farm boy (or other "simpleton") turned hero. Since Tolkien penned his Middle Earth stories, this trope has been wildly popular in the genre. One of the reasons I love Game of Thrones so much is that it completely ditches this typical cliche. Martin writes his story in such a way that it grabs readers immediately. More than once I found myself unable to put the book down until I found out what had happened to the characters I had so quickly become taken by. With each chapter told from the viewpoint of a different character, it easy to pick favorites at the start. It also ditches the typical cliche of the fantasy trope, focusing instead on the individuals functioning as a part of the whole, with each character bringing something to the dilemma. And the dilemma is, what else in a medieval setting, a clash for power. Game of Thrones, for me, reinvented the genre more than any other fantasy series. With five books and counting, I grow more and more attached to the Seven Kingdoms, and root for my favorite characters each time I pick up a book. Of course, there are downsides to the series. Most noteable and really the only negative of substance is that he doesn't write fast enough. For those who have seen the HBO series, I urge you to pick up the books. While the series is phenomenal, the books bring so much more to light. There is so much that you miss simply from watching it on TV. You won't be disappointed. 

Canned 
By Franklin Schneider  / Reviewed by Uzodinma at  Strand Books NYC

A down-dirty, grit-covered gem of a book. Mislabeled as humor. Franklin is the pal we all have stories about, like a correspondent on the front lines of a war many of us are afraid to fight. I'd go so far as to say that even if you don't agree with the way he sloughs off society's rules, you've at least wondered about it. You, like me, we've all crunched through pointless jobs, or ones we may even like, and still something's missing. But something's always missing. And this, I'd argue, is what Schneider, would like us to laugh at and understand. Not the evils of culture, or the modern work-week, not necessarily. You can seize up if you want to on the bits about laziness and unemployment checks, but that's the light-hearted, topical fluff. Think about it this way, and it's true: the gifts of the culture we live in were created by thinkers, dreamers, that is, by completely different hands than the ones that use those same dreams to lock us down and enslave us . . . Or maybe that's too far out there. What I like about this guy Franklin though, is that there's no real dogma, no ten-step revolution, nor should there be. He wanted off the 9-to-5 treadmill to become a writer, and thus the book, this book, is the proof that we can create the life we want to live, or go down trying. Thus the saga. Sex romps in unfinished basements. Inter-office pranks. Ten-day benders. The arcade chapter. The dead man in the Porto-Potty. More sex. The sex chapter. More racing, full sprint, down moonlit streets. The lawn mower through the window thing. This is Franklin's saga. Like we each have our own, and it's up to us to stay awake .


828 Broadway, Manhattan, NY 10003-4805 phone: 212.473.1452
fax: 212.473.2591 Monday-Saturday 9:30am - 10:30pm Sunday 11:00am - 10:30pm
Rare Book Room is open daily until 6:15pm 




IMAGE: Edward Hopper (U.S.A., 1882–1967), New York Corner (Corner Saloon), 1913. Oil on canvas. 

Edward Hopper: New York Corner

Through February 8, 2016  The exhibition showcases the painting New York Corner and contextualizes it by grouping works from the museum’s collection into several art-object-based “conversations.” These constellations point to the kinds of artistic practice that preceded the painting’s creation; showcase concurrent work, both similar and different, by Hopper’s contemporaries; and present the kinds of practice that followed.

The Cantor Arts Center at Stanford University  328 Lomita Drive at Museum Way  Stanford, CA 94305



image: Elliott Landy                                 Courtesy of The Artist and LandyVision.com

THE PHOTOGRAPHER ELLIOT LANDY

This Fall a New Book by Photographer Elliot Landy with Exclusive Images of Bob Dylan and The BAND will be available. Recent Documentaries and New releases on Audio of BOB DYLAN's Famed Basement Tapes Sessions have been celebrated with the participation of T. Bone Burnett, Mumford & Sons and a Showtime Series that included the participation of Elvis Costello have cast a new re-look at this important period in the life of one of America's most important songwriters. Elliott Landy took many of the pinnacle images that defined Robbie Robertson and The Band's Big Pink album as well as Dylan's retreat from the public eye in Woodstock NY. This much anticipated original publication is a must for music lover's, Dylan fans and Rock & Roll Historians.

Check your Local Bookstores November 2015 and for more information visit: LandyVision.com 





 The NOCTURNE
A Photographic Essay & Interview


With LYNN SAVILLE

Joshua TRILIEGI :  What draws you to Night Photography?

Lynn SAVILLE : When I was five years old, two keys things happened.  I looked out of the window at night into my back yard in Durham, North Carolina and noticed that the grass, tool shed, wheelbarrow and trees appeared scary at night. Illuminated by the single floodlight behind our house, the very familiar terrain became mysterious and dangerous during the night. It had looked normal and calm during the daytime.  This very familiar place took on a new dimension at night.  The second key occurrence was that my family boarded a steam ship in New York City’s harbor and traveled across the Atlantic Ocean to Italy.  This experience created in me, a dramatic appreciation for New York City, and an awe of the night, the stars, water, the rare sight of the occasional ship at sea.


Joshua TRILIEGI : Take us on a shoot with you: Location, Number of  Images, Time invested in The Walk about, Choosing the work, Printing and Exhibiting.

Lynn SAVILLE : When working in my own city [ New York ], I walk during different times of day and evening making mental notes and cell phone snapshots of places that attract my interest.  Later I return when it’s dawn or twilight and look again at the way these chosen “locations” appear in the shifting light.  I might return to a location three or four times to see what I find…always bringing my camera and tripod and any other items such as velvet to minimize reflections if I’m photographing into a window and a small flashlight or headlamp to use if I want to paint some light. 


I edit on my computer and make contact sheets or small 4” x 6” proof prints through inexpensive online printing labs or with Xerox.  These I put on my magnetic board in my apartment – to “live with them”.  I find that seeing photographs at different times of day and night helps me select the best ones.

When preparing for an exhibition, I print the photographs 8 x 10 or 11 x 14 as “match prints” – fine tuning the files.  I generally print on a paper size of  20” x 24” or 30” x 40” and occasionally 40“ x 50”.  These are printed with archival inkjet process. 

[ Entire Interview Continues in The FREE FALL Edition ]


Dark City Exhibition October 2nd - November 28th, 2015
  
Lynn Saville explores what she refers to as “limbo regions” in her series Dark City. These regions are undeveloped and overlooked spaces across major cities’ in the United States. Although Saville initially associated these vacant spaces with the economic turmoil of the recession, she came to realize that they also resulted from a natural cycle of decay and renewal in the urban landscape. She photographs at either dawn or dusk so that the place itself is lighting the scene with streetlight, window light, advertisements and surveillance lighting. Saville has been able to transform these spaces into lively and inviting places even with the absence of people and the cities usual attractions. She regards such places as “empty skeletal sets in which objects can dream, and light and shadow can dance uninterrupted.”



   Visit The Gallery and The Artist for Sizes, Specifications and Available Photographs at:
The Artist :  LynnSaville.com    The Gallery :  SchneiderGalleryChicago.com     
SCHNEIDER GALLERY  770 North LaSalle Dr. Suite 401, Chicago, IL 60654




BUREAU BEST BOOKS :  ANDERSONS 

In 1964 they opened the first official bookstore: Paperback Paradise. Since then they have expanded and moved several times, opening  Downers Grove store in 1980 and a children’s wholesale warehouse bookfair company, Anderson’s Bookfair Company (ABCFairs), in 1982. Bookfair company has grown and moved 5 times from being in the basement of  Downers Grove store.  Last November they opened Two Doors East, an eclectic and unique gift store, just two doors down from the Naperville bookshop. The members 5th generation that own and run the businesses today all started to work at a very young age in the family’s Business. " Working along side with your grandfather, parents, brothers, sister, and children is a family tradition that creates community within your family, and reaches your employees, your customers, and beyond your brick and mortar location."  Each generation of their family has offered new touches and ideas to keep it innovative, fresh and exciting. 


 5112 Main St, Downers Grove, IL 60515 (630) 963-2665 



Unidentified photographer, American, 20th century Circa 1950s  Gift of Peter J. Cohen  Courtesy Museum of Fine Arts, Boston 

Museum of Fine Arts Boston
presents
Unfinished Stories: Snapshots 
from the Peter J. Cohen Collection Now Through to February 21, 2016

Unfinished Stories celebrates a century of snapshots from the Peter J. Cohen Collection of amateur photographs. An avid collector, Cohen rescued more than 50,000 lost, discarded, or disowned personal photographs, culled from flea markets, antique shops, galleries, eBay, and private dealers. As he sifted and sorted through his finds, Cohen discovered mesmerizing, often humorous, shots removed from their original context: People at Play, Photographers’ Shadows, Double Exposure, Couples, Oddities, and Hula Madness. These pictures reveal the lives of strangers through intimate exposures, telling a story, or as Cohen puts it, “a teeny part of a story that remains unfinished.”








