One of this images in the article is this one
by Camera Club of NY member and the Club's Vice President, Alfred Stieglitz.
Not exact matches
The buzzer - beating three - point shot
by guard Chris Heitzig was captured on
camera and widely circulated within the
club.
Some reports emerged that the incident was captured on
camera by security
cameras in the
club and on - lookers with their cell phones.
Footage from the
club cameras will undoubtedly show quite a bit more than this video, taken
by a self - proclaimed «friend» of Peterson.
Fujimoto's shadowy visual sensibility was a unifying factor, and without it, «Ricki And The Flash» — which was shot
by Declan Quinn, Demme's go - to cinematographer in recent years — swings wildly between different conventional
camera styles, turning into a small -
club concert doc for The Flash's regular gigs at The Salt Well or into stagey, locked - down farce during the restaurant scene that introduces Ricki and Pete's sons, Joshua (Sebastian Stan) and Adam (Nick Westrate).
The first - person view of the ball during the swinging of the golf
club is meant to be innovative, but apart from seeing the ball as you hit it, it's a hindrance because you can't see where it's actually going to go without pressing various
camera buttons and then aiming
by holding the trigger as the aim marker goes nuts.
Yakuza's party piece are the Heat Actions — contextual super moves triggered
by giving foes a consistently brutal thrashing — which brings the
camera in close showcasing some absolutely vicious beatdowns — such as smashing someone's face into a brick wall or
clubbing them with bicycles.
«Smoke And Mirrors» exhibition presented
by Camera Work at Only Arts
Club in Hamburg, Germany.
The final exhibit curated
by Cincinnati Art Museum's Curator of Photography Brian Sholis before his move to Toronto is the first major museum survey of the Lexington
Camera Club's artistic achievements.
Baxter St at the
Camera Club of New York is delighted to present Body Is A Situation
by Nandita Raman.
Three poetry books are on view
by Paul Laurence Dunbar (1872 - 1906) and show the beautifully illustrated book covers and pages including photographic work of the Hampton Institute
Camera Club.
Nancy Brooks Brody, Joy Episalla, and Carrie Yamaoka participated in Dust: the Plates of the Present, curated
by Sonel Breslav,
Camera Club NY at Baxter Street, NYC (2015) and Galerie Praz - Delavallade, Paris (2017), as part of a project co-organized
by Jo - ey Tang and Thomas Fougeirol.
Baxter St at the
Camera Club of New York and National YoungArts Foundation are pleased to present Oldtown, a solo exhibition
by YoungArts alumnus Henry Spritz.
Baxter St at
Camera Club of New York is pleased to present the exhibition, Mon's Future, a solo show of the work of Danish photographer Fryd Frydendahl, curated
by Megumi Tomomitsu.
Baxter St at the
Camera Club of New York presents As Object, an exhibition of photographs with watercolors, video, sculpture and collage
by artist Pam Butler, curated
by Leigh Ledare.
Baxter St at the
Camera Club of New York presents Let Me Hold Your Breath, an exhibition consisting of projected images and installation
by artist duo Tal Gilboa and Elizabeth Stehl Kleberg, curated
by Zachary Lucero.
Baxter St at the
Camera Club of New York presents stages, an exhibition of photographs and drawings
by 2016 Workspace Resident Katherine Hubbard.
The exhibition currently on view at Baxter Street at the
Camera Club of New York (CCNY), titled «Deep Shade,» is the result of what happens when you take images made for fast consumption (think speeding
by a roadside billboard or flipping through instagram) and remake them within the conventions of more considered viewing.
In 1907, the school's
camera club took a field trip to Alfred Stieglitz's Little Galleries of the Photo - Secession at 291 Fifth Avenue, where they saw an exhibition of photographs
by members of the Photo - Secession, including Gertrude Käsebier, Edward Steichen, Clarence H. White, Frederick H. Evans, and Joseph Turner Keiley.
Baxter St at the
Camera Club of New York is pleased to present Walking in Lightness, the first NYC solo exhibition
by 2017 Workspace Resident Amanda Gutiérrez.
This much is clear when you walk into the Baxter St. gallery at the
Camera Club of New York and are visually assaulted
by the dearth of documents — culled from the files the FBI maintained on Barnette's father Rodney, who was the founder of the Black Panther Compton chapter — barely readable, covering the long, main wall.
She is a recent graduate of Bard College International Center of Photography where she earned an M.F.A. in Advanced Photographic Studies, and has exhibited internationally and regionally in solo and group shows including, The Exquisite Landscape, ICP, New York; Interiority Complex: A Conversation Series,
Camera Club of New York, New York; and «Wrestling with the Image: Caribbean Interventions», organized
by the World Bank and the OAS, and «About Change».
In 2014, Charlotte Cotton awarded her first place in the
Camera Club of New York's Annual Juried Competition, she was a Nominee for the Baum Award, received Honorable Mention for the John Clarence Laughlin Award, and was selected as a Top 50 Photographer
by Critical Mass..
By the 1950s, the ubiquity of the pinup, combined with the popularity of
camera clubs for hobbyists, resulted in a burgeoning cottage industry for amateur girlie pictures like the ones seen here.
This circa late 1920s silver gelatin photograph still life with pale flowers in a vase is
by Dr. F.W. Buraky, a member of the Chicago
Camera Club.
The Center for Photography at Woodstock is pleased to announce our 2018 artists - in - residence, selected
by a guest panel including Lisa Henry, Independent Curator and Consultant for Riverside Art Museum, and Libby Pratt, Director of Baxter Street
Camera Club of New York.
Press Release: 2018 WOODSTOCK AIR The Center for Photography at Woodstock is pleased to announce our 2018 artists - in - residence, selected
by a guest panel including Lisa Henry, Independent Curator and Consultant for Riverside Art Museum, and Libby Pratt, Director of Baxter Street
Camera Club of New York.
Baxter St at the
Camera Club of New York presents Let Me Hold Your Breath, an exhibition featuring projected images and installation
by artist duo Tal Gilboa and Elizabeth Stehl Kleberg