introvert images - Todd Family Reunion 025

©introvert images

 

I knew my brother, photographer Charles Saadiq of introvert images, had skills with the camera, but it really hit home when he shot some of my family members during my most recent family reunion in Michigan. While his wife and I were chatting, Charles busied himself with guerrilla-style photography during the family picnic with his beautiful camera. While it seemed that he was just shooting quick snippets here and there, it became evident that he was capturing stories within fragments of angles. Not only did he take some amazing shots of the subtle nuances of my family members’ interactions, but he shot them in a way that made me see them in a different light, most especially so with this picture of my Uncle Jimmy. My uncle suddenly went form a wise-cracking, sometimes fiery character to a soulful, solemn work of art. I was speechless.

Please be sure to see more of Charles’ shots here at his Flickr stream. A big thanks to my bro for adding so much dignity and beauty to my family event!

Mar 142011
 

©Paul Lambermont

My friend and fellow artist Paul Lambermont creates beautiful artbooks fileld with his sketches, ideas and observations that are beautifully rendered as paintings and energetic drawings.  Paul likes to organize his sketchbooks around a theme and this time it’s all about torsoes.

© Paul Lambermont

What I love the most about the art books is that it combines the written word with imagery, a relationship that Paul likes to explore and was the predominant theme in the last group show that he curated called Twelve Lives in Queens County: A Collaborative Zine.

See more of Paul’s work by visiting his site!

 
A few days ago, AJ and I had the exciting opportunity to finally check out the Norman Rockwell exhibit at the Brooklyn Museum of Art. AJ and I were pretty geeked to see Rockwell’s work up close after growing up with his illustrations of old Saturday Evening Post magazine that we had as kids. As a young girl, I remember admiring his famous The Golden Rule  piece that hung in the living room of a family friend and wondering how in the world he manage to capture the details and the essence of each individual in that spectrum of races and ethnicities.
 
Norman Rockwell: Behind The Camera  explores Rockwell’s relationship with the camera as a basis for his numerous illustrations. I was very suprised (and pleased) to learn that he often worked off of staged photography scenes that allowed to construct the mood that he wanted to capture in his paintings. I was happy to learn that he worked from photographs because I  often do the same in my paintings. During his process,  Rockwell  would shoot each scene at different angles and then use a composite of his shots to create the final piece. Initially he used professional models but  later on he preferred using every day folk that he encountered in his daily interactions because they conveyed more of authentic feel of everyday people.
 
Rockwell’s works are especially astonishing in their attention to detail; it was obvious that the man was a perfectionist. In several of his paintings, he recreated minute details in the backgrounds of his works , such as the lettering and graphics on a comic book, or the repeated patterns of a wood grain. In fact, Rockwell was known for doing hundreds of sketches before diving into his works and even when he neared their completion, he sometimes would be so dissatisfied that he would start the same piece over again from scratch.

The Problem We All Live With by Norman Rockwell, 1964

 
I was especially thrilled  to see was Rockwell’s depiction of events pertaining to the Civil Rights Movement, such as the piece The Problem We All Live With, which commemorates  when Ruby Bridges became one of the first black students to attend public school New Orleans in the wake of the Brown v. Board of Education decision. The jolting work Southern Justice: Murder in Mississippi represents the murder of civil rights workers Andrew Goodman, Michael Schwerner and James Chaney.
 
If you can, I highly recommend that you pay a visit to the Brooklyn Museum’s exhibition on Rockwell’s work. Not only is it a visual porthole into American history, but it’s also a fitting homage to an artist that was a master of his craft.
Info:
Norman Rockwell: Behind The Camera
Dates: Now through April 10, 2011
Nov 102010
 
A few days ago, I happened to notice that the building where I work in has several hand-signed prints of Gordon Parks’ photographs. It was a terrific surprise since Parks is one of my heroes. I had been in this building for a few weeks and I had always noticed the pictures  as I walked into the entrance  but I  assumed that they were just paintings.It wasn’t until I got up close that I realized that not only were they photographs, but they belonged to Gordon Parks himself!  The soaring subject matter and the placement reminded me a lot of the lush paintings of flowers and desert scenes that Georgia O’Keeffe painted. I would try and snap a picture for you guys but I’m not sure security would like that, but stay tuned…
 
I call Gordon Parks my hero not only because of his artistry with his photographs, but also for how he lived his life as a true “Renaissance Man”. I remember watching the documentary Half Past Autumn about him a few years ago on HBO and being absolutely amazed by how he lived his life on his own terms. That he was able to forge ahead and create a multi-faceted career in the face of adversity and discrimination is truly remarkable and inspiring. To boldly explore the realms of poetry, photography, musical composition, film directing, writing fiction, just to name a few, requires an incredible sense of tenacity and insatiable hunger. “I had a great sense of curiosity and a great sense of just wanting to achieve,” he once said. “I just forgot I was black and walked in and asked for a job and tried to be prepared for what I was asking for.” (New York Times, March 8, 2006)
  
As I watched that documentary, I realized that I wanted to be like Gordon Parks. I wanted to have that curiosity and appetite to explore and decide for myself what I really want to do, rather than being told what I should humbly prefer. His New York Times obituary said it best:  
 
An iconoclast, Mr. Parks fashioned a career that resisted categorization. No matter what medium he chose for his self-expression, he sought to challenge stereotypes while still communicating to a large audience. In finding early acclaim as a photographer despite a lack of professional training, he became convinced that he could accomplish whatever he set his mind to. To an astonishing extent, he proved himself right.(Andy Grundberg, March 8, 2006)
 Coming upon those photographs was a nice jolt creative espresso that was much needed. It helped me to rediscover that place in my heart that whispers to me to continually pursue my dreams. Thank you, Mr. Parks.
 

In addition to totally digging the beautiful, color-popping art by artist Olimpia Zagnoli, I’m in love with this venue that she “won”. It’s open and crisp, making it the perfect environment to bring Zagnoli’s life to work.

See her more of her work here: http://www.olimpiazagnoli.com/.