Friday, December 30, 2011

Members get great deals!

Become a member of Marita Gootee, Fine Art Photographer on FACEBOOK and you will get connect with some great deals!! Not only will you be able to stay up to date with where my work is show but also be the 1st to learn about my new projects. Members will also get unheard of discounts on selected images. such as the one running now! Join now and get in on these great deals at Maritagooteephotography.com

This deal is over $100 in savings! But time is running out!

"Thank you for being a part of this group. To show my thanks I am posting for TODAY DEC 29 on of my Sand Shadow images at Maritagooteephotography.com at a special LOW price of $30. This image will be printed on 5x7 paper, hand tinted for each order. Print will be un-matted and unframed. All orders will be shipped by the 1/20/12. This is only good for members of this group. This is only good for the next 24 hours. Thank you! Please encourage your friends to join this group!"



Tuesday, December 6, 2011

Elizabeth and Mallory FACTOR PRIZE for Southern Art

The Prize

Established in 2007, the Elizabeth and Mallory Factor Prize for Southern Art honors an artist whose work contributes to a new understanding of the South. The Prize is accompanied by a cash prize of $10,000 and is administered and presented by the The Gibbes Museum of Art.
A panel of judges considers artists who are from, reside in or work in the following Southern states: Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee and Virginia.
The Factor Prize is also designed to create an archive of information about Southern artists that can be used by curators, collectors, academicians and the public. The repository of artist information that this Prize process creates is available online as a resource for anyone interested in the current state of art in America.

The Process: DEADLINE 2/28/2012

Submissions are accepted via this Web site throughout the year. Submissions for the 2012 Prize should be posted by February 28, 2012. A panel will convene in March to select a Short List of Finalists. The Gibbes Museum of Art chooses the winner and then announces the winner at a celebration at the museum in May.
Artists may nominate themselves and may update their records as often as they see fit. Third parties are also free to nominate eligible artists.

The Donors

Elizabeth and Mallory Factor are devoted collectors and patrons of the arts. The Factors relocated to Charleston from New York City in 2006 and maintain a family home in Gastonburg, Alabama. Elizabeth Factor, an attorney, served on the board of the Drawing Center in New York City and on the Whitney Museum of American Art’s Photography Committee. Mallory Factor, a merchant banker and consultant, serves on many corporate and not-for-profit boards including the Brooklyn Academy of Music, the American Theatre Wing and the TONY Awards Administration Committee.
According to the donors, “we are establishing this prize to focus on the artists working in the South or on Southern issues.” The donors hope that the establishment of the Prize will increase awareness across the country for the depth of creation in the visual arts that occurs in the South.

The Gibbes Museum of Art

Located in Charleston’s historic district, the Gibbes houses a premier collection of over 10,000 works, principally American works with a Charleston or Southern connection and presents special exhibitions annually.
“The museum’s support of living artists dates to 1858 and this award builds upon that 150-year tradition,” says Executive Director Angela Mack. “The Gibbes Museum of Art is honored to administer this Prize which so closely matches our core mission.”

Sunday, December 4, 2011

Heidi Robinson is Published!



Heidi Robinson has had two of her recent images accepted in a daily calendar project titled POLADARIUM 2012. This was conceived by a German Company. So she is internationally published!! How Cool is that!! Editors are: Lars Harmsen is designer and publicist, editor of slanted magazine and weblog, Member of ADC and Raban Ruddigkeit is designer and editor, especially the founder of »Freistil – Best Of European Commercial Illustration«. He is member of ADC and boardmember of CREATE BERLIN. It is published by Seltmann+Sohne.

Format: 88 x 107 mm, 365 polaroids, 368 pages (only sx70 / 600!)




Another project Heidi has been asked to be involved with Polaboy from Lightboys. The company out of Germany has developed a one meter high luminous Polaroid frame. It is made of a high quality white wood for the picture frame in a SX70 1:10 format. In this frame they backlight the scanned original Polaroids (80 x 80cm / about 230MB ) and expose it on a special slide film material. 


Must admit from the website these are enchanting! I want one!! 

Nate Trott in National Exhibition!