CRAFTED: Beth Lipman Cut Table Courtesy of Museum of Fine Arts Boston © Museum of Fine Arts, Boston 

Museum of Fine Arts Boston  presents  Crafted Objects in Flux

Now Through to  January 10, 2016

“Crafted” explores this moment of “flux” in the field, focusing on contemporary craft-based artists who bridge cutting-edge concepts and traditional skills as they embrace and explore the increasingly blurred boundaries between art, craft, and design. Featuring a selection of works from across the landscape of contemporary craft, the exhibition includes more than 30 emerging and established international artists. Looking to a broad range of materials and practices, the exhibition explores the connections between craft and performance; the opportunities provided by new technologies and materials; and the power of rethinking craft’s interactions with architecture and space. This exhibition is the first of its kind within an encyclopedic museum to explore the broad possibilities of contemporary artistic engagement with craft. By examining these interactions in proximity to historical examples in the MFA’s collection, “Crafted” demonstrates the vitality, viability, and variety inherent in choosing craft as a foundation for contemporary artistic practice.  Tap: mfa.org



THE  BUREAU  PHOTO  INTERVIEW
Ryan SCHIERLING

 The  How,  The  What  and  The  Why  of  Taking  Photographs  for  a  Living . The Austin Based Photographer Discusses His Work in Seattle Washington +More

Joshua TRILIEGI : There is a real diversity in your catalogue, explain what draws you to a subject, how you approach it and where  you decide to frame it?

Ryan SCHIERLING : I’m drawn to anything that’s visually and aesthetically pleasing, but I think that describes most photographers. The process of translating what I’m seeing into a photograph using a mechanical process of adjusting this and that is what, my style? Visually, I like clean images. I like to fill the frame with precisely what I want, because I don’t crop much. I want exactly what I want to see, and it’s done in camera, zooming a lens, or moving the legs here and there. 

Shooting portraits, specifically environmental portraits, is what I worked the hardest on. Photojournalism is documenting a scene unfolding around you. You’re not supposed to be part of it, you’re an external, impartial observer. That’s easy. To engage someone before the camera even comes out of the bag and have them be comfortable with you, enough to give you a piece of themselves in a photograph, is difficult. There have been people I’ve wanted to take a photo of, but it just didn’t feel right emotionally, or they weren’t in the right frame of mind to be physically and mentally present for the camera. I was never good with the whole “Alright, you have five minutes to shoot Mr. Famous Person” because there’s no connection. You’re just making a visually-accurate representation of what Mr. Famous Person looked like in that 1/60 of a second. I’d rather genuinely talk to them for five minutes, as a real person, and take one frame before I leave.


Ryan SCHIERLING : I did that the last time I photographed John Vanderslice, and I’ve shot so many photos of him - live and portraits - over the years. I shot a few songs of a show at The Mohawk in Austin, and I just wanted to watch and listen for the rest. Throngs of people were looking to talk to him after the set. It was after 1 a.m., and I didn’t want to intrude. I only wanted to let him know that he’d played a wonderful show - as always - and shake his hand. I asked him if I could just take two frames, and he looked a little surprised, but graciously agreed. I said, “Close your eyes. Take a deep breath, exhale.” Click. “Turn around, relax.” Click. Those are some of my favorite images of him. 

Faces interest me, body language interests me. How people relate to their environments. Things that happen to people, moments that they will never forget, moments that might seem small, or large, or insignificant. They all make a difference in our lives. I can’t be everywhere I’d like to be, so i just try to capture what I can, when I can. it’s all important in some manner, whether it’s politics, music, dinner, a first date or a death in the family.

There's a photograph in just about every situation you'll ever come across. Sometimes it's just a matter of stopping and looking a little harder. In some photos there are stories that need to be told, in others there might just be a feeling. One quote I remember from photographer Windy Osborne really stuck with me, and it's been probably 25-plus years. "Fill the frame with exactly what you want to see." I try to get all of the important elements in there, without making anything cluttered. And that tends to be my style in whatever I shoot, whether it's music or portraits or landscapes or anything that’s in front of me.



Ryan SCHIERLING : I don’t have a lot of photo books. There are no collections I keep other than cookbooks and old skateboards. The few photography books I do have are by Glen E. Friedman, Charles Peterson, Richard Avedon, Jim Brandenburg. I have all issues of “Loose Lips Sink Ships” from Steve Gullick and Stevie Chick. Gullick is incredible. He and Peterson certainly influenced my music photography initially. Both had a dirty, grainy style, but Steve did some lovely lighting for portraits and Charles captured a Pacific Northwest live music epoch with a camera and a strobe attached to a motorcycle battery. I dig Danny Clinch and his aesthetic. Old school? Windy Osborne and Spike Jonze - shooting for Freestylin’ Magazine in the late 80s - were huge for me, riding, shooting and working on a craft. Dan Sturt and J. Grant Brittain were massive talents at Transworld Skateboarding Magazine. Sturt’s mid-lens artistry and framing in a fisheye-lens dominated industry was incredibly inspirational. Brittain’s 1987 TWS cover of Tod Swank still makes me shake my head and smile every time I see it. At a young age, there were no finer photographers to emulate. New School? I love William Anthony, Dan Winters, Jonathan Saunders, Penny De Los Santos. I don’t shoot for a living anymore, so there’s no pressure to push the button for nonsense. I just try to stay true to the subject and the image, whatever it may be. 



[ Entire Interview Continues in The FREE FALL Edition ]







BUREAU BEST BOOKS :  BOOKPEOPLE

BookPeople has been the leading independent bookstore in Texas since 1970. Located in the heart of downtown, BookPeople has been voted best bookstore in Austin for over 15 years. BookPeople was voted Bookstore of the Year by Publisher’s Weekly in 2005. With visits from some of the most interesting and important authors of the past 43 years, as well as by Former Presidents Jimmy Carter and Bill Clinton, BookPeople is the destination bookstore in Texas.

 BOOK SIGNINGS CURRENTLY SCHEDULED INCLUDE APPEARANCES  BY

   OCTOBER 20TH 2015 
                               ELVIS COSTELLO 
             NOVEMBER 12TH 2015     
                                             JOHN IRVING   
                              DECEMBER 9TH 2015     
                                                          SALLY MANN 
   

  603 N. Lamar Blvd  Austin, TX 78703  512-472-5050  Visit : Bookpeople.com 


THE BUREAU EXCLUSIVE ART INTERVIEW

DAVID BURKE : PAINTER

Joshua TRILIEGI : The New Work has both architectural as well as figural conflagrations with a seriously organic feel. What happened to you between the previous target series and the new work?

David BURKE : In graduate school I had a professor look at my paintings and say, “You’re not an architect, your belongs in a world that is more organic.  Stay away from that other stuff.”  It took me almost ten years to paint anything that was remotely architectural after that.  It’s funny the things that stick with us, the grad school ghosts that haunt us and eventually need to exorcised.  In 2011, I was a visiting lecturer at Chiang Mai University in Northern Thailand and I spent almost the entire year painting landscapes that were spawned by my inability to reconcile the tension between the beauty of the pristine Thai landscape and the destruction of this landscape driven by an increased surge towards westernization and development.  When I returned to Bay Area, where I grew up, I was shocked at how a place so known to me could feel almost completely foreign.  The intensity of the urban landscape was arresting. In order to get reacquainted with my environment I started painting what I call “fractured landscapes” that tapped into the disorientation I was experiencing upon my return.   


"When I’m painting, once the first mark hits the surface, this stuff flies out the window and it’s all about making the work.  A painting should never shake its finger at the viewer; nobody wants to live with a work of art that appears to be judging them."


In these paintings pools of ink recede like oil-saturated waters at low tide.  Trees emerge from a tangled field of structures, gears, and wires.  My process involves equal parts control and chaos, and echoes tenuous socio-ecological relationships depicted in the imagery.  The use of synthetic material reinforces the commentary on man’s impulse to consume, contain and modify the earth’s resources in order to accommodate our own needs and desires. Contrary to some of the jaded ideas around the work, the paintings are actually quite optimistic in the sense that I am continually awestruck by the resilience of the natural world in the face of such heinous destruction.   This relationship between man and nature has all of the trappings of a dysfunctional marriage that has lasted thousands of years.  It’s filled with lover’s quarrels, abuse, comedy and beauty.  When I’m painting, once the first mark hits the surface, this stuff flies out the window and it’s all about making the work.  A painting should never shake its finger at the viewer; nobody wants to live with a work of art that appears to be judging them.

