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Michael Grace-Martin

~ Photography, Art & Life

Michael Grace-Martin

Tag Archives: photography

Fashion/”Film” Photo Shoot

04 Wednesday Apr 2012

Posted by mgm in All, Fashion/Glamour, MGM's Photos

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fashion, film, photography

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After a lot of discussions over email and Facebook, I was finally able to arrange a photo shoot with Liz and Danielle.

We were working with a couple of scenario “concepts” that I’ll be explaining in a little more detail shortly. Also, I’ll be providing many more photos from the shoot.

In the meantime, here are a few photos from the photo session to get things started…:-).

Liz and Danielle by Michael Grace-Martin
Liz and Danielle by Michael Grace-Martin
Liz and Danielle by Michael Grace-Martin

Liz and Danielle by Michael Grace-Martin
Liz and Danielle by Michael Grace-Martin
Ennui (Liz and Danielle) by Michael Grace-Martin

Liz and Danielle by Michael Grace-Martin
Liz and Danielle by Michael Grace-Martin
Liz and Danielle by Michael Grace-Martin

Liz and Danielle by Michael Grace-Martin
Liz by Michael Grace-Martin
Liz and Danielle by Michael Grace-Martin

Danielle by Michael Grace-Martin



Visit Michael's Art Photography Portfolio at SaatchiArt.com!

Street Photography: New York City, St Patrick’s Day Weekend 2012

22 Thursday Mar 2012

Posted by mgm in All, MGM's Photos, Street

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new york city, nyc, photography, street

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My wife and I celebrated our 14th wedding anniversary this year by visiting New York City. We had a very good time!

Being a photographer who likes to shoot street photography, I took some shots while we walked and traveled about the city. In an effort to stave off being too blatant in my photography during our stay (which was supposed to be more about our anniversary than about me taking photos!), I brought along my compact Olympus point-and-shoot that I could keep in a little pouch at my side most of the time.

I’ve now uploaded most of the ones I liked or which had some special meaning. Maybe a few more, but these are the majority of the ones I’ll be uploading.

Chinatown, NYC, March 2012
The World Stage, SoHo, NYC, March 2012
Midtown Train (NYC March 2012)

From the Top, New Museum of Contemporary Art, SoHo, NYC, March 2012
Marisol Escobar’s LBJ (with blue window), MoMA, NYC, March 2012
Hot Dog Stand, Midtown, NYC, March 2012

MOMA Courtyard, NYC, March 2012
Midtown Restaurant, NYC, March 2012
SoHo Rooftop, NYC, March 2012

W 53rd St, Midtown, NYC, March 2012
Rainy Day, Midtown, NYC, March 2012
W 53rd St, Midtown, NYC, March 2012

Gold Marilyn Monroe (Andy Warhol), MoMA, NYC, March 2012
Girls Just Wanna Have Fun, Moma, NYC, March 2012
Mulberry St, Little Italy, NYC, March 2012

Prince St Taxis, SoHo, NYC, March 2012
W 53rd St, Midtown, NYC, March 2012
Unconventional Chic, Manhattan, March 2012

Photographer, MoMA, NYC, March 2012
Subway Stairs, NYC, March 2012
Amtrak Dining Car, Hudson Valley Amtrak, March 2012

It’s Art, Dammit!, MoMA, NYC, March 2012
Shop Window, Schenectady, NY (March 2012)
Prince St in SoHo, NYC, March 2012

City Garden Sculpture, MoMA, NYC, March 2012
1 Ave and 1st, SoHo, NYC, March 2012
W 53rd St, Midtown, NYC, March 2012

Community Garden at Midnight Lower East Side, NYC, March 2012
Teenage Conversations, Greenwich Village, NYC, March 2012
The Birth of the World (Joan Miró), MoMA, NYC, March 2012

Outside Penn Station, NYC, March 2012
Red Paper Crumpled, MoMA, NYC, March 2012
Train Ride, Hudson Valley Amtrak, March 2012

