Pictures at an Exhibition – Off the Clock

Two of my prints were just selected for an exhibit of 100 prints of personal work: Off the Clock APA LA American Photographic Artists Curated Exhibition.  The curator was Gordon Baldwin, former Associate Curator of Photographs at the J.Paul Getty Museum.  The opening reception will be June 16th in the Helms Building in LA and then the gallery moves to two of the top ad agencies in the US for the next four months: TBWA\Chiat\Day in LA for the Summer and Crispin Porter + Bogusky in Boulder for the Fall.  Here are the two images:

Surfing Rincon Point in Santa Barbara, California.

Falling Water #1

1st place winner: 2010 APA Awards

APA:    What is it?  American Psychological  Association, American Psychiatric Association (close!), American Planning Association, American Poolplayers Association, American Payroll Association, American Philological Association or best yet: the Asia Pacific Alliance for sexual and reproductive health.

No – it is: American Photographic Artists (earlier this year it used to Be Advertising Photographers of America) and I learned this week that my entry in the action category took 1st place.  Stoked!

In their own words the The APA Awards are:

  • To encourage and recognize outstanding work, reflecting personal vision and technical excellence.
  • To increase market opportunities through vigorous, multi-faceted, post-competition promotion.
  • To educate and inspire.

In keeping with the APA brand, the competition encourages work that reflects forethought and planning, is message driven, (away from generic images) and without a doubt exemplifies technical excellence.

Here is the image.

If it looks familiar, that’s ’cause it is currently (by coincidence) a spread in the October issue of Men’s Journal.

This image was a planned capture – I knew the storm swell was coming and arranged for a loaner of a 600mm lens from Nikon Pro Services.  I think the resulting perspective, the texture of the foam (so unusual!) and that it acts as a reflector back up into the wave makes this image work well. Many of my shots now are created – not capturing the moment as much as planning those moments with friends and models.  My body of work recently is all about creating dynamic portraiture.

UPDATE 10/21 – a news item from Aurora Photos


PDN Faces portraiture 2010 winner

A photograph of Kevin Brown won in the Environmental Portraiture category of PDN’s Faces 2010 competition.  Photo District News is the go-to magazine for pro photographers and industry creatives. This is featured in the July issue. I share the pages with other winners in Celebrity/Editorial, Animals and Self-Portrait categories.

Kevin is situated 2600 feet above the treetops on a multi-day ascent of El Capitan in Yosemite Valley.  We had climbed Excalibur, a hard and seldom climbed line that was beating us up with its wide body-width cracks. Near the top we traversed from Excalibur to link up with the Salathe route and finish the final headwall, above which this shot was taken just after sunset.  I’m anchored, leaning way out as far as I can with my feet propped against the outer edge of the red porta-ledge (sleeps 2) to get the full sweep down the face to the trees.

The image is a special one for me as Kevin passed away last fall. An incredible athlete and human being, Kevin had taught me how to climb Big Walls 20 years ago.  Yesterday I took his young son out climbing on local crags in Santa Barbara, just like Dad.