Altpick Members 2011 Image Round-Up – Artists Choice Continued…

Nadine Takvorian

Clare Nicholas

Wendy Wray

Stefano Morri

Paul Garland

Philip Cheaney

Christopher Marion Thomas

Lucie Rice

Ellen Weinstein

Wacso

Lindsay Beach

David Fullarton

Jenni Salvia

Jason Greenberg

Wendy Ding

Selina Alko

Elvis Swift

Jacob Thomas

Margaret Hurst

Jack Malloy

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Altpick Members’ 2011 Image Round-Up – Photography

Altpick Members were asked to pick their favorite image that they shot this year.  Here’s part two of the photographers’ choices.

Take 2. And click.

Montalbetti + Campbell

Brian Cummings

Brook Pifer

Jay Watson

Laura Hanifin

Rose Pacific

Jonnie Miles

CJ Isaac

Zave Smith

Kim Lowe

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Altpick Members : 2011 Image Round-Up : Artist’s Choice : Part 2

[ART]ist Choice. Part 2.

Richard Borge

Arlen Schumer

John Lacko

Kristy Caldwell

Mark Collins

Oliver Wetter

Edel Rodgriuez

Viktor Koen

Whitney Sherman

Tansy Myer

Giovannina Colalillo

Gant Powell

Clare Ultimo

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Altpick Members’ 2011 Image Round-Up – Photographer’s Choice

As we celebrate the holidays, we also would like to celebrate the incredible talent on Altpick.com.  Altpick Photographers were asked to choose their favorite image that they shot this year.  Here is Part One of the 2011 Image Round-Up – Photographer’s Choice. We like.

Take 1. Click.

Scott Lowden

It is a portrait on a story about an architect couple who work out of their home. Shot for San Francisco Magazine.

Eric Millette

Art Brewer

Stephanie Diani

James Porto

Kevin Steele

Robert Houser

Tom McKenzie

Dana Hursey

Dina Litovsky

Laura Crosta

George Mattei

Tom Atwood

Glen Wexler

Ryan Ketterman

Walker Esner

See the Illustrators’ choices here:

Stay tuned for tomorrow’s next installment!

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Altpick Members 2011 Image Round-Up – Artists’ Choice

As we celebrate the holidays, we also would like to celebrate the incredible talent on Altpick.com.  Altpick Members were asked to choose their favorite image that they created this year.  Here is Part One of the 2011 Image Round-Up – Artists’ Choice. We like.

[ART]ist Choice. Part 1.

Kim Rosen

Sergio Baradat

Hugh D'Andrade

Alex Fine

Graeme Bandeira

Barbara Kosoff

James Benn

Liz Amini-Holmes

Ari Warner

Jing Jing

Alicia Buelow

Johanna Goodman

Kurt Ketchum

Antony Hare

Denise Hilton Campbell

Vlad Alvarez

David Cooper

Karen Klassen

David Fullarton

Joanne Tolkoff

To see more fabulous talent, go to Altpick.com.

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Marcus Philipp Sauer Takes Stockholm with Audi

Marcus Philipp Sauer’s Audi Commercial was partially filmed in Stockholm with a stand-in car. ‘The city was perfect for us because it’s one of the youngest European cities, very creative, modern and the Swedes love the internet. It’s perfect for a high-tech multimedia car.” Sauer comments. The car itself was shot in Spain at a secret location.

“Like wings on my back, lifting me up, get a better view of the city I love …” And so begins the love note to Stockholm written by Audi delivered so lyrically by Sauer.


Directed by Marcus Philipp Sauer

DoP: Ingmar Lindner
Art Direction: Jessica Gronau
Agency : Philipp und Keuntje GmbH
Production: Contra
Postproduction: Farbrau

To see more of Marcus’ work go to his Altpick page and his website.

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“Steinen mit Beinen” is German for “Kegs with Legs”

John Lacko

This past October, John Lacko did a film industry poster for a Colorado agency called Mrs. K who hosted an Oktoberfest party for local film agencies this year.

“Kegs with Legs” is an annual theme party for film and motion design agencies around Colorado. Each year one of the local agencies is assigned to host the party and to create a theme for the event. This year’s theme was “Oktoberfest” and Mrs K’s Creative Director, Jeanne Kopeck wanted to top past parties with an over the top poster design.

“Steinen mit Beinen” is German for “Kegs with Legs” and she called upon Lacko Illustration to breathe life into this campy, German poster to announce the upcoming festivities.

“I decided that traditional illustration wasn’t going to be enough for the poster and that I need to create something more surreal. Working with Mrs K’s husband – photographer Peter Thron – and account exec-turned-model Brianna Kapell, we staged a St. Pauli style photo shoot to add particular charm to the final product!”