   [ Entire Interview Continues in The FREE FALL Edition ]

Links to David BURKE At The Vessel Gallery Exhibit : http://bit.ly/1NxWCH7






Founded in 1953 by poet Lawrence Ferlinghetti and Peter D. Martin, City Lights is one of the few truly great independent bookstores in the United States, a place where booklovers from across the country and around the world come to browse, read, and just soak in the ambiance of alternative culture's only "Literary Landmark." Although it has been more than fifty years since tour buses with passengers eager to sight "beatniks" began pulling up in front of City Lights, the Beats' legacy of anti-authoritarian politics and insurgent thinking continues to be a strong influence in the store, most evident in the selection of titles. The nation's first all-paperback bookstore, City Lights has expanded several times over the years; we now offer three floors of both new-release hardcovers and quality paperbacks from all of the major publishing houses, along with an impressive range of titles from smaller, harder-to-find, specialty publishers. The store features an extensive and in-depth selection of poetry, fiction, translations, politics, history, philosophy, music, spirituality, and more, with a staff whose special book interests in many fields contribute to the hand-picked quality of what you see on the shelves. The City Lights masthead says A Literary Meeting place since 1953, and this concept includes publishing books as well as selling them. In 1955, Ferlinghetti launched City Lights Publishers with the now-famous Pocket Poets Series; since then the press has gone on to publish a wide range of titles, both poetry and prose, fiction and nonfiction, international and local authors.  Visit The Store: CityLights.com 261 Columbus Avenue  San Francisco, CA 94133  (415) 362-8193

Founded in 1953 by poet Lawrence Ferlinghetti and Peter D. Martin, City Lights is one of the few truly great independent bookstores in the United States, a place where booklovers from across the country and around the world come to browse, read, and just soak in the ambiance of alternative culture's only "Literary Landmark." Although it has been more than fifty years since tour buses with passengers eager to sight "beatniks" began pulling up in front of City Lights, the Beats' legacy of anti-authoritarian politics and insurgent thinking continues to be a strong influence in the store, most evident in the selection of titles. The nation's first all-paperback bookstore, City Lights has expanded several times over the years; we now offer three floors of both new-release hardcovers and quality paperbacks from all of the major publishing houses, along with an impressive range of titles from smaller, harder-to-find, specialty publishers. The store features an extensive and in-depth selection of poetry, fiction, translations, politics, history, philosophy, music, spirituality, and more, with a staff whose special book interests in many fields contribute to the hand-picked quality of what you see on the shelves. The City Lights masthead says A Literary Meeting place since 1953, and this concept includes publishing books as well as selling them. In 1955, Ferlinghetti launched City Lights Publishers with the now-famous Pocket Poets Series; since then the press has gone on to publish a wide range of titles, both poetry and prose, fiction and nonfiction, international and local authors.

Visit The Store: CityLights.com


261 Columbus Avenue  San Francisco, CA 94133  (415) 362-8193 

BUREAU INTERVIEW : MICHELLE HANDELMAN ARTIST


Cyphers from Irma Vep, The Last Breath, 2013, digital c-print on archival paper, 18” x 24”, courtesy Participant, Inc., New York City

BUREAU :  Let’s discuss video art. Who are your earliest influences.

Michelle HANDELMAN : If by influences you mean cultural artifacts that absolutely transfixed my imagination, both visually and mentally, things that totally rocked my world, then without a doubt it was: horror films. In fact probably the earliest memories I have revolve around my brothers and I dressing up as vampires and watching old black and white horror films. We would put white powder on our faces, throw towels around our shoulders like capes, light candles and watch Creature Features every weekend—Tod Browning’s Dracula, Edgar Ulmer’s The Black Cat—all the 1930s classics starring Boris Karloff and Bela Lugosi. And so, from a very early age I had this interest in the macabre and the supernatural, and the symbolic language of monsters. Two films that thoroughly imprinted themselves on me back then were Mario Bava’s Black Sunday and Hitchcock’s The Birds. I mean, when Barbara Steele emerges from that iron maiden in Black Sunday with holes all over her face that was just the coolest thing I ever saw. It was deep. I mean, we’re all riddled with holes, metaphorically, and its all one can do to keep the tatters together and move forward. But to get back to your original question about video or experimental avant-garde film, the first moving image artists who rocked my world were Charles Atlas and Ulrike Ottinger. 

BUREAU : Do you believe art can change policy? Acceptance and progress?

Michelle HANDELMAN : I look at the world of humans as one large dysfunctional family that has the ability to evolve and transcend hatred, but the cards are still out as to whether or not that will ever happen. I do feel I’m a realistic optimist, which means I believe in transformation, but I also know destruction is inevitable, and in fact necessary for change. But to specifically address your question, yes, I do believe some art can lead to a change in policy. I don’t think it can actually change policy, but it can open dialogue, that can lead to a change. My piece at Eastern State Penitentiary has been on display for three years now, and periodically I receive emails from people telling me how it changed them. Last year I received a call from the federal Bureau Of Prisons inviting me to present my piece to their corrections officers. That was the first time I actually felt my work was effecting change in a very direct way. I met with the head of the BOP, as well as an assortment of bureaucrats, guards and officers and they wanted to know….they knew they had to change the way they’ve been dealing with trans inmates. They didn’t understand it, probably didn’t like it, but still, they knew they needed to change and they asked questions, lots of questions. In fact just today I was reading in the New York Times about how police officers are now receiving mandatory training on interacting with trans people. I’d like to think that in some small way my piece played a part in this change. 

[ Entire Interview Continues in The FREE FALL Edition ]



CINDY  SHERMAN          UNTITLED  FILM  STILL  # 7            The BROAD MUSEUM

The  NEW  BROAD  MUSEUM  in  L. A.

PHOTO : Iwan Baan                                                                             THE BROAD MUSEUM

The Broad makes its collection of contemporary art from the 1950s to the present accessible to the widest possible audience by presenting exhibitions and operating a lending program to art museums and galleries worldwide.The Broad is a new contemporary art museum built by philanthropists Eli and Edythe Broad on Grand Avenue in downtown Los Angeles. The museum, which is designed by Diller Scofidio + Renfro in collaboration with Gensler will offer free general admission. The museum will be home to the nearly 2,000 works of art in the Broad collection, which is among the most prominent holdings of postwar and contemporary art worldwide. With its innovative “veil-and-vault” concept, the 120,000-square-foot, $140-million building will feature two floors of gallery space to showcase The Broad’s comprehensive collection and will be the headquarters of The Broad Art Foundation’s worldwide lending library.  The Broad is home to the 2,000-work Broad collection, one of the most prominent holdings of postwar and contemporary art worldwide. With in-depth representations of influential contemporary artists like Jean-Michel Basquiat, Barbara Kruger, Cy Twombly, Ed Ruscha, Kara Walker, Christopher Wool, Jeff Koons, Joseph Beuys, Jasper Johns, Cindy Sherman, Robert Rauschenberg, and more, plus an ever-growing representation of younger artists.

  from  BURDEN to BALDESSARI 
                               from  FISCHL to FRANCIS
                                                          from WALKER to WARHOL

 221 S. Grand  Avenue  Los Angeles  CA USA  90012   TheBroad.org



Larry Sulton                  Oranges on Fire   1975                  LarrySulton.com

Milwaukee Art Museum 
presents 
The Photographic Works of Photographer Larry Sultan
October 23, 2015 – January 24, 2016

The exhibition includes more than 200 photographs ranging from Sultan’s conceptual and collaborative works of the 1970s to his solo works in the decades following. Sultan never stopped challenging the conventions of photographic documentation, exploring themes of family, home, and façade throughout his career. Larry Sultan grew up in California’s San Fernando Valley, which became a source of inspiration for a number of his projects. His work blends documentary and staged photography to create images of the psychological as well as physical landscape of suburban family life.   

Sultan’s pioneering book and exhibition Pictures From Home (1992) was a decade long project that features his own mother and father as its primary subjects, exploring photography’s role in creating familial mythologies. Using this same suburban setting, his book, The Valley (2004) examined the adult film industry and the area’s middle-class tract homes that serve as pornographic film sets. Katherine Avenue, (2010) the exhibition and book, explored Sultan’s three main series, Pictures From Home, The Valley, and Homeland along side each other to further examine how Sultan’s images negotiate between reality and fantasy, domesticity and desire, as the mundane qualities of the domestic surroundings become loaded cultural symbols.  


In 2012, the monograph, Larry Sultan and Mike Mandel was published to examine in depth the thirty plus year collaboration between these artists as they tackled numerous conceptual projects together that includes Billboards, How to Read Music In One Evening, Newsroom, and the seminal photography book Evidence, a collection of found institutional photographs, first published in 1977. Larry Sultan’s work has been exhibited and published widely and is included in the collections of the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, the Art Institute of Chicago, the Museum of Modern Art, the Whitney Museum of American Art, the Solomon Guggenheim Museum, and the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, where he was also recognized with the Bay Area Treasure Award in 2005. Sultan served as a Distinguished Professor of Photography at California College of the Arts in San Francisco. Born in Brooklyn, New York in 1946, Larry Sultan passed away at his home in Greenbrae, California in 2009.


