Showing posts with label Vallbona. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Vallbona. Show all posts

Sunday, August 19, 2012

Big Picture: Opening Night

Photo of Al Diaz with his Angel de Panama by Chuck Fadely
Opening night at the Little Haiti Cultural Center Gallery was a hit. It is also the biggest print of my work I have ever seen measuring 8 feet tall! Here is a gallery of images of friends and fellow photographer's Big Picture, shot with the smallest camera I own, the one on my iPhone. For further information contact:
Lena Sendik
Iris PhotoCollective
Director of Sales and Marketing
Phone: 504-756-1492
The photograph on display is titled Mohawk by Jennifer Kay

At left to right are John VanBeekum, Charles Trainor Jr., Marice Cohn Band, exhibit curator Carl Juste, Al Diaz and Chuck Fadely. AUDIO

Patrick Farrell AUDIO

Charles Trainor Jr. AUDIO
Jon VanBeekum with Marice Cohn Band and her Bandera Vieja AUDIO

At right is John VanBeekum's Tuxedo Man AUDIO
Patrick Farrell, Al Diaz and Chuck Fadely

Many friends turned out for the opening exhibit including Matthew Pace and Paul Morris.

Here is a list of contributing photographers.
Jahi Chikwendiu
André Chung
Marice Cohn Band
Al Diaz
Patrick Farrell
C.W. Griffin
Carl Juste
Jennifer Kay
Heidi Levine
Pablo Martinez 
Joshua Prezant
Les Stone
Charles Trainor, Jr.
Nuri Vallbona
John VanBeekum
Clarence Williams

Sunday, August 12, 2012

Big Picture: Photo Exhibition in Miami

The Big Picture is an idiom often used in spoken language that refers to the overall perspective of objective, not just the fine details. It is an expansion of meaning that gives way to an over-arching theme. The details provide meaning, which eventually yields to understanding. In the visual language of photojournalism, comprehension is not determined by a large frame but rather, by large context. Iris PhotoCollective is pleased to announce its groundbreaking exhibition Big Picture, a group show curated by photojournalist, Carl Juste. Big Picture will open August 17, 2012, 7pm at The Little Haiti Cultural Center in Miami, Florida. The gallery is approximately 2,100 square feet with high vaulted ceilings—a perfect venue with ample space for an exhibition of this magnitude. The exhibition will display seventeen colossal images by seventeen extraordinary photojournalists. The work will be featured in high- resolution quality and size that will make viewers feel like they are part of the scene, allowing them to experience the event first hand. Each image is a physical manifestation of the expansion of meaning. The truth and relativity of the facts are the ingredients that expand the comprehension of the image. The viewer sees the larger context because they are drawn into the expanding frame, hence made to see the Big Picture.
Jahi Chikwendiu/Washington Post - Kogelo, Kenya 2009
Thousands of miles from Washington, DC, Kenyans celebrate the incoming U.S. presidency of Barack Obama. Kenyans, particularly from this village where the president's father was born, symbolically claim the new US president as their own president. A scene shot through one of the shawls that were on sale on the grounds of the Senator Barack Obama Secondary School in Kogelo, Kenya, where the incoming US president has roots. What is your big picture? Tell us. Come to see, feel, and get the Big Picture. 
Big Picture  
August 17, 2012 @ 7pm 212 NE 59th Terrace, Miami, Fl 33137 Little Haiti Cultural Center Gallery 305-796-4718
At the event their will be QR Codes for an audio presentation each photo graphger
 For an audio invitation by Carl Juste and Nancy Ancrum 
Click Here