Giant beer steins and pretzels are staples at Oktoberfest so John opted to make the name of the party the focus of the event by designing real Gothic style pretzel letters which were baked from scratch! John crafted a custom font, made real pretzel dough and then he and his wife baked several versions of each letter. Lacing the letters with butter for a golden brown shell and topping them with
bright white speciality pretzel salt gave the letters an old world authentic German feel.

Each letter is unique and with the exception of some color correction after the letters were photographed. No photoshop manipulation of the pretzel font was used nor harmed during the process. Squeeze-bottle mustard accents and letters finish the piece. John then assembled the elements with starbursts and a checkered wood
textured backdrop.

“Baking and building the pretzels with my wife was the best part of the project. After hearing about all the extra hours we put into the art and realizing we didn’t actually get to eat any of the home-made pretzels we baked, Mrs K’s mailed us a GIANT box of Kim & Scott’s Gourmet Pretzels to reward us for all of our hard work! It wasn’t a traditional poster design but it was by far our favorite project
of the year,”  Lacko commented.

The final poster which was originally printed at 22.0″ W x 28.0″ H. To which we say Prost!

Client:
Mrs K’s – Film Direction & Motion Design Agency
http://www.mrsk.tv/home.htm

Click here for Artist John Lacko’s website and Altpick.com page.

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Wednesday Tip Jar : Bill Frakes Gives Some Pro Tips

Bill Frakes is a Sports Illustrated Staff Photographer based in Florida who has worked in more than 125 countries [is that all?] for a wide variety of editorial and advertising clients. TV commercials, music videos and lately short documentaries.

Bill believes in being prepared. “So I know what I’m going to do when I get there. Getting to the location with my equipment, having it organized, having it ready, having it in perfect working condition.”

Years At It: 30. On the Road Jack: 315 days. Moleskin notebooks: 3. Tripods: 4,5,6. Camera bodies: a number. Lenses: 10 or 12. Dollies, rail systems, sliders and jibs, multiple lights: strobes for stills, hot lights for videos.

“When I started in this industry 30 years ago, my mom hand-stitched on my camera bags for me. I was worried about my cameras. She was worried about me. Today I rely on the Kata products for the exact same thing.”

On Kata Bags: Intelligent bags. Well-crafted. Made with passion, integrity and with love. Creative bags built by creative people for creative people.

From a well-seasoned heavy-duty user comes a super sharp snapshot of a product line that has withstood the enduring tests of a Sports Illustrated staff photographer. Peer to peer review that has circumnavigated the globe. A challenge taken and met. Kata Bags.

Bill’s arsenal in this video: OC-97, FlyBy 74 Pro Light, FlyBy 76 Pro Light, LW 99 Pro Light.

kata-bags.com

To see more of Bill Frakes’ work go to his Altpick page and his Personal Website.

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Tim Gough + Midweek Mountain Get Away

Tim Gough (pronounced like cough with a “G”) has created the album cover art for newly released EP Midweek Mountain GetAway. This new album blends the sounds of Philadelphia band Toy Soldiers and Nashville musician Jordan Hull.

The highlight of this project for Tim, “was working with some young and upcoming musicians.”

The birth of this EP came from Jordan Hull’s impromptu visit to Philadelphia to stay with friend and fellow musician Ron Gallo of Toy Soldiers. A midweek get away to the mountains, provided the album’s title.

With Tim being a SHA artist, Jordan was already familiar with Tim’s artwork and ironically; Ron had worked with Tim at a Philadelphia newspaper.

The purpose of the project for Tim was, “to create a striking piece of art that represents the experience of the collaboration of artist and their music.” Tim further explained, “I found it interesting that the musicians seem to have been influenced by their time during their escape to the mountains. Jordan told me about the trip and hinted at some of the antics they got into. I wanted to capture the collaborative nature of the album, but also that this group of artists experienced an adventure together. So going off what I knew of these guys and being inspired by the music they made during that time, I did my vision of the band on their adventure.”

Check out Tim’s album cover art and listen to the EP at www.itunes.com. We think you’ll find Tim’s artwork to be “striking” and the EP well worth the listen.

For more of Tim’s work check out his site, Scott Hull’s site and his Altpick page.

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Nicole Etienne + Duggal = The Silver Metallic Canvas

“ I was hooked like a Magpie to shiny things,” said Nicole Etienne the young painter acclaimed for her oil paintings on canvas, of her first encounter with print materials at Duggal. Painters are not among our most frequent clients, so when a painter is excited about what we offer, we are both intrigued and thrilled to assist. Nicole had lived close to Duggal for almost a decade before she moved to London. Remembering the window displays at our headquarters on twenty-third street, Nicole finally contacted us for a unique experiment she was beginning for Moveable Feast, her first solo exhibition in New York that would feature her photography and paintings in mixed media, for the first time.