The Artist:  LarrySultan.com        The Museum :  MAM.org    






Kehinde Wiley /  30 Americans :  Detroit Institute of Arts Oct. 18, 2015–Jan. 18, 2016

 30 Americans :  Detroit Institute of Arts 
Oct. 18, 2015–Jan. 18, 2016

30 Americans is a dynamic exhibition of contemporary art by African American artists, on view Oct. 18, 2015–Jan. 18, 2016. “30 Americans” includes 55 paintings, sculptures, installations, photographs and videos by many of the most important artists who rose to prominence during recent decades by exploring racial, gender, political and historical identity in contemporary culture. Organized around several artistic approaches used by the artists to explore identity: defying Western art traditions; portraying black subjects as real people as opposed to types; sampling multiple sources of inspiration, from historical material to found objects; freestyling by adopting improvisational and expressionistic styles to demonstrate creative and technical virtuosity; signifying through the use of symbols, materials and images that imply or trigger associations about gender, race, religion, class and sexuality; transforming the body’s appearance to examine the relationship between societal assumptions and identity; and confronting American history regarding race, racism and power in the United States.   VISIT THE LINK AT:  www.dia.org 


Photo Image: : Melissa Ann PINNEY                             Courtesy  SCHNEIDER GALLERY Chicago USA

The Underground Punk Music Scene : A Feminists View 
 By Bureau Music Contributor Sarah Rose Perry

Young people from far and near come line up in a Downtown LA alley outside of The Smell -- an all ages, self sustained “community oriented art and music space” waiting to see The Groans  Joel Jerome, Sloppy Jane and Peach Kelli Pop. These bands collectively, along with countless more, make up a fresh and new underground music scene. Concentrated in the Inland Empire, but spread about Los Angeles and Riverside counties, the Groups range from garage rock to  punk pop. The bands and their fans are something like that of a large family, with many distant relatives; you might not know each person there, but everyone is friendly and glad to see you. The Groans were the opening band at Friday’s show and when asked about why the scene is so important to us young people, they explained that the scene is very much a community and it’s exciting to be a part of, because “it gives people who are different or outsiders a sense of home.” It also provides a space for women empowerment. Whether they are deliberately taking a political stance, or simply being badass women, the message from these leading female musicians is clear and powerful. 

As I myself can testify, being a young woman, and seeing these other ladies on stage, confidently doing traditionally male dominated work, can be a catalyst for a dose of adrenaline and self approval. The Groans first got together because the lead singer, Amanda, and the bassist, Annie, thought there weren’t enough women in the local music scene. They explain, “we wanted a band that represented women of color and women in general.” They have achieved this thoroughly and many of their song’s lyrics make that statement loud and clear. One of their more popular songs entitled “The Perks of Being a Girl” (“perks” being used rather sardonically) begins with fast paced music, sing - songy vocals and features a very catchy build up stating, “I can be pretty. I can be skinny. I can be everything, BUT I. Don’t. Owe. You. Anything.” The band states, “It’s about the shit all women go through on a daily basis… It’s us saying ‘fuck you’ to society’s beauty standards; I’m beautiful no matter what.” This turned out to be a highly relatable concept among the young adults at the show, boys and girls alike. During their performance of the song on Friday, a sweaty mosh pit opened up in the middle of the crowd and everyone screamed along, “I’m just another girl in this fucked up world.” 

 Of course, this is nothing new to punk rock. As writer, Rock Hall explains, “The anti-establishment philosophy of the punk rock movement was the perfect fit for those female musicians who still felt like outsiders in the male dominated music industry” Though this particular comment was in reference to the seventies, some sentiments have remained the same. Amanda, the lead Singer of The Groans states that, “It’s a bit of a boy’s club, but [ they ] are glad to see more women in the scene.” Women throughout history have made significant, empowering gains using punk and all its sub-genres as a facilitator to bring serious female issues to the media, and by making waves in punk in the past. The female gender today are able to make the ‘fuck you, society’ statement, and be critical of authority or social norms, more safely -- which was not always the case and in some parts of the world, still is not.

Like nearly everything else, punk rock began as an all male genre, but with questioning authority and social norms as their main agenda, it was natural for women to step in and take a piece of the spotlight. Inspired by the Sex Pistols, Poly Styrene decided to form her own punk band, X-Ray Spex. Although they only lasted about three years, producing only one album, the band will be remembered by their lead singer screaming, “some people think little girls should be seen and not heard… Oh Bondage Up Yours!”  Before the start of their debut single. Chris Salewicz of The Independent says, “As a dumpy, frumpy,almost willfully unsexual girl from Brixton, with braces on her teeth, Poly Styrene was a perfect candidate to find herself through punk; turning this persona on its head into an art form, she became one of the movement's principal female figures, her song ‘Oh Bondage, Up Yours!’ a feminist rallying cry.”  Also formed in 1976, The Slits were the first all women punk band. Their song “Typical Girls” includes commentary on the social pressure women receive along with the negative misconceptions upheld about them by society, “typical girls worry about spots, fat, and natural smells… typical girls are emotional / typical girls are cruel and bewitching.” 

 [ Entire Article Continues in The FREE Downloadable FALL 2015 Edition ]


ART FAIR REVIEWS, AUDIO AND VISUAL PRESENTATIONS ON LINE DECEMBER 2015 UNTITLED . MIAMI . RED DOT . LA ART FAIR . PHOTO LA . MIAMI PROJECT + MORE 







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The PORTRAIT :  LANGSTON  HUGHES


AMERICANS WHO TELL THE TRUTH By Robert SHETTERLY



We ThankDa Capo Press, Cantor Arts Center, Stanford University, Pace/MacGill Gallery, National Gallery of Art, Georgia O'Keefe Museum of Art, Fine Arts Center Colorado Springs, Duke University, Andy Warhol Museum, Phoenix Art Museum, Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art, Art Institute of Chicago, Museum of Fine Arts Boston, Crystal Bridges,  United Artists, Spot Photo Works, Nasher Sculpture Center, Dallas Museum of Art, Museum of Fine Art Huston Texas,  Gallerie Urbane, Mary Boone Gallery, Pace Gallery, Asian Art Museum, Magnum Photo, Chicago Museum of Contemporary Art, Fahey/Klein, Tobey C. Moss, Sandra Gehring, George Billis, Martin - Gropius - Bau Berlin, San Jose Museum of Art, First Run Features, Downtown Records, Koplin Del Rio, Robert Berman, Indie Printing, American Film Institute, SFMOMA, Palm Beverly Hills, KM Fine Arts, LA Art Show, Photo LA,  Jewish Contemporary Museum, Cultural Affairs, Yale Collection of Rare Books & Manuscript and  Richard Levy.



 Contributing Photographers: Norman Seef, Herb Ritts, Jack English, Alex Harris, Gered Mankowitz, Bohnchang Koo, Natsumi Hayashi, Raymond Depardon, T. Enami, Dennis Stock, Dina Litovsky, Guillermo Cervera, Moises Saman, Cathleen Naundorf, Terry Richardson, Phil Stern, Dennis Morris, Henry Diltz, Steve Schapiro, Yousuf Karsh, Ellen Von Unwerth, William Claxton,  Robin Holland, Andrew Moore,  James Gabbard, Mary Ellen Mark, John Robert Rowlands, Brian Duffy, Robert Frank, Jon Lewis, Sven Hans, David Levinthal,  Joshua White, Brian Forrest, Lorna Stovall,  Elliott Erwitt,  Rene Burri,  Susan Wright,  David Leventhal, Peter Van Agtmael & The Bureau Editor Joshua Triliegi.   



Contributing Guest Artists: Irby Pace, Jon Swihart, F. Scott Hess, Ho Ryon Lee, Andy Moses, Kahn & Selesnick, Jules Engel,  Patrick Lee, David Palumbo, Tom Gregg, Tony Fitzpatrick, Gary Lang, Fabrizio Casetta, DJ Hall, David FeBland, Eric Zener, Seeroon Yeretzian, Dawn Jackson, Charles Dickson, Ernesto DeLaLoza, Diana Wong, Gustavo Godoy, John Weston,  Kris Kuksi,  Bomonster,  Hiroshi Ariyama,  Linda Stark,  Kota Ezawa,  Russell  Nachman,  Katsushika  Hokusai and  Xuan Chen



Contributing Writers: Robin Holland,  Jamar Mar(s) Tucker,  Linda Toch,  Sarah Rose Perry 





The BUREAU INTERVIEW:
PHOTOGRAPHER ROBIN HOLLAND
Can you remember early on, the first time an image actually spoke to you, in a personal way?


Of course I grew up surrounded by images (but in comparison to today’s childhood, it was a visual void)--TV (Flintstones, Jetsons), movies (Disney, Hayley Mills), Look, Life (I remember a strange, very blue image of Nixon shopping for real estate, peering into a window of the guest house at San Clemente, and on the cover of that issue, a black and white group portrait of three men in sharp suits (whom years later, coming across the magazine in my parents’ basement, I was surprised to recognize as John Cassavetes, Peter Falk and Ben Gazarra). But the first visual images that I remember wowing me were the portraits of Simon and Garfunkel (on the cover of “Bookends”--but it would literally be a decade before I knew it was shot by Avedon and who he was), and the Beatles (+ everyone) for “Sgt. Pepper.” But studying/working with images, for me, first, it was words, reading: Nikos Kazantzakis, Ai (Florence Anthony), Richard Hugo, Wendell Berry, Elizabeth Bishop--I studied literature and creative writing in school; writing: my attempts at poetry in classes with Ai, Milton Kessler and John Vernon. Some of the most powerful images for me are still words--I just watched (staying up way too late) “True Detective” (great performances, gorgeously shot) and the Handsome Family’s song over the opening credits, “Far From Any Road” has a line, “and when I touched her skin my fingers ran with blood.” Beautiful, horrible, perfectly paired with the visual images in the credit sequence. I actually became a photographer by fortuitous accident, but that’s a separate story.