Lower East Side, NYC, March 2012
W 53rd St, Midtown, NYC, March 2012
El Sombrero, SoHo, NYC, March 2012

Warhol’s Elvis, MoMA, NYC, March 2012
Man with Yellow Pants (Michelangelo Pistoletto), MOMA, NYC, March 2012
Terrace View, SoHo, NYC, March 2012

Pinkyotto in SoHo, NYC, March 2012
FDR Drive, Lower East Side, NYC, March 2012
Sherman Show (pencil mustache), Lower East Side, NYC, March 2012

Nighttime Bus, Midtown, NYC, March 2012
SoHo, NYC, March 2012
W 53rd St, Midtown, NYC, March 2012

Ballaro (East Village, NYC, March 2012)
Part of Ungovernables Exhibit, New Museum of Contemporary Art, SoHo, NYC, March 2012
Part of Ungovernables Exhibit, New Museum of Contemporary Art, SoHo, NYC, March 2012

Rain in Midtown, NYC, March 2012
Window Terrace, SoHo, NYC, March 2012
Window Terrace, SoHo, NYC, March 2012

Cheep’s, East Village, NYC, March 2012
Midtown Crossing, NYC, March 2012
Midtown, NYC, March 2012

MoMA, NYC, March 2012
Help, Falling!, MoMA, NYC, March 2012
The Line Outside, MoMA, NYC, March 2012

Rainy Day in Midtown, NYC, March 2012
Sign Holder, Midtown, NYC, March 2012
NYC, East Village, March 2012

W 53rd St, Midtown, NYC, March 2012
Streets of SoHo, NYC, March 2012
Still Life with Flowers (Juan Gris), MOMA, NYC, March 2012

MOMA, NYC, March 2012
Empathic Eye Poking, MoMA, NYC, March 2012
Radio City Music Hall, NYC, March 2012

W 53rd St, Midtown, NYC, March 2012
Streets, SoHo, NYC, March 2012
Outside Penn Station, NYC, March 2012

Competitive Messaging, SoHo, NYC, March 2012
Out of the Subway at Midtown, NYC, March 2012
New Museum of Contemporary Art, SoHo, NYC, March 2012

Train Station, Rhinecliff, NY, March 2012
Afghan Restaurant, NYC, March 2012
Lower East Side Subway, NYC, March 2012

Onlookers, MoMA, NYC, March 2012
View from a Train, Schenectady, NY, March 2012
Through the Train Window, Hudson Valley Amtrak, March 2012

Street Level (Midtown, NYC, March 2012)
Block Drug Store, East Village, NYC, March 2012
Midtown, NYC, March 2012

little Cupcake lover, SoHo, NYC, March 2012
Magic Carpet, New Museum of Contemporary Art, SoHo, NYC, March 2012
Bleecker & Broadway, NYC, March 2012

Jobs, NYC, March 2012
Orthodoxy, Midtown Subway, NYC, March 2012
St Patrick Day Revellers(!), NYC, March 2012

Playground, Little Italy, NYC, March 2012
Little Italy Restaurant Window NYC, March 2012
McCracken’s Pink Plank + Guard, MOMA, NYC, March 2012

Underwear & Construction on Lafayette, NYC, March 2012
Midtown, NYC, March 2012



Visit Michael's Art Photography Portfolio at SaatchiArt.com!

Aside

Vision Trumps Technique

20 Tuesday Mar 2012

Posted by mgm in All, Commentary

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photography, technique, vision

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Vision trumps technique.



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Book Review: Cindy Sherman’s Untitled Film Stills

19 Monday Mar 2012

Posted by mgm in All, Book Reviews

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art, book, cindy, moma, photography, review, sherman

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Untitled Film Still #21, 1978 (©1997 The Museum of Modern Art, New York)

I recently saw the Cindy Sherman Retrospective at the Museum of Modern Art (MOMA) in New York. (By the way, I highly recommend seeing it if you haven’t.)