Mesmerizing, Whimsical, Exotic, Transcendent, Magnificent are adjectives that are commonly associated with Nicole’s work. In Moveable Feast, Nicole introduces photography in her compositions to recreate visual narratives that invite viewers to take a deep dive through myth and imagination. Described as an artist who presents “objects as how she sees them, not how perspective tells us they should,” the unique interplay between reality and illusion in Nicole’s new series, celebrate photorealism and abstract painting in a powerful way.

The exhibit features thirteen canvases that Duggal printed on silver metallic canvas to complement the magical tone of her compositions. Each digitally printed canvas serves as the photographic base for Nicole’s spectacular settings and mysterious pasts that she painstakingly creates with her brushes and paints. In “Lift,” one of her pieces in the exhibit, Nicole paints a woman flying into her bed, which she has photographed. Evocative of Botticelli and Sam Taylor Wood at the same time, the subjects of her compositions seem literally to fly out of the canvas. In another one, a photograph of what appears to be a corridor in the Metropolitan Museum, Nicole paints fowl and wildlife, creating a surreal landscape that is instantly familiar and enchanting.

Says Nicole of the this new series, “In his memoir, Ernest Hemingway considers ‘A Moveable Feast’ to be the memory of a splendid place, one that lives on with the traveler, long after the experience is over and for the rest of his or her life. In these mixed media works on canvas, I conjure memories, recreating the experience of “A Moveable Feast” decades, even centuries, later. The process begins with photographing magnificent antique rooms and historic museums, delicious settings that are ripe with history and alive with splendor. I strive to connect with the essence and importance of what once transpired there and then manipulate the images to support the mystery and mood of these perceived experiences. Finally, I layer on my impressions, incorporating living organisms and fetishized objects, rendered with traditional techniques in oil and varnish, until each reconstruction is complete. Through this process I resurrect the dreams, emotions and ghosts of past happenings by sharing their stories with those who were unable to experience them first hand.” 

The application of photography in painting has been well documented—artists from Vermeer to Picasso have chosen to flatten the three-dimensional world into photography’s two dimensional one to help them paint photo realistic moments. However, mixing painting and photography so they become part of the same substrate is a new phenomenon made possible only by the advancement of digital printing techniques that allow painters to work on pre-printed canvas and fabric, materials that they are most accustomed to. There remains a slight stigma for painters who use photography and are therefore blamed for merely “copying” or enhancing what has been already been “captured”. Nicole’s cubist style, which  challenges our normal notions of perspective, renders the photography in the painting invisible, resulting in dreamy artworks that blur the line between photorealism and the abstract. Karen Irvine, a curator with the Museum of Contemporary Photography, says The moment of recognition that there is something else going on—that both attention and inattention are required to fully experience a piece—is often what gives artwork its impact…. Painting, typically best suited for still scenes, and photography, typically better at freezing movement, temporarily occupy each other’s domain. The presence of both mediums, in fact, forbids either from being transparent—having to shift between the two codes, the viewer becomes acutely aware of the process of looking, of the reconciliation required between sensory and cognitive understanding. Painting and photography accomplish this union in different ways.”  Nicole is first and foremost a storyteller who is genre-agnostic when it comes to expressing her imagination. For her, the photography is “the first step of the story, a hazy memory or space for an event to occur.”

The silver metallic canvas that each of Nicole Etienne’s photographs are printed on, magnifies the “illusion” of her paintings. The photographs were printed on our six-color printer with special UV inks that make a molecular bond with the canvas material leaving no traces of pigment or emulsion that a painter would need to be concerned about. Nicole worked with the Duggal team, while based in her studio in London, trusting us with the saturation and color matching of the process. She then painted over these “photo canvases” and stretched them onto traditional wooden frames at size 36” x 60.”

I have been in the visual graphics industry long enough to have seen artists push the boundaries of photography beyond realism into the illusionary— from manual airbrushing to Photoshop, artists have found inventive ways of expressing themselves with pictures by going beyond the mechanical reproduction of photography. It is exciting to work with painters like Nicole who are now turning to photography to invent new genres of mixed media art—a move that will hopefully put to bed the historic debate between photography and painting.

As Rod Slemmons of the Museum of Contemporary Photography says, what these artists (who combine photography with painting) also accomplish is to cause us to become self conscious when looking at both photographs and paintings, and to understand that what we see in both is a flat field of elaborately but narrowly represented information that combined may lead us to truths not present in either individually.”

Written by Baldev Duggal

Check Duggal’s website for more exciting printing options: http://duggal.com

 

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