DAVID MAMET BY BUREAU OF ARTS AND CULTURE NYC PHOTOGRAPHER ROBIN HOLLAND




Your single image facial portraits are particularly strong; David Lynch, Amiri Baraka, George Clooney, David Mamet. What can you share with our readers about these images, the photo sessions and or your approach ? 

Individual portraits  (in  my  studio,  environmental  portraits  have  extra  elements) are largely about emotional honesty (and the lighting). I started shooting like this with the title of a Peter Handke novel,  “A Moment of True Feeling”  in my head.  Hopefully I get a truthfulness ( yeah,  I know, with that word,  I too, think  “truthiness” --  Colbert  has colonized our minds), a steadiness in the eyes, a presence.  I don’t go in for affectlessness, what I’ve jokingly called the recovered memory portrait.  There is something timeless about your work:  Joseph Beuys,  Phillip Glass,  McCoy Tyner. Each image seemingly taken today. How do you go about configuring your portraiture ?I’m often asked  ( sometimes by people who should know more--sure, maybe some are being ironic) if I’m “capturing someone’s “essence.” That’s a cliché to me, like “closure.” I was photographing a well-known sculptor (he was doing the shoot with resistance, as a favor for a friend who was an editor at the magazine) in his studio when, with heavy sarcasm, he asked the essence question. Risking angering him, I answered, “I’ve only been here for a half hour. If I’ve figured out “your essence” in that amount of time, you don’t have much.” He relaxed some.


JOSEPH BEUYS                                                                BUREAU NYC PHOTOGRAPHER ROBIN HOLLAND
 
I’m nosy (I like to think that’s because I’m a journalist) and during most shoots we talk a lot, laugh a lot. I’m lucky (well, it’s not entirely luck) that I shoot people that I’m genuinely interested in, engaged with the work they’ve done. There’s often a specific intimacy that develops and then the person is gone (sometimes forever, sometimes only until another assignment--quite a few of my subjects have shown up repeatedly). (Anecdotes: I was supposed to shoot David Lynch on 9/13/01. Of course the shoot was cancelled, eventually rescheduled the following month, part of a junket. He called me “ma’am”--struck me funny, maybe he didn’t get my name; I kind of ambushed Joseph Beuys. I had an assignment to photograph Documenta 7 in Kassel in 1982 and was having an unusual amount of difficulty adjusting to the time zone. One morning I was up and photographing outside around 6:00 am. And there he was, raincoat, fedora, unmistakably Joseph Beuys. I approached him and herded him over to his piece (“7000 Oaks”), explaining I was working for Portfolio (now a long- extinct art magazine). I think he was surprised to see someone else up that early, surprised that an American (my accent gave me away) recognized him and was so obviously excited to photograph him. He offered to sit on his piece--I never would have asked. At another shoot Robert Rauschenberg jumped onto his “1/4 Mile or 2 Furlong Piece” at the Met--as horrified staffers looked on--but remained silent. Great for the photos that “don’t touch the art” doesn't apply to the artists.

CINDY SHERMAN                                           BUREAU NYC PHOTOGRAPHER ROBIN HOLLAND
   

I had shot George Clooney before, with the Coen Brothers, whom I had first met years earlier at a screening of “Blood Simple” before it was released and shot previously, at Cannes. I think that’s why he remembered me but I’m also sure that friendly, funny, smart, charming is his default setting. He kissed my assistant and me good-bye on our cheeks. She was gleeful but not for the obvious reason. The shoot was a few days before Thanksgiving and that evening she was returning home to spend the holiday with her Evangelical family in Texas, who was displeased about her living in New York, her career choice, etc. She knew that being kissed by Clooney could occupy a lot of conversation time that otherwise would have been devoted to disapproval.) 

PUBLIC ENEMY                                                       BUREAU NYC PHOTOGRAPHER ROBIN HOLLAND


The group shots are particularly creative: Magnetic Fields, The Composers, Ritz Chamber players. There is a real vitality, energy and genuine happiness to many of these images, but overall the composition remains very balanced. Will you share with us what one of these sessions is like and your general take on the challenges of photographing a group ? 



Although I haven’t photographed anywhere near as many musicians as filmmakers, actors or artists, the majority of my group shoots has been with musicians. With groups, emotion too, sure, and great lighting, of course, but also I think about the bodies as forms to be organized in space. I really like doing it and as performers whose work is done live (and together), musicians are good “raw material,” can easily stand or sit as requested--and they bring beautiful instruments. And with rare exception they’re all focused, cooperative. But of course it’s the rare exceptions that stick in the memory. 

TAYLOR MEAD                                                                   BUREAU NYC PHOTOGRAPHER ROBIN HOLLAND


You know the quote from Tolstoy about the sameness of happy families--all good shoots blend too. But I’ll probably always remember the young woman who was seized with “the vapors”each time I gave another young woman in the ensemble a prominent place in the set-up. My assistant called the time-waster “the fainting goat.” Do three people count as a group shot? When I was photographing Alfonso Cuáron, Gael Garcia Bernal and Diego Luna for a magazine, the distributor (of “Y Tu Mamá También”) arranged for a top-notch stylist and while there’s always a lot of clothes at a group shoot, that day it looked like the trendiest department for men at Barney’s had exploded in my studio. It was really fun. It’s less hard to get everyone looking good in the same frame than you’d imagine. I’m not sure why but it was true before digital too when I often shot fewer frames (budget constraints). 

Five Boys Near Ground Zero                                                       BUREAU PHOTOGRAPHER  Robin HOLLAND

Three of my non-musician favorite group shots: five boys in their neighborhood (Tribeca), near ground zero on 9/12/01; director Laurent Cantet and the students who made up the non-professional cast of his great film, “The Class.” The French teenagers had never been to New York before and it took more energy to wrangle them than the dogs that were part of another favorite shot--gay artists, their partners and their canines for a Gay Pride issue of The Village Voice. I recently started shooting interiors (and landscapes and flowers too--really) and I think that my approach to groups (the sense of forms in space and the light throughout the frame) helped me hit the ground running. My first project was shooting eight houses in New York’s Hudson Valley, working with writer/editor Linda O’Keeffe on her new Rizzoli book, “Heart and Home: Rooms That Tell Stories” (which will be published this fall) and I’m thrilled that one of my images is on the back cover.

JENNY HOLZER                                                             BUREAU NYC PHOTOGRAPHER ROBIN HOLLAND


Many of your images are in the square format, we spoke briefly about you utilizing non digital formats, tell us about your equipment and process through the years and how that has influenced your work to this day.

Photography has always been wedded to technology. But not committed--glass plates, tintypes, gum bichromate prints, etc., etc., are all relics of the past (but ripe for artists' revisioning/use) and now too film is receding into history. I don't miss the materials per se, except for Polaroid's 665 (b&w positive/negative), and although I was a very good black and white printer, my Epson 7900 made me forget my darkroom (most of which I recently donated to a small college that’s party of New York’s CUNY system). But I miss the esthetic--square (portrait's perfect format), b&w used without need for justification, without it seeming like a bid for attention. 

KAREN FINLEY                                BUREAU NYC PHOTOGRAPHER ROBIN HOLLAND


Pawel Pawlikowski’s recently released “Ida”--best film I’ve seen this year--needs to be b&w but other films’ (and photos) use of b&w is the equivalent of stunt casting. So I crop images (“The Class” group, Ritz Chamber Players, both shot with my Canon 5D Mark II, a camera I really like)--something that I was taught was verboten, but that was then--and shoot square with my phone. And I pine for my Hasselblad 500 C/M which I use sometimes with a Phase One P45 back. 3x4 isn’t square but it’s better than 35mm. But the two cords required to make the electronic/digital component work with the basic box camera can be annoying and unreliable. But I do get to use all my beautiful Zeiss prime lenses. 



And I’ve made friends with 35mm again (I started with a Pentax Spotmatic, then two Nikon F2s, which I still have--big, black, sentimental pendants). My first 35mm digital was a Nikon D70 but I reluctantly abandoned Nikon for Canon, which won the race to make the first 35mm full-frame digital cameras. I’m crazy about my Canon zooms, 24mm-70mm and 70mm-200mm and amazed that I’m fine with them replacing primes. Great with just two lenses to have (almost) all lenses, all the time in my bag. (I also have 20mm and an incredible tilt shift lens, TS-E 24mm). And great too to have all the ASAs that are possible with the 5D. I also have a little Canon G10. I take it everywhere and I once dropped in the Groverkill (a stream)--actually a lot of me ended up in the stream--but it dried out. I think the different formats, cameras, iphone, digital, film, Polaroid, have, perhaps paradoxically, contributed to how I see my work (past and current)--I’ve stopped classifying which of my images are meant as journalism, which are portraiture, which are art. And it’s also time and history that scramble these things.  