Nate Trott had his holga image which was lith developed, Untitled Church 3 juried in to 5th Annual Juried Plastic Camera Show at Rayko Photographic Center in San Francisco. The exhibition dates are January 18th-March 6th, 2012 with an opening reception on January 18th from 6-8pm which, by the way, is open to the public. If you are in town go and see it!

This is Untitled Church 3

Way to Go Nate!!

Monday, November 7, 2011

MSU IN SAN ANTONIO, TX...part 2

From the last post you know that the conference was going great. We were experiencing some new sights, sounds and tastes. This was expanded as we explored.

I am proud to say the Wyatt was the only undergraduate that received a SPESC [Society for Photographic Education South Central] travel scholarship! That was so cool! MSU students ROCK!!

We had the great experience of seeing the prints from the Helmut and Alison Gernsheim Collection at the University of Texas in Austin. It was a very special experience. To see the 1st photograph, View from the Window at Le Gras a Heliograph by Niepce was so AWESOME!! Plus seeing Steerage by Alfred Stieglitz was amazing. This was private viewing for MSU students. It will be something everyone will remember for a long time.

The students agree that Austin is a place to return to in the future. Here Nate poses for me with the infamous UTA bell tower in the background.

Once the conference ended we took an extra day to explore the area. I have to say that it is very dry in Texas is an understatement. Pond and lakes water levels are extremely low. The grass looks like kindling. It is natural that fires are popping up everywhere. We drove up to Bastop, TX to view the destruction from the recent forest fire. I could not photograph the charred remains of the homes and the burnt shells of the cars. I am saddened when I think about the lives that have changed. We left once we were informed that we were not in the Lost Pines Bastop State Park but on private property. All signs and fences were totally gone.


Learned later that the fire regenerated and crossed a nearby freeway... one I am sure we were driving one just the day or so before. You could smell the smoke on the interstate.

Another interesting location we traveled to was a vacant suburb of townhouses. The Tundra Village is a depressing site as you view homes that range in level of completion. Again, we left once we were asked by a neighbor. Frankly I think more images should be shown of this location so there is a clear understanding of the waste of the land developers fraud.

We then traveled to Medina River Natural Area and walked by the river. But there we knew what was public and private.


From there it was lunch a Whataburger and on to the next adventure. We swung around the town and ended up at Guadalupe River State Park. It was a nice relaxing way to end the day of shooting.

This was a great trip. I need to develop my holga film and see what else I saw while in Texas. This was great group of students would travel with them anytime!

Sunday, November 6, 2011

MSU IN SAN ANTONIO, TX

October was very busy for I traveled to two conferences, presented a workshop, picked-up artwork and dropped off artwork. Early in the month I travel with a group of students to San Antonio, TX for the Society for Photographic Education [SPE] South Central regional conference. It was a great event with lots of adventures.

1st we took the wrong bus and ended outside of San Antonio and had to find enough change for everyone to get a ride back. But we did make the evening event but did come close to missing the last trolley back to the hotel. Good news all was fine and it was an interesting start to the conference.


Dominic Lippillo who works with me at Mississippi State gave a great presentation on his work at the conference. Both students and I loved it and were impressed by the research.

 If you go to San Antonio - go to the campus and have lunch at the red taco truck! It is awesome! Never stopped at a food truck before but will be looking for them now as I travel.



Tables were few and far between so we eat in the comfort of the van. Yes, we rode in this van from MS to the far reaches of TX for tacos! ... and the conference.


There is more stories from the this trip but will have wait for another posting. Must say it was a mix of seeing thoughtful / creative artwork, seeing new places and getting to know each other.

Poolside Film and Camera

I thought I would share with you a shot of my last box of Polaroid 809 film and the camera that I used to make the POOLSIDE series.
As you can see each box held 15 exposures which is a combination of 15 negatives and 15 paper / pods for the negative to be transferred too. I hope the Impossible Project will come out with the 8x10 version of this before the end of the year. Note that I added the 85A filter - you can tell by the fancy tape job. 

This is the camera I used to make all my POOLSIDE series. It was created by Eric Renner the Director of the Pinhole Resource. It is called Leonardo. This is the best large format pinhole camera that I know. I have tired others but always come back to this one.