One phase of her work presented in the exhibit was her black & white “film stills”. Sherman started these in 1977 when she was twenty-three and completed the series in 1980.

Untitled Film Still #35, 1979 (©1997 The Museum of Modern Art, New York)

I liked this phase enough that I actually purchased the book published by MOMA containing the entire series.

The book begins with an essay by Sherman about the making of this series. She talks about how it was probably influenced by her extensive exposure to television as a child. Her time working for the experimental filmmaker Paul Sharits at the State College at Buffalo was also an influence.

Untitled Film Still #7. 1978 (©1997 The Museum of Modern Art, New York)

She gives some history of her studio work environment, both in Buffalo and later in New York City. She got a part-time job at Artists Space, which helped to pay her rent and also kept her in touch with contemporary art and the gallery scene.

Untitled Film Still #6. 1977 (©1997 The Museum of Modern Art, New York)

She gives more history and then gets into the details of how many of the individual images were made. I found it all quite interesting because it gives you a good idea what was going through her head when she made this series.

Untitled Film Still #3. 1977 (©1997 The Museum of Modern Art, New York)

I would like to point out three things she mentions that I found particularly interesting…

  1. She had various people helping her take these photos (including her father), and they were not experienced photographers. Sherman says she made sure they framed the shots with lots of room around her so she could crop it the way she wanted afterward…and some were cropped extensively!
  2. Her negatives were technically quite bad and required a lot of dodging and burning, much to her printers’ chagrin.
  3. She admits that she’s gotten “a little sick of these pictures” because [I presume] she’s looked them over so much, she’d rather not have to keep looking at them!

Untitled Film Still #14, 1978 (©1997 The Museum of Modern Art, New York)

I really enjoyed this book and the inside view it gives of Sherman’s thoughts, intentions, methods, and environment. I would recommend it to anyone who enjoys fine art photography or aspires to create fine art photographs, even if you are not interested in the genre of “self-portraits” that her work primarily falls into.

Untitled Film Still #48, 1979 (©1997 The Museum of Modern Art, New York)

It’s a seemingly honest and informative book about what goes on in the mind and life of a hugely successful art photographer. And if you enjoy black & white photos, they’re great to look at, regardless of whether the negatives suck…:-).

You can purchase this book at the MOMA bookstore.

 



Visit Michael's Art Photography Portfolio at SaatchiArt.com!

Everyone is a Photographer Now

12 Monday Mar 2012

Posted by mgm in Writing

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photography, poem

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It used to be
a photograph wasn’t free
and the method was surrounded by mystery.

But then Kodak said
just press a button,
we will do the rest
making your photos look their best.

And Land tried his hand
making the Polaroid cam
which many found hard
to avoid.

But it was the computer mob
that did the job,
with its electrons
the camera maker dons.

Now they’re in every device
like an infestation of lice,
and…

Everyone is a Photographer Now.

–(c) Michael Grace-Martin

[See a related post at another blog]

 



Visit Michael's Art Photography Portfolio at SaatchiArt.com!

Candid Photography and Signal Detection Theory

09 Friday Mar 2012

Posted by mgm in All, Commentary

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aesthetics, photography, signal detection, theory

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I have a background in Cognitive Psychology (M.A.) and it occurred to me that candid photography–whether it be street photography or candid event photography–is in fact an act of “signal detection”.

For those unfamiliar with signal detection theory, here’s a simple description from a Hanover College Psychology web page:

A person is faced with a stimulus that is very faint or confusing.  For simplicity’s sake lets us call this stimulus a signal.  The person must make a decision, is the signal there or not.  What makes this situation confusing and difficult is the presences of other mess that is similar to the signal.  Let us call this mess noise.

What makes this different from traditional threshold theories is that the subject makes a decision, a cognitive act, as to whether the signal is present or not.  This basic sensory act of determining if a stimulus occurred now is understood to have a cognitive component.