DAVID FAHEY :  Fahey/Klein Gallery

Listen To The Entire Audio Interview at BUREAU MAGAZINE  By Joshua A. Triliegi






 Spending time with a man like David Fahey is sort of difficult to describe. He's affable, funny, irreverent, but also knows exactly what he's doing and he's pretty damn aware of what you are doing too. Several days prior to our visit with David Fahey, a picture of Brad Pitt exiting the Fahey/Klein gallery was splayed across the internet. The image was taken by the current Hollywood paparazzi. It is safe to say that this image was not created by an artist and most likely will not be hanging in a gallery in twenty-five years. So what is it that makes some images art and others simply images ? Thats a rather difficult question to answer as, much of what we like as a society and as individuals, is subjective. One thing we learn rather quickly while spending time with Mr. Fahey is that the art of selling an image is equally as important as the art of creating one. Our ongoing series of Interviews with the owners, art dealers and curators attempts to lift the veil of mystery that shrouds much of what we call the art world. Were not giving away trade secrets or formulas, that would be sacrilegious. What we are doing is simply creating a common dialogue and taking you, the reader and now via the internet, the listener, into a world you may not likely access   otherwise. So, lets step into the back office with Los Angeles' top Photographic Art Dealer. 


         
                      TAP LINK : FOR ENTIRE JUNE EDITION 2014 MAGAZINE



The Phil Stern catalog is a gold mine. Growing up with a fascination for film, art, music and even literature, one could not help but notice and appreciate, through the years, what Phil Stern did with the camera. His subjects often knew he was there, but still, he captured the essence of their character and the very style and inner qualities that we so love about these people. Dean, Brando, Marilyn, Frank, Ella : we know these people on a first name basis, how is that ? Much of it has to do with the camera, the image, be it still or be it moving. Stern got his subjects to share themselves with us.








" I Really Understood  The Power Of  The Image… " 
                                                                    - David Fahey


Images mean something to us as humans, they capture a time and they capture a place, forever. Being a human is a frail and transitory experience, it just doesn't last forever. For whatever reason, having an image of a loved one, an entertainer, a particular location can mean quite a bit and in the case of the image becoming a valuable collectible commodity, Mr. Fahey has been on the front lines in more ways than one. David fought in the Vietnam War and when  iconic photos of that war hit the front pages, he noticed the effect the images had on society. Upon returning home, he began teaching the History of Photography, assisted in a Gallery for over ten years, meeting and befriending many of the established photographers and most of the up & comers too. Finally and quite successfully launching his own Art Gallery located on La Brea in what is commonly called the Metropolitan Section of Los Angeles in the Original Art Gallery Row, South of Beverly and North of Wilshire.




Mr Fahey explains, "Back in those days, there were no galleries showing photography, photography wasn't even accepted as an art form." People laughed when Mr. Fahey demanded that the photograph was ART. He befriended Ansel Adams and later sold a single image for a record amount of money. "We sold an Ansel Adams photo for 80,000 dollars and people thought it was a joke, they just didn't understand, and so, this was back in the seventies, there was no market, there were no collectors, there were a handful who were well known in America."Decades later, everyone now knows that Photographs are indeed an accepted Art Form and current museum budgets can barely keep up with their value. Imagine what it must have been like to know a certain truth, before anyone else and finally: justification in commerce.  



"  It's really about the best photographs in all the genres. "
                                         - David  Fahey





The gallery catalogue is so incredible and extensive that we found it difficult picking and choosing images. The history of Art, Music, Film, Fashion and the counter culture of America itself is housed within these images. For decades this gallery has provided a home for photojournalists, and photographers of all sorts, styles and bodies of work that are important and enduring, exacting and entertaining, collectible and sometimes heartbreaking. 


      Photographer: William Claxton       John Coltrane  at The Guggenheim Museum


Thirty years later and some forty-five books in design, it is time to reflect. "You have to trust your instincts right away and so, if you believe in the artist, if you believe in the work, there's a point in time where it's going to click and it's going to happen." 

" You have to trust your instincts right away and so, if you believe in the artist, if you believe in the work, there's a point in time where it's going to click "      
                                                        - David  Fahey   

                   
                                               


Although Fahey / Klein represents a multitude of Fashion related photographers such as Herb Ritts and Ellen Von Unwerth, Mr Fahey explains, " The perception is that we have a heavy leaning towards fashion and pop culture images and an aspect of that is true. But I would say, we also have James Nachtway, Steve Schapiro, Gary Winogrand, Gene Richards : All the iconic Photojournalists."  The list is daunting. In some cases the gallery represents the photographer directly, such as Phil Stern, in other cases, they may own a few images or are simply working directly with The Estate as they do with Diane Arbus. 



"If the pictures are strong and unique and powerful, that will  surface,  that  recognition  will  come your way  and things will start happening for you."           -  David Fahey





Which brings us to a part of our conversation where David discusses the commitment one has with more challenging, difficult, controversial or even, ahead of their time photographers and images. When asked how he was able to stand by whole bodies of work that the public had not immediately understood or even appreciated, he explained it this way, " You have to trust your instincts right away and so, if you believe in the artist, if you believe in the work, there's a point in time where it's going to click and it's going to happen." When pressed to explain farther, he put it to us this way, "A lot of it has to do with juggling a lot of projects, you know, this isn't selling, so maybe it will next year, you still show it,  present it,  put it out there, but you've got three things over here that are working." 

"Its  fun to see the  artist come  from nowhere to becoming  very  well  known,  and  to  see  the  public being  educated  as  to  the  importance  of  these  artists."      - David Fahey 







      

     Entire David Fahey Audio Interview at BUREAUofARTSandCULTURE.COM 

      Photographer: Steve Schapiro


THE JAMES GABBARD PHOTO INTERVIEW
 
JAMES GABBARD Photographed By  Joshua Triliegi in 1996 / 97 at TRILIEGI STUDIO 

BUREAU OF ARTS AND CULTURE 

Nearly Twenty years after his first exhibition at Bureau Art Center, Editor Joshua A. Triliegi & Mr. Gabbard and share ideas about photography, travel, philosophy, his first art exhibit at The Original BUREAU ARTS Center and what he is doing now with his photographs.

Interview with BUREAU Photographer James Gabbard
JT: First of all, I would like our readers to know that You walked into The BUREAU about 18 years ago with a very serious catalog of images & we immediately agreed to show the work. Your influence was pretty intense. As I recall, you covered the entire gallery window space with vellum & exhibited the photographs in a slanted style reminiscent of The Classic Photographers of yesteryear : Ansel Adams, Edward Weston, Walker Evans & that school. Since then, you've spent 12 years living in Hong Kong China, created a family & are now back in America. It's a pleasure to showcase your work again. Why did you choose the images that our readers are viewing and tell us something about this body of work ? 

JG: I see it now as a sort of isolation series: a cultural ideology. The result of 12 years in Asia as a foreigner, living, working, breathing, in all that is China. The city of Hong Kong is filled with seven million tightly packed people all trying to make a mark and get ahead. Artistically the photographic views I gravitated towards were silent, motionless steel, concrete & glass, all very cold materials to be intrigued by. This gave me two very serious bodies of work to conclude with, one, a Visual Multi-Media motion graphic series in which I shoot digital motion, capture, then re-edit it through post psd graphics & visual software called vdmx5, then run various live feed camera programmed projections onto and throughout the city scape's & club interiors. The other is a purely architectural abstract study of Hong Kong using a film format camera & a perspective of unique in-camera modification. For this special series I built a 16 frame film roll back technique I call (M.I.M) by designing and modifying my medium it allowed the creation of multiple images to be captured in one continuous series of frames: a flow of abstract identity. As a result, I guess subconsciously, the intersections of multiple lines in these images represent the people crossing over one another each day culturally, the shapes and dark shadows could be the philosophy of consumerism, strong juxtapositions of motion set in stone while social media inter play and identity populate the direction of progress.


" It was regarded as a highly successful photo series 
                    which lead to several shows in Rome" 


JT: The show at BUREAU Art Gallery in 1996, " Delirium of Silence " showcased  Portraits you took in Italy of people within a mental Institution.  What drew you to that subject ? 

JG: In 95 I moved to Rome Italy to live and work with my then wife Artist/Painter- Patrizia Martridonna. We stumbled into the Santa Maria della Pieta Institute one day to look at the magnificent grounds and architecture of this once private estate of multiple buildings and gardens, and met a man that day (a patient) and later found out he was the famous Italian Artist Giannini Fenue. We became friends and after several visits began to communicate through our related artistic interest, his in the beautifully drawn sketches of Patriza & mine in his life story & photogenic persona. An exchange of art, which led to the Medical Director of the asylum viewing my black and white pictures of Fenue and inviting me to shoot a case study of the other patients. This was a great honor since it had never been achieved before and politically the Roman government needed to give patronage for the project to commence. Over the next several months, I was allowed into the private mens housing & medical staffed treatment centers to observe and photograph the men of this ward. Each day I'd set up a black back ground in the court yard adjacent to the exit of a common room the patients used to paint & make art. This indoor/outdoor space became my external studio giving the men comfort to stroll freely. After some time passed, they would take a seat at the stool and I would begin the pictures. The entire film series would be developed and printed each evening in a make shift darkroom and later presented to the authorities and patients. It was regarded as a highly successful photo series which lead to several shows in Rome and gave me a chance to work with "The Patriza Foundation" and Unicef. 




