Highly recommending this new title from Infinitum Nihil… real heart rending prose.Learn more over at Open Culture

Highly recommending this new title from Infinitum Nihil… real heart rending prose.

Learn more over at Open Culture

Great to see the good photo neighbors here in our humble little corner of Vermont getting press!

Photograph by Mikael Kennedy
Tonight in his hometown of Randolph, Vermont, photographer Mikael Kennedy will be exhibiting a collection of his favorite photographs at First Light Studios. To see more of Mikael’s work, visit his website here — for more information on the gallery, visit here.
via timelightbox:

Great to see the good photo neighbors here in our humble little corner of Vermont getting press!

Photograph by Mikael Kennedy

Tonight in his hometown of Randolph, Vermont, photographer Mikael Kennedy will be exhibiting a collection of his favorite photographs at First Light Studios. To see more of Mikael’s work, visit his website here — for more information on the gallery, visit here.


via timelightbox:

When we acknowledge that each one of us lives in service to each other, we realize that there can be no separation, no real isolation, that indeed we are all connected to each other and everything around us… there is a true sense of belonging, of being individually and communally required. Camille Seaman
I have frequently been accused of deliberately twisting subject matter to my point of view. Above all, I know that life for a photographer cannot be a matter of indifference. Opinion often consists of a kind of criticism. But criticism can come out of love. It is important to see what is invisible to others - perhaps the look of hope or the look of sadness. Also, it is always the instantaneous reaction to oneself that produces a photograph. Robert Frank, A Statement (U.S. Camera Annual, p. 115) in Photographers on Photography

E.O. Wilson on Ideation, Innovation & Developing Solutions

Ideas emerge when a part of the real or imagined world is studied for it’s own sake. Of foremost importance is a thorough well organized knowledge of all that is known of the relevant entities and processes that might be involved in that domain that you propose to enter.
—E.O. Wilson

We think we understand the rules when we become adults but what we really experience is a narrowing of the imagination. David Lynch
There is a tendency at every important but difficult crossroad to pretend that it’s not really there. Bill McKibben
Tadanori Yokoo. Shambhala #9 of 14.Japanese, Shôwa era, 1974. Silkscreen with offset text, 85cm x 57cm.
everything becomes illuminated
On a recent trip to the North Shore in Massachusetts as a visiting artist to the Photography Department at Montserrat College of Art, I was fortunate to reconnect with a number of old friends & artist colleagues—finding great inspiration in doing so.
In addition, I was able to study the Seeking Shambhala exhibition at Boston MFA:

Shambhala is a Sanskrit word describing a mythical land whose exact location is hidden behind mist of snow-capped mountains, where peace reigns, wealth abounds, and there is no illness. The West was first introduced to the concept as “Shangri-la” in the 1930s book and film Lost Horizon, but Shambhala, in both physical and spiritual senses, has been part of Tibetan Buddhist art and culture for centuries.

Beyond having an opportunity to revisit the poignant work of Gonkar Gyatso in this exhibition—a contemporary artist dealing with issues of Tibetan identity in exile—and view a varied collection of 17th century Thangka paintings, I was introduced anew to the work of Tadanori Yokoo, a prolific Japanese graphic artist and painter.
a synesthesia of symbolism
Fascinating enough, Yokoo is said to have stumbled upon the concept of Shambhala while researching UFOs. In his edition of the same name, 14 vividly hued silkscreen prints from 1974 are on display in sequence. In Shambhala, Yokoo cleverly interplays underlying rhythms of Buddhist, Hindu & Occult iconography—all in a visual framework built upon appropriated incense box images, rich pop-art alchemy and various inter-linked visual metaphors. The mixture of iconography and relationship suggested by both form and proximity in his work is quite evocative—the multi-layered execution an inspiring exploration of media, representation & meaning—transcending the sometimes literal limitations of graphic design and print making mediums with great depth in both concept and execution.

Tadanori Yokoo. Shambhala #9 of 14.
Japanese, Shôwa era, 1974. Silkscreen with offset text, 85cm x 57cm.


everything becomes illuminated

On a recent trip to the North Shore in Massachusetts as a visiting artist to the Photography Department at Montserrat College of Art, I was fortunate to reconnect with a number of old friends & artist colleagues—finding great inspiration in doing so.

In addition, I was able to study the Seeking Shambhala exhibition at Boston MFA:

Shambhala is a Sanskrit word describing a mythical land whose exact location is hidden behind mist of snow-capped mountains, where peace reigns, wealth abounds, and there is no illness. The West was first introduced to the concept as “Shangri-la” in the 1930s book and film Lost Horizon, but Shambhala, in both physical and spiritual senses, has been part of Tibetan Buddhist art and culture for centuries.

Beyond having an opportunity to revisit the poignant work of Gonkar Gyatso in this exhibition—a contemporary artist dealing with issues of Tibetan identity in exile—and view a varied collection of 17th century Thangka paintings, I was introduced anew to the work of Tadanori Yokoo, a prolific Japanese graphic artist and painter.

a synesthesia of symbolism

Fascinating enough, Yokoo is said to have stumbled upon the concept of Shambhala while researching UFOs. In his edition of the same name, 14 vividly hued silkscreen prints from 1974 are on display in sequence. In Shambhala, Yokoo cleverly interplays underlying rhythms of Buddhist, Hindu & Occult iconography—all in a visual framework built upon appropriated incense box images, rich pop-art alchemy and various inter-linked visual metaphors. The mixture of iconography and relationship suggested by both form and proximity in his work is quite evocative—the multi-layered execution an inspiring exploration of media, representation & meaning—transcending the sometimes literal limitations of graphic design and print making mediums with great depth in both concept and execution.