As a photographer, the signal you are trying to detect is “a good and/or interesting photograph”. However, there are usually lots of visual stimuli available in the immediate surroundings (i.e., “noise” or “mess”), and successfully identifying a “signal” (in our case, a good or interesting photograph) in this “mess” of stimuli often requires an experienced and/or trained eye.

Not only do you have the photographer’s training and experience to consider, but there’s also the situation itself.

In my experience, situations can vary greatly in terms of signal. At an event like a fashion show, festival, or parade there’s commonly a lot of “signal” available–i.e., many good or interesting photo possibilities present. In other situations, you may find it difficult to find *any* signal/good photos due to poor lighting, plain surrounds, lack of activity, etc.

One of the biggest challenges for a professional photographer is to find whatever “signal” is available regardless of the situation and the presence of distracting or misleading stimuli that are mere “noise”. Sometimes, this requires quite of bit of imagination and creative visualization.

One of my most satisfying experiences as a photographer is finding or detecting “signal” where others see only “noise”.

Maybe psychology is in fact a great background for a photographer…;p.



Visit Michael's Art Photography Portfolio at SaatchiArt.com!

Catering to the Masses

08 Thursday Mar 2012

Posted by mgm in All, Commentary

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photography, popularity, quality, work

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It is assumed among much of the population that all photographers and artists in general are aiming to make work that appeals to the greatest number of persons and gets the largest possible number of views or “likes” as possible. We can describe this quite simply as “catering to the masses”.

This assumption makes sense in terms of commercial considerations: usually the more “popular” a work is, the greater its money-earning potential.

Talk to any thoughtful artist you know, however, and you’ll discover there’s often a disconnect between the work they make that sells and the work they make that is actually personally important to them.

Each artist has his or her own unique trajectory of artistic growth and it is obviously more internally guided than outwardly or commercially guided. But artists have to eat and pay for a roof over their head. So they create popular works that sell…or they get a “day job” or find a partner that/who support them financially.

The assumption that artistic success = popularity/teeming congratulations seems to run rampant and can lead to artists giving up on work that actually has the greatest potential for providing them with true growth and their audiences with work that is truly insightful.

How many artistic geniuses died penniless because their artistic accomplishments were not recognized during their lifetimes? Of course, being a “starving artist” does not mean your work is good…and I’m not advocating that being penniless is a good idea…for anyone!

The main point here is that the quality or genius of an artist’s work cannot be evaluated by popularity or commercial success and that a lot of truly astute art may never be made because people with artistic ambitions think that it is.

This is not an original thought but it stands repeating:

Truly good or great work is not always rewarded with money or popularity.

 

 



Visit Michael's Art Photography Portfolio at SaatchiArt.com!

Clever versus Truth in Photography

06 Tuesday Mar 2012

Posted by mgm in All, Commentary

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art, cleverness, photography, truth

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Clever photographs are certainly nice to look at, but what about a photograph’s “truth”? If push comes to shove, I give truth the nod against cleverness.

“Clever” photos make use of unconventional perspectives, juxtapositions, scale, or framing to create an interesting image, sometimes sacrificing the viewer’s ability to learn anything useful or authentic about the pictured subject matter.

I’m not arguing against any cleverness in photography. Ideally, a photo is both clever and shows you something about the true nature of the subject matter. However, cleverness for cleverness’ sake–to the point of obscuring or distorting accurate information about the pictured subject–is unsatisfying and disappointing to me*.

Here’s what I like about photography: it obediently captures visual reality. The photographer “steers” the camera to capture the reality s/he sees and is interested in, but the camera simply records whatever is focused on it’s light sensitive image capturing medium (film or digital sensor) when the shutter button is pressed.

I like that.

The photographer is admittedly influencing what is captured and how, so the photograph taken is not at all immune from the photographer’s decisions, views, beliefs, or values; but it doesn’t have to be. Variation among different photographers is itself an interesting aspect of photography….and is maybe an additional topic for another day.