JT: America, Europe, China all seem to have had an influence on you. Does traveling and say, searching for life itself, play into your work?

JG:  Most defiantly… Exploring, even if it's just by taking a different route home from a friends house has always given me a series of new ideas and complications to figure out. Thats been the drive for bigger and more complicated scenario's of achievement, I guess, like a move to the other side of the world. It's not really all about what happens while your there, its the process of departure and arrival once returned. I've always gone searching for trouble or situations that may cause conflict or mental diffusions from the norm. Learning chinese, altering your diet and physical condition are all good artistically diffused and challenged mediums to work with. 

JT: I started the magazine a few years ago mostly with a desire to continue those conversations we had among each other and the interdisciplinary aspect of Photographers, Musicians, Dancers, Artists, Painters, Sculptors, illustrators, writers: sitting in a room together discussing each others craft. You brought a very keen sense of presentation to the scene and yet at the same time seemed deeply grounded in a respect for tribal rituals: Drumming, Hiking, Singing. How important is it to hone your craft and at the same time follow the path ? 

JG: Ahh,  the "path" and "presentation", for me,  it's all the same.  I make most of it up as I go. But, 
I do notice when a fall - off or out is near. If by luck, its a radical new direction [then] after a while, if its a true radical direction, it fits and the path becomes one again or maybe it was never really divided & the direction is just a continuum in a newly presented presentation. I had a friend tell me once [that] I was a master of re-inventing myself, I thought that was weird at the time, but now take it as a compliment. Some times to evolve internally one must move at a glacial pace or go on line in search of Mars. 

       


"… The art of photography, as a pure medium, was
      the most important thing I could relate to …"


JT: As I recall, everyone [ The professionals ] on the scene, were very impressed by your work and yet, the local kids and neighbors seemed to understand it too. Does a show with Portraits as compared to say, Architecture create any certain challenges ? And how has your worked changed or evolved since that exhibit in 1996 ? 

JG: Photography and the act of the art of photography, as a pure medium, was the most important thing I could relate to while shooting everything that my eye thought to be a part of a theory in category placement, [from] architecturally driven shapes of a nude to the gutter soaked cigar-butt. Developing a sense of style for a subject matter came from life experiences and maybe that was the substance of related interest. I aspired to the artists of my own generation and those from past, while looking into the future to make the next statement.

JT: What kind of philosophy do you adhere to while ' looking for the image ' ? 

JG: I started out with this quote in my head from Henri Cartier - Bresson, " The Decisive Moment ". 
After re-interpreting his ideas, to include a post production element, it made the expansion for broader practical sense & was used with every direction I turned while viewing a subject matter with a metal box against my eye. It, then and still is, a foundation for me to see, develop and manipulate motion graphic imagery. 


JT: Your photographs, back then, were very rooted in a 'real film' aesthetic, does the digital aspect now change your process at all ? If so elaborate, if not, discuss how we can retain the integrity of the image as digital aspects of technology creep up on us more and more .  

JG: Im deeply routed in the old school theory of shooting film to express my more artistic still work but I'm all for progress & modern interpretation that the digital world has brought. That said, all of my art based photography is still shot with a film camera then scanned for larger output & cataloged to last beyond my lifetime. The work of (VJ-indef) which is an acronym for Inoperative - Defunct  dot com a creative based art production studio I developed back in LA just before leaving to Hong Kong in 2001. Its a massive combination of multi media motion graphic digital production. I use everything from originally shot HD captured movies to digital stills, then mash it up with motion graphic software and out put it through large scale projectors onto club walls and art spaces.


JT: Do you remember all of the original BUREAU of ARTS and CULTURE crew taking drumming lesson together ? This was after we had all been playing for over several years, many were actually professionals ? How important is it to continue education, even for professionals ? 

JG: I truly believe in variety and the development of many forms of expression. Music provides me with great latitude while moving in-between art forms such as still photography to the multi-media motion graphics I've been creating and producing for the International DJ's in Hong Kong's club scene. For me its always the development of an instruments personality that I fall for, be it the African Djembe or the Jazz Trumpet, or the spin distortion an old Compact Disc makes that compliments my continuing education in music and way of life.


JT:  What words of advise do you have for our younger readers on The Art of  creating an image and continuing with the creation of a body of work ? 

JG: Art movements are just that, look at what the Chinese have done in the last ten years, and now they are getting half what was paid to them in 2008. Americans contemporary art scene is booming again, after the critics said painting was dead and the street art of London became the biggest profit margin for Capital flip investment groups. Shit, I'd never thought I'd give this type of advise. But,  when I was a lot younger, I thought that looking at too much work would have a direct or indirect influence on my own work and that might be a bad thing, but then I got a little older and realized that you must look at or view all types of art works so you can be in control and diminish your own adverse perspective. View only good works and read only good reviews to better understand what shit is out there. so when you step in it and it's faithfully your own, you have the spirit to find a good shoe shine.


JT:  We talked a lot about Philosophy back in my studio some years ago. What are you into these days and how does a person's belief system influence their work ?  

JG: I have a three year old now, so I'm into Doctor Seuss … I think, subconsciously Watts and Nietzsche play intricate roles in defining my definition of life and parenting, these two problematic solutions are more than enough to explain to my daughter, while spending the afternoon inspecting lady bugs on flowers at the park. Although, to her credit, her child like symposium of the symmetry of red body and black spots or was it black spots and red body are more truthful than any Nietzsche quote I could ever live by…





         

PHOTO INTERVIEW LORNA STOVALL

Lorna Stovall is an Original Member of BUREAU of ARTS and CULTURE A participant of BUREAU Art Exhibitions in The Early Nineteen Nineties and an active influence on The BUREAU Graphic Style throughout the formative years. 
BUREAU: You’re a graphic artist as well as a photographer with a career that has spanned a few decades, what would you say is the reason why we as artists have the need to capture and share images?


Lorna Stovall: Well, when talking about graphic design and advertising, it is all about the need to communicate a message in a manner that stands out—period. When we talk about personal work, it becomes more complicated. I believe it is a way for the artist to communicate a feeling—a feeling that otherwise they may not be able to communicate. Whatever the feeling is—of horror or peace, humor or sadness—the artist feels a need to remember and, by sharing it with others, hopes the viewer will empathize with her. The artist is more vulnerable since the message is her own, but the designer is a step removed from the images she is creating since the message belongs to someone else.



BUREAU: Your body of work is vast, experimental and interesting, having lived on both The West and East Coast, is there a difference, in how the cities speak to us as artists? 


I would have to say yes, but that answer may also be a reflection of the different stages of my life while living in each place. In LA, during that time, there was cheap space available where artists could work and show art. I found there to be a fantastic sense of collaboration and support, a free flowing conversation between artists without the aid of Twitter, a social creative salon…and cars. Cars made it easy to go to out-of-the-way places for inspiration and tote materials around.In NY I feel you are constantly having your artistic conversation with the city. The difference in seasons, public transportation, pop-up everything, music, noise, people, walking—surprise and fascination is everywhere and it all influences an artist’s work somehow. There is also the influence of all the hundreds of museums, galleries, libraries and theater without going very far.I’ve also noticed the color palette of both cities is inherently different and must influence artists as they travel between the two places. The year round bleached-out sun colors and the blueness of the sky and ocean of LA vs. the changing colors of NY—Spring & Summer are oppressively green, Fall has its reds and browns, while winter is basic black, white & grey. With all that said, I love both cities for what they have to offer. They are unique, fascinating and inspirational in their own way. 



BUREAU: I have some of your early photographs of the sunflowers and have always liked your black & white imagery. What are you working on in this most recent exhibition? 


After I left advertising I was searching for what truly made me excited creatively. I looked back on my work and found it was the feeling of experimentation and chance that made me feel most alive. When I was in LA, I collected a lot of cameras that were “cheap” or outdated and played with what I could get out of those tools. After spending so much time with hyper-real retouched digital photos at work, I fell in love again with the imperfections these cameras offered. I had toyed with the idea of doing shows of photos taken with cameras under $20 and felt now it was a perfect time to explore this concept further. Since all of these cameras use film, I took courses to learn how to perfect a digital print so it looked like a darkroom print. With all the advances in printing and papers, I feel this is now possible. This particular portfolio is the beginning of the CU20$ series. 


" I looked back on my work and found it 
was the feeling of experimentation and 
chance that made me feel most alive." 


Growing up in Southern California, I spent a great deal of my childhood exploring the deserts of the southwest. To me, there was nothing more otherworldly than the Salton Sea, a failed yacht and beach resort in the middle of the desert. Without question, the Salton Sea had to be the first subject in my series—with it’s partially submerged neighborhood that brought a feeling of calm beauty within its never-ending tragic story. The stillness of the sea that day and the unconventional beauty of the salt formations on the weather-ravaged buildings was to me a bucolic landscape worth preserving in film. Most of the shots were done as panoramas to emphasize the vastness of the desert and the use of B&W infrared film exaggerated the desolation and otherworldliness of the location. I have been shooting other locations in this manner and am excited to continue on with the CU20$ series!