So now you know some of the basic elements that I used to create the POOLSIDE series. Each exposure was about 2 minutes. This series is available for exhibition and monographs can be found on Blurb [search Gootee].

Saturday, November 5, 2011

Check out this Great work!

This is a combination different approaches to the landscape. It has digital work to hand tinted images taken with a pinhole camera. It is a great way of seeing how different Wendy Roussin and I photograph nature. The show opens on Monday NOV 7th at 4:30. If in Meridian drop by......

Thursday, September 15, 2011

Work for the Impossible Project

Apply! I would if I knew Linux! All I know about programing 'software' is that I like flannel PJ's.

IMPOSSIBLE

IS RECRUITING
Impossible is currently looking for a PHP programmer with experience in Linux server maintenance to join us part-time or full-time in our head office in Vienna.

If you know your way around PHP, know the difference between an Inner and an Outer join in MySQL, can maintain a Linux server and are willing to help us keep our Macs in the office running smoothly, please send your CV and some work samples to jan@the-impossible-project.com.

Tuesday, September 13, 2011

GET GEAR from THINK TANK

Need New Gear! Go to THINK TANK and get what you need. The photography area at MSU will benefit too. 
Go to Think Tank and use the code EP-384
http://www.thinktankphoto.com/affiliates-validated.aspx?type=education

Friday, September 2, 2011

Portfolio Reviews

PHOTOJAX 2011 Jacksonville Photography Festival – September 16-17, 2011 
Photography Portfolio Review at MOCA10 a.m.-noon & 1-3 p.m.
$50 for professionals; $25 for amateurs/students
Portfolio Reviews
This one-day event connects photographers with potential mentors and industry professionals. Photographers (professional and student) will engage in one-on-one meetings with industry professionals for a focused review of the photographer’s portfolio of work. Each review session will last for 15 minutes per reviewer and each photographer can expect their total review to last an hour. MOCA Jacksonville’s Portfolio Review will be held at the museum, located at 333 N. Laura St., Jacksonville, FL 32202.
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PHOTONOLA

PhotoNOLA is an annual celebration of photography in New Orleans, coordinated by the New Orleans Photo Alliance in partnership with galleries, museums and photographers citywide.
The 2011 festival will take place from December 8-11 with broad ranging photography exhibitions on display throughout the month. Events include portfolio reviews, workshops, lectures, alternative process demonstrations and a kick-off gala. Many events are free and open to the public.
Portfolio Review registration will open on September 1 at 10am CST.

"Lets Play" on Display

‎"LETS PLAY" is presently on display in the "2011 Faculty Exhibition." It is a 37"x48" digital enlargement of 8x10 Polaroid Film taken with an 8x10 pinhole camera. It is from the series POOLSIDE. This image was made possible by the Mississippi Arts Commission. ........ and yes it is available for sale.

The MSU Department of Art is proud to host the "2011 Faculty Exhibition." This year, the faculty exhibition was opened up to the entire College of Architecture, Art, and Design.

Exhibition dates: August 30-October 28, 2011
Exhibition is held at the Visual Arts Center, 800 University Drive, Starkville, MS
Gallery Hours: Tue-Fri, 10-4.

Wednesday, August 3, 2011

Lobster at Art By Choice

Plan you Bid SOON: "Lobster" [37"x48"] from the POOLSIDE SERIES will be in the Art by Choice Event at the Mississippi Museum of Art.
Art by Choice exhibition opens at the MMA for public viewing August 26, 2011 6:30 p.m. sale opens (5:30 for V.I.P. ticket holders); 7:30 p.m. live auction begins. Participating artists are invited to attend and receive complimentary admission. Art in the sale remains available for purchase through September 11.








 Art by Choice exhibition is Free admission and open to the public. 
Mississippi Museum of Art
380 South Lamar Street
Jackson, MS 39201

April Wallace Landscapes



"the first two were taken late one evening a week or so ago... headed back from a long day of farm work with my mother and daughter... we saw the feelds full of fog iluminated dimly by the setting sun and pulled over to try and capture it." writes April.