The key point for me is I want photos that tell me something truthful and useful–something about the way things really are.

Understanding life begins with an accurate view of what life is made of. Photographs that do not mislead in the service of “cleverness” can help in that quest.

*(Note: if a photographer has purposely created misleading images for the purposes of entertainment, what I’ve said above does not apply.)



Visit Michael's Art Photography Portfolio at SaatchiArt.com!

Fine Art Nudes by Michael Grace-Martin

05 Monday Mar 2012

Posted by mgm in All, MGM's Photos, Nudes

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art, female, fine, nude, photography

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The fine art nude holds a special place in Michael’s photography career. It’s the second photographic subject Michael has pursued in earnest, after only the subject of children.

He began with self-portraits, but soon progressed to working with other models in late 2003. The photograph “Playing into the Light” (a photo of a woman playing a violin topless) is from that first session with another model. Since that session, Michael has worked with various models in various settings: homes, an old dance studio, an old barn, a marshy swamp, a gorge creek, and even on a rooftop.

Michael prefers presenting his nudes in black & white and sepia, but uses color when the colors in the photo appeal to him.

These fine art nude images and more can be found at Art vs Wall Gallery.











Visit Michael's Art Photography Portfolio at SaatchiArt.com!

Sarah Ellis by Michael Grace-Martin

04 Sunday Mar 2012

Posted by mgm in All, eBooks, MGM's Photos, Nudes

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art, female, fine, nudes, photography, women

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Sarah Ellis 2009 by Michael Grace-Martin

Back in late October of 2009, I did a fine art nude photo session with semi-famous fine art nude model Sarah Ellis. Sarah has posed for many photographers–famous (including people like Renée Jacobs and Terry Richardson) and not famous.

Our session went 3 hours, and in addition to shooting stills for those 3 hours, I also had a videographer shooting along side me.

Sarah Ellis (not her real name) was a joy to work with and very professional. I hope to work with her again someday, but it has become quite a bit more difficult since she moved away from Upstate New York out to Seattle, Washington.

Sarah Ellis Video

I’ve only posted a few short clips (just over a minute each) of that 3 hours of video at my YouTube channel. However, I’m offering one longer uncut version of a session we did in one of the bedrooms. It is approximately 21.5 minutes long and you will see and hear me and Sarah talking about different poses, angles, lighting, etcetera.

The video is a large (over 500 megabytes) 854×480 resolution digital file in .MP4 format–a video format that plays on most computers and devices. You can download and play it on your computer for $6.00. or “rent” and watch it for 30 days for just $3.00.
Sarah Ellis Photo Session: Video #4

Buy & Download for $6 or Rent for $3:

Buy or Rent this Video

 

Sarah Ellis Photo Prints

Want a more “physical” likeness of Sarah? I’ve chosen 15 of the most popular prints from the photo session and printed them as 15 full-bleed, gelatin sliver (professional Kodak) 4″x6″ prints and put them into their own convenient 4×6 clamshell box. You can open the box and slowly look through the stack of prints–much like you would with a high-quality photo book–for enjoyment, inspiration, and provocation at your own leisurely pace. I will ship anywhere in the US.

Here are thumbnails of the 15 photo prints (click to see larger):

contact_sheet

Fifteen 4″x6″ Photo Prints in Clamshell Box: $29.95

Buy Box of Prints

 

Sarah Ellis eBook

If you would like to see the photos we got in book form, you can purchase an ebook containing the best 72 photos from the session as awesome high-quality images for just $6.00. You won’t be disappointed, I promise. Here is a low-resolution video preview of the eBook:

https://www.michaelgracemartin.com/main/wp-content/uploads/2014/04/book_vid2.mp4

**** Fine Art Nude Photography eBook by Michael Grace-Martin

eBook in PDF Format: $6.00

Buy this eBook

 

[Weekly Nude Photo List]

 



Visit Michael's Art Photography Portfolio at SaatchiArt.com!

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