BUREAU: You’re a career artist that jumped into motherhood mid career. How has that influenced your work? 


Lorna Stovall: I would say motherhood has influenced the way I work and what I work on more than the work itself. After taking maternity leave while a Creative Director in Advertising, I realized that I didn’t want to go back to that world. Since I waited so long to have a child, I was lucky enough to be able to stay home and focus on raising him. A co-worker once said to me (when he became an “older” father) that in advertising, you put your heart and soul into a campaign, working long ridiculous hours, only to have the work be left in a drawer. With parenthood, you see the results of all that hard work daily. Now, instead of working on this project or that, I must focus on one idea and create during the time I have free—when my son is in school. This show is the first I have done within this framework and I feel like I have accomplished something to be proud of.
BUREAU: Back when the Bureau of Arts and Culture was an unofficial art space and later a gallery, your innovative graphic designs had a big influence on my work, I always considered you a safe person to learn from and emulated many of your innovations, whether it was utilizing rivets, or mixed media or simply being open to experimentation. In fact, I have collected most of your invitations and works all these years. Who would you site as your influences?


Lorna Stovall; Thank you. It is nice to hear there is someone else out there that keeps design inspirations for so long! I would have to say my influences are vast and varied. In college, I was influenced the most by 4AD Records. The music and the artwork (with Peter Saville as Art Director) at the time was very different than what was going on in America. Also, the magazine THE FACE was new and exciting (the Neville Brody years—I had a subscription for quite a while and still have all those issues!). But I think my use of alternative materials came from a combination of financial necessity (ie. super low to no budgets) and also from my fondness with experimentation. When I worked for Henk Elenga of Hard Werken, he shared his gift of mixing medias and disciplines, doing type by hand, and his enormous passion for the creative process. Remember, this was the time before there were computers in the studios, manipulations were done on a Zerox machine and type was set at typesetting houses. Because of this, I feel there was more down time that enabled experiments, collaborations and creativity. Around this time I was also discovering the film work of the Quay Brothers and Fellini as well as photographers such as Jan Sudek, Joel Peter Witkin, and on the commercial side, Nick Knight and Anton Corbin. Also, I was (and still am) a devotee of hardware, stationery and grocery stores when I travel—funky and amazing stuff to be had in the oddest of places! Inspiration and modes of execution can be found everywhere.



ABOUT LORNA STOVALL and the Salton Sea Images Currently at B & M ARTS in NYC With a BS in Applied Art. Lorna has worked in the print design field for 20+ years. Starting her career in the Los Angeles music industry, she specialized in hand lettering, logos, packaging, branding and advertising. During this time, Lorna explored her passion for photography, experimentation and the element of chance. In ad- dition to her commissioned work, Lorna created assemblage pieces that encompassed her photography. It was also at this time that she indulged her curiosity of using alternative cameras and processes for her photo- graphs. The concept of only using cameras under $10 was soon born (later changed to $20 due to inflation!). She scoured garage sales, swap meets and 5 & 10 stores for cameras she could alter and adapt to her vision. In the Salton Sea Series, the panorama shots used an Ansco Panorama PIX ($7 at any drugstore) adapted for infra- red film and the square shots used a Holga (2 for $15 at Maine Photographic Resources).


ABOUT  THE  BUREAU  OF  ARTS  AND  CULTURE  MAGAZINE: 


An Electronic Interactive Version of  BUREAU of Arts and Culture Magazine. 'Electronic' meaning you are reading it with a device, 'Interactive' meaning you can actually tap the featured interview or image & listen to extended Audio Interviews & Links. BUREAU Magazine can be read without being on-line, though it is much more useful and interesting if you are actually on-line or you may visit our website and enjoy a compendium of Interviews, Articles, Reviews and Essays. We suggest you view the pdf in the Two Page and Full Screen Mode options which are provided at the top of your menu bar under the VIEW section, simply choose Two Page Layout & Full Screen to enjoy. This  format  allows  for  The Magazine to be read as a Paper  Edition. The BUREAU of ARTS and CULTURE has been a respected ART Institute since the early Nineteen Nineties. Many of the original BUREAU members have gone on to have stellar careers in The ARTS. Artists, Filmmakers, Musicians such as: Lucas Reiner, Spike Jonze, Alex McDowell, Martin Durazo,  James Gabbard, Christina Habberstock, Lorna Stovall, Heather Van Haaften, Chris Greco, Don Harger, Ron Riehel, Joan Schulze  all had very early collaborations with The BUREAU Projects. Our relationship with ART spaces who have been interviewed / reviewed by BUREAU: Jack Rutberg, Susanne Vielmetter, Tobey C. Moss, Shoshana Wayne, Known Gallery, Sabina Lee, The Bowers Museum, The Geffen Contemporary,  Hammer Museum, RED CAT, The Skirball Cultural Center, Museum of Contemporary Art in L A, San Diego and in Santa Barbara help to create well earned future partnerships, distribution as well as a 'word of mouth' that is priceless. Collectively, they have been in the business for hundreds of years. Not to mention the thousands of public readers that have received the magazine on their door steps. Our coverage of the MIAMI Art Fairs with in depth audio & slide presentations allow us to create a lasting relationship with the ' National Big Tent ' art events that allow for fundraising activity. We recently interviewed the Grammy Museum and are creating a lasting relationship. The same pattern applies for THEATER: Edgemar, LATC, Circle Theater, Cygnet, Robey.  MUSIC : The Echo, The Redwood, The Roxy, Grammy Museum, Origami, Vacation, Record Collector, LA Philharmonic & The San Francisco Philharmonic. BUREAU has created relationships with Film, Music and Art festivals, National & Local Radio Stations, continuing the tradition created with BUREAU Film projects and the utilization of Print, Radio and Web to facilitate publicity, fundraising & awareness. Triliegi Film programs were discussed on KCRW 89.9, KPFK 90.7 and Indie 103 FM  within the non profit umbrella in the past and we plan to sustain & develop those ties. We were invited to Cumulus Radio's Commercial Rock Formatted KLOS 95.5 FM [ Bureau mentioned on air] to consider an affiliation.  We recently interviewed Miles Perlich of KJAZZ 88.1 FM and we were given tickets to Classical Music concerts by K-MOZART Radio & we invited a guest reviewer to attend. The BUREAU of Arts and Culture Magazine will continue to create a lasting relationship with the Art Institutes, Media & Schools that drive the Arts in America. We distributed Paper Editions to OTIS Art School & The Campus at USC to support alignments with faculty, staff & students who will become future entrepreneurs & participants in the Arts. Our upcoming interview with Barbara Morrison and her connection with UCLA Jazz music department with Herbie Hancock & The Thelonius Monk Institute is solid.We delivered the first edition of the magazines to: Beverly Hills, Pacific Palisades, Palos Verdes, West Hollywood, Los Feliz, Malibu and The beach communities: Hermosa, Redondo & Manhattan beaches. We received financial support from the arts & culture communities by creating a dialog about the arts, reviewing their art exhibitions, theater plays & films. Art Galleries from Culver City to Bergamot Station to Glendale approved of and supported Edition One. Now we have an online READERSHIP that grows exponentially. BUREAU sites in cities such as Los Angeles, San Francisco, San Diego, Santa Barbara, New York City and very soon Seattle, allow for anyone, anywhere, to see what is going on in the arts in that particular city. Which we feel will allow for us to apply for support, distribution and grants within those particular cities and for local businesses to buy ads. We add new cities quite often and create a lasting relationship with the established Arts Foundations in ART, MUSIC, THEATER. Which usually includes Classical music, Art Galleries, live Theater and Film. We added Surfing , Skateboarding and Biking to get the interest of a younger readership and indeed it worked. We have also celebrated those subjects with our fundraisers, selling artworks in relation to Biking & Skatng. We partnered with local & national businesses that assisted & we provided logo affiliation & coverage on the web: Chrome Bags, Jarrittos, LA Skate, DTLA Bikes and The Los Angeles Bikers coalition, to name a few. Older Established Artists from diverse cultures also participate in the BUREAU of Arts and Culture Exhibitions and Interviews. We brought together Native American, African American, Chinese American, Armenian American and Mexican American elder artists in a single exhibition: a financial as well as critical success with "Gathering The Tribes: Part One". We hand delivered the first paper Edition throughout Southern California and select neighborhoods in San Francisco. We introduced the magazine & created Popular Cultural Sites. We are an official media Sponsor for L A Art Fair & PHOTO LA Photo Fair. We extensively cover and or interview galleries at Art Fairs such as, Platform LA, Pulse LA, Untitled Art, Basel Miami, Art Miami, Miami Project,  LA Art Book Fair. We provide an extensive overview, Audio walk throughs, visual presentations with 100+ images per on-line feature. If that doesn't convince you, nothing ever will. 


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