April reflects on this image ..."christmas tree... was a lone tree in a feild we spotted on the way to christmas dinner.... is struck me as the most beautiful 'christmas tree' i had ever seen."

"snoe!...  was my attempt at combiling motion with the still amd symmetrical scene of winter fields.... i enjoy the contrast." says April.

April has a great eye and wonder use of negative space. She has a creative eye and can work in a variety of photographic mediums.

You can find more about these works and more by contacting her at April Wallace <aprilgailwallace@gmail.com>

Thursday, July 28, 2011

Poor Frog

This toy frog was found in a parking lot. It seemed lost and alone. It could have stayed there for some time to come with strangers walking by and nature taking its toll. So I picked this guy up and will let him have a new life in my photographs. I often look for lost memories like these. I am drawn to the discarded. Those items that others have used and left. They become my treasures.

Tuesday, July 26, 2011

AWESOME SUMMER PHOTO CLASS THIS SATURDAY

Summer Photo Workshop being offered by Blake McCollum on July 30th this Saturday
This should be a great workshop. Blake is very talented and approaches photography with fun. 
He is very skilled in photography so expect to learn a lot!


Contact him for more info - discounts for students.


Blake McCollum
Blake McCollum Photography
http://www.blakemc.com/



My dog wished she had a camera and thumbs so she could take his workshop!!

Monday, July 25, 2011

New Photo Challenge - Best Friends

New Photo Challenge - Best Friends




Enter CliQ Photo Challenge - Best Friends
Who is your best friend?

Your pet? Your sibling? Your spouse? Your teammate? Your imaginary friend? Whoever or whatever your best friend is, we want to see how you visually represent that friendship! Grab your camera phone, your point & shoot, anything that takes a photo and get shooting now.

To enter the Best Friends Photo Challenge, just follow these three steps:
1. "Like" our Facebook page here: http://www.facebook.com/CliQworld
2. Click the "Contests" link on the left navigation
3. Click "Enter Contest"

That's it. There is no cost to enter, and the first place prize package is worth over $1100. Contest ends July 31 and winners will be announced on August 8, 2011.

Good luck!

The CliQ Crew

Camera and Rockwell at the Eastman House


NORMAN ROCKWELL: BEHIND THE CAMERA

rockwell
Norman Rockwell. THE RUNAWAY, 1958.
©1958 SEPS: Licensed by Curtis Publishing, Indianapolis, IN.
Reference photo ©NRELC: Licensed by Norman Rockwell Licensing, Niles, IL.
Norman Rockwell Museum Collections.

Experience the iconic paintings and illustrations of artist Norman Rockwell alongside the meticulously staged photographs on which he based his work. Beginning in the late 1930s, Rockwell adopted photography as a tool to bring his illustration ideas to life in studio sessions. He served as the director and carefully orchestrated the photographs, hand-selecting the props, locations, and models. Rockwell created an abundance of photographs for each new subject, sometimes capturing complete compositions and other times combining separate pictures of individual elements. For the first time, Norman Rockwell: Behind the Camera presents these study photographs with his drawings and related tear sheets from magazine covers, offering a fascinating look at the artist’s working process. Organized by the NormanRockwell Museum in Stockbridge, Massachusetts, in collaboration with guest curator Ron Schick. The Eastman House exhibition is sponsored by M&T Bank with additional support provided by The Robert Lehman Foundation.
From June 25, 2011 through September 18, 2011 in the Brackett–Clark Gallery.

Friday, July 22, 2011

Still Time with Trees

Taken last year in Indiana. There is a silence with in this image. I feel I want to pass between the trees once they complete their conversation.

Wednesday, July 20, 2011

Apprenticeships - interesting

Into the forest, out of the house © Jonny Briggs, who is graduating from RCA this summer.
Further education for photographers is changing, with apprenticeships and work-based learning taking an important role alongside the traditional BA and MA courses. Miranda Gavin surveys the options.
Author: Miranda Gavin

Skillset survey carried out a few years ago put the number of students leaving degree courses with photography or photo imaging in the title at around 5000 a year. Skillset, the Sector Skills Council for the Creative Industries, concluded that workers in this sector are highly qualified, stating “more than two-fifths have a degree and over a fifth have a technical qualification, including a quarter of all photographers”. The value of these qualifications isn’t universally recognised, however, as a recent Russell Group report showed. A survey of 20 universities, including prestigious institutions such as Oxford and Cambridge, found that most colleges consider photography A-level to be a “soft” option.

