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30
Sep

Made In America

As a long time fan of B/W photography, I was delighted to discover in our local post office this weekend a set of postage stamps from two early masters of the medium. Unbeknownst to me, the US Postal Service recently issued a limited edition set of stamps designed to celebrate the American worker as captured through the lens of Lewis Hine and Margaret Bourke- White.

The "Made in America: Building a Nation" U.S. Postal Service stamp issuance, launched Aug. 8, honors the workers. (Courtesy US Postal Service)

The “Made in America: Building a Nation” U.S. Postal Service stamp issuance, launched Aug. 8, honors the workers. (Courtesy US Postal Service)

Photo Credit: Lewis Hine, Courtesy of George Eastman House, International Museum of Photography and Film. (Courtesy US Postal Service)

Photo Credit: Lewis Hine, Courtesy of George Eastman House, International Museum of Photography and Film. (Courtesy US Postal Service)

Whenever I consider images from this period, I immediately reflect not only on the power of the work itself, but the conditions and risks Hines and others took to create them.  Whether Hine’s image at right of a worker dangling from a crane or Bourke White’s female welder, these were dangerous places for photographers to practice their craft and as such elevate them from mere portraits to participants in the industry being depicted.

If you are a fan of classic white black and white photography make sure you get a set (or four) of these classic images to adorn you next letter, package or postcard.  Your fellow photo loving friends and family will thank you.

To celebrate contemporary images of manufacturing and industry, see our gallery featuring work from Brownie Harris, Shannon Faulk, John Henley and many others.

 

24
Sep

The instanding image

Every now and then, being on both sides of the picture business (as a partner in Evolve, and sometimes as a client), I try and note what photography I personally find useful in a given hour or two. It’s a visual audit, a reality check of sorts on what seems to be working for me.

The results of this can give insight on what we are doing right here or what we might develop.

Today, for example, it included: a classic archival shot of a building I was reading up about on wikipedia; a well-taken product shot of a jacket in the newspaper; and a misty view across a rainforest. Yes, random. There’s a lot more of that. The trick is to look for the patterns.

These images tend to be anything  but outstanding. But they really function – they are embedded in the content they deliver in a way that is as important as any verb, noun or comma in the associated text. They absolutely work and do so as part of a structure of communication elements.

This is, for me, an important part of understanding how imagery is developing in our world. It’s becoming an ever richer and more complex language, one that we increasingly read and use better than aspects of our spoken or written language.

When we send or share pictures via social media we often do it with images that are closer to this vernacular than to being an icon image. The images are visual notes, elements in a communication, and with no aspirations to be a framed print or a full-page ad.

We’re all increasingly this kind of photographer. Or reader of photography. And, with the way archives are open to share (legally or not so legally) we mix up the old with the new in a rich stew of visual content.

Some of the images we add to our collections, often some of the ones shot on smartphones, are perhaps in this area. They’re images that straddle a line between the new language ‘element’ and the more iconic shot.

These images need a description – so, for me, I’ve been calling them ‘instanding’ as opposed to outstanding. They’re pictures that are really made to sit inside a message, a component. Some can also work iconically, i.e. Be outstanding. But the main need in communications is to find that great image that can be instanding, can work alongside as a natural team player.

An example, would be something as simple and yet appealing and conceptually charged as Ron Fehling’s image of a coffee cup.

© Ron Fehling/evolveimages.com

© Ron Fehling/evolveimages.com

It’s a note of a modern phenomenom – the culture of decorated cappuccino froth. It says care, love, taste, style and, of course, service. (Don’t tell me you do this to your own coffee at home.)

It’s instanding. Isn’t it?

blog post submitted by Lewis Blackwell, Chief Creative Officer, Evolve Images

6
Sep

Curator’s Choice: New Work September 2013

New work this month from Ron Fehling, Alan Majchrowicz, Pete Saloutos, Tracey Lee, Brian Summers, Scott Dimond, Jody Watts, Irene Suchocki, Malte Mueller, Martin Siepmann, Hans Huber, Michael Diehl, Roman Märzinger, John Lund, Ron Watts.

See more new work in our New Images Gallery.

© Ron Fehling/evolveimages.com

© Ron Fehling/evolveimages.com

© Alan Majchrowicz/evolveimages.com

© Alan Majchrowicz/evolveimages.com

© Pete Saloutos/ evolveimages.com

© Pete Saloutos/ evolveimages.com

© Tracey Lee/ evolveimages.com

© Tracey Lee/ evolveimages.com

© Brian Summers/ evolveimages.com

© Brian Summers/ evolveimages.com

© Scott Dimond/ evolveimages.com

© Scott Dimond/ evolveimages.com

© Jody Watt/ evolveimages.com

© Jody Watt/ evolveimages.com

© Irene Suchocki/evolveimages.com

© Irene Suchocki/evolveimages.com

© Ron Fehling/evolveimages.com

© Ron Fehling/evolveimages.com

© Malte Mueller/evolveimages.com

© Malte Mueller/evolveimages.com

© Martin Siepmann/evolveimages.com

© Martin Siepmann/evolveimages.com

© Hans Huber/evolveimages.com

© Hans Huber/evolveimages.com

© Michael Diehl/evolveimages.com

© Michael Diehl/evolveimages.com

© Roman Märzinger/evolveimages.com

© Roman Märzinger/evolveimages.com

© John Lund/ evolveimages.com

© John Lund/ evolveimages.com

© Ron Watts/ evolveimages.com

© Ron Watts/ evolveimages.com