In reality, qualifications in the photographic industry differ widely. New photography and photo imaging courses, plus drives to supportapprenticeships and work-based learning, mean there is a growing range of vocational and academic paths to choose from. But with Government plans to increase tuition fees from the next academic year, vocational approaches could boom as budding photographers seek out affordable ways to learn, get work experience, make contacts and gain qualifications.
Foundation Degrees
Foundation Degrees in Arts (FdA) were set up in 2001-02 by the Higher Education Funding Council for England and DfES as an alternative to the traditional three-year degree. A vocational qualification of “academic and work-based learning through close collaboration between employers and programme providers, usually universities in partnership with further education colleges”, it typically takes two years full-time and is equivalent to the first two years of an honours degree.
Skillset developed a guidance document for colleges offering photo imaging courses, summing up industry views on the most important topics to be included in the curriculum. For those who want to keep up with professional development, Skillset has also developed flexible training with its ‘Build your own MA’ short courses. These are industry-focused and offered individually or in combination, with credits being used towards a qualification ranging from a Postgraduate Certificate to an MA in Professional Media Practice. Of particular interest is a course in Digital Video for Photographers, which is under development at University of Gloucestershire.
The Photography FdA at City College Brighton and Hove has been running for two and half years, and has seen a steady rise in the number of applicants for just 15 places. Head of photography Graham Hulme, who has worked at the college for nine years, says, “After the first year, word spread and numbers have tripled from when we started the course. I also think there’s been an influx this year before tuition fees go up next year. If a student gets on a course this year, the tuition fees will stay the same for the duration of the course.”
Hulme researched the FdA qualification nearly three years ago, and at that point found “perhaps, no more than 20 or 30 courses”, a fraction of the number of degree courses. He believes the short duration of the FdA is one of its selling points – the fees are the same as for a degree, but students have to pay for two years, not three. But the flexibility of the qualification may also make it attractive, as students can progress to the final year of an appropriate degree if they decide they want to take it further (although in practice, this depends on matching the student’s previous two-years’ study to an appropriate course).
This doesn’t have to be done straight away – students “can wait about six years and still turn the FdA into a BA later on”, explains Hulme. Students also gain from studying in an institution, as they can use its facilities and equipment. City College has in-house studio space and “a HD Hasselblad medium format camera and scanners”, high-end kit that would be beyond most students’ budgets.
On the job
At the start of 2010, Skillset redeveloped its Advanced Apprenticeship in Photo Imaging for 16-25-year-olds. A Government-funded, modular scheme, it was developed from a similar (and successful) programme delivered by the MoD and the Defence School of Photography to train photographers in the Forces. The idea is to “raise competency standards to an apprenticeship level of confidence” and the apprenticeships are kept deliberately broad to give them “as wide an appeal as possible, as jobs are not as clearly defined as they used to be”, according to Skillset’s photo imaging sector manager Pippa Walkley.
Successful apprentices get a nationally recognised Level 3 qualification, and “hopefully future employment”, which could be as anything from a trainee social photographer or minilab printer to a picture library keyworder. Apprentices are paid no less than £2.50 per hour by the employer throughout, but the exact sum depends on their age and the number of hours they work. An apprentice aged 16 to 18 when they start can work a 37.5-hour week, including the time they spend training, for example, and earn a minimum of £2.50 per hour. Once the apprentice turns 19, they can work up to 40 hours a week including the training, which has an incremental effect on their wage.
If the apprentice is over 19 when they start, they can work a 40-hour week including training, and have an hourly minimum wage of £2.50 per hour for the first year. For the second year they will earn the national minimum wage, which is currently £4.92 per hour for a 19 or 20-year-old, and £5.93 for a 21-to 25-year-old. These are minimum rates, and there is nothing to stop an employer paying more, but the levels have led some to brand the scheme little more than undervalued, cheap labour.
Even so, it could prove popular. Getting into the photography industry is difficult because the market is saturated and competition is fierce, and young image-makers are often badly informed about the kind of work available to them. “One of the most difficult things is when someone says ‘I want to be a photographer’,” says Walkley. “There are so many sub-sectors in photo imaging and there’s no right or wrong answer to the question, ‘Should I go to college?’ It’s all about trying to provide as much information and guidance as possible so that they can make informed choices about careers in the industry.” With this in mind, Skillset also provides information on its website, at 
www.skillset.org/careers.
“Apprenticeships wouldn’t suit everyone, some people need space in college to find their way and explore, others want to be in employment,” adds Walkley. For the rest, she’s been sourcing employers willing to take part in the Advanced Apprenticeship, and has had input into the creation of a new apprenticeship in Creative and Digital Media, which offers units in web design, interactive media and production, as well as photography and image management.
In tandem with this, the National Apprenticeship Service, a separate entity has developed a database in which photographers can submit information and search for vacancies.
Foundation Degree interns
Skillset is also working on industry-led Foundation Degree Internships, combining Foundation Degrees with unpaid, work-based learning. Pitched as a vocational, work-based route through Higher Education, these qualifications will feature on-the-job training and structured academic teaching. The student interns will be taken on full-time, two to three days a week for a minimum of 25 weeks per year by the host companies. The businesses are encouraged to commit to taking on interns for two years, and should allow the students to attend regular tutorials and study blocks at the Skillset Media Academy. The University of Westminster has already agreed to provide one such internship at its Harrow campus.
The host companies get the interns’ help free of charge, though they’re encouraged to provide travel or subsistence support; the students pay 50 percent of the college fees. At the end of the two years the student intern will have earned a Foundation Degree qualification, which (as with other Foundation courses), they can top up over a third year to gain an Honours Degree. So far the programme is only targeting picture libraries and agencies, but there’s potential to expand it, Walkley explains.
“Student fees for UG courses rise considerably from September 2012,” she says. “Many media courses will cost £7500+ and students will want to be sure they have selected a course that the industry values. A course that allows you to combine the rigour of a degree programme with the opportunity to develop workplace skills as well as good contacts will become increasingly popular, and this programme is such a course.
“Students will leave with a high level of professional skills, honed by working alongside media professionals, complemented by academic and theoretical understandings and excellent interpersonal skills. They will be creative, responsible, reflective and effective young professionals ready to slot straight into creative teams when they start work.”
Academic route
At the other end of the academic spectrum are courses such as the full-time two-year MA in Photography at the Royal College of Art(RCA), which has provided many young photographers with a route into the highly conceptual art world. “The MA is not about careers and professionalism at all, but personal development,” says Olivier Richon, professor of photography of the RCA course. “It’s for people who want to develop their own practice and explore how to think about images.”
For Richon there’s no direct, vocational qualification for art photographers, because being ‘an artist’ sums up so many different skills. “It is quite ambivalent as to what one means by a practising artist,” he explains. “Some students may have shows in good galleries, but don’t end up making any money from it, and so do other things to make money. Others may use their skills as a photographer to take pictures of sculptures for galleries, or of architecture, for example.” Around 85 percent of former students end up “doing photography in various forms”, though, with some going into teaching or taking up artist residencies.
One of the most-respected courses in the country, its applications have remained stable at around 200 for 20-22 places, but Richon says student fees have already made a difference over the last few years. “I think the students are different now,” he says. “If they decide to study, they usually commit themselves more. Our students are much more prepared to borrow money, be in debt and work at weekends. It’s a different attitude.”
Personal choice
With so many options available, young photographers need to do their research and work out what suits them best, Nick Sargeant, head of the art and design department of the University of Gloucestershire, points out. “The decision regarding going straight into industry, taking an FdA or getting a degree is one that prospective students must make.
“Like other universities, we are looking at the possibility of two-year fast-track degrees. Whether that would be appropriate for photography courses is something we need to decide. Alternative study methods are bound to be on our agenda but the bottom line is that it’s important we deliver courses that help students acquire a range of skills to enter employment.”
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