Photographers

Speaking about Personal Projects to ASMP SFL

by Brian Smith on November 21, 2011

in Seminars & Speaking

Brian Smith will speak about the process he developed for this personal project shooting celebrities for his book ART & SOUL and how he made this personal project profitable as a great example on how photographers need to think about exploring new business models in this changing market with little or no rules still established.

WHEN: Monday, November 28, 2011 at 7PM. Doors open at 6:30PM
WHERE: Barry University, Fine Arts Building, Room FA130 – 11300 Northeast 2nd Ave Miami Shores, FL
COST: FREE, so please spread the word about this event among your peers and see you there!!

ASMP South Florida
ASMP SFL Find A Photographer Search

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RIP Herman Leonard

by Brian Smith on August 15, 2010

in Music Photography

I just got sad news that Herman Leonard, the Greatest Jazz Photographer who ever lived, has passed away. Even if you don’t know the name, you know the photographs. Herman captured iconic photographs of the Legends of Jazz better than anyone. I know all his friends up above are playing a great jam session for him tonight. Check out tonight’s ABC World News Tonight for a tribute to a legend I can proudly call my friend…

Herman Leonard's exhibit of jazz photography at "Jazz at Lincoln Center"

Herman Leonard "Jazz at Lincoln Center" October 2009

Brian Smith and Herman Leonard at Leonard's exhibit of jazz photography at "Jazz at Lincoln Center"

Me and Herman at the opening of "Jazz at Lincoln Center" October 2009

Herman Leonard
March 6, 1923 – August 14, 2010

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I went to see Lindsay Adler & Rosh Sillars yesterday at B&H Photo. Even if you’re a photographer with a Website and Photo Blog and you’re social media savvy enough to be all over Facebook, Twitter, Linkedin and FlickR you can still learn a lot from Rosh and Lindsay, since THEY WROTE THE BOOK on Social Media for Photographers: “A Linked Photographers’ Guide to Online Marketing and Social Media” It’s a must read..

Book: Linked Photographers’ Guide to Online Marketing and Social Marketing for Photographers

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PhotoShelter WordPress Plugin

by Brian Smith on July 29, 2010

in Blogs

My good friends at PhotoShelter have created a super-slick-gotta-have-plugin-for-Wordpress-blogs which allows photographers to post photos from their PhotoShelter account directly on their WordPress blog. A great way to simplify your workflow!

Simply Select an image from a gallery and select “Insert Image.”

and then in the words of one of the greatest poets of our generation: “BAM!”

Actor Don Cheadle photographed for Entertainment Weekly (©2009 Brian Smith)

Or it you prefer more security, you can choose to upload a flash image:

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PhotoShelter Salutes the Point-and-Shoot

by Brian Smith on July 20, 2010

in Photography Gear

Grover Sanschagrin of PhotoShelter put together this great article about Professional Photographers who also shoot with Point-and-Shoot cameras.

It’s great to see that so many of my friends also carry a small camera with them everywhere they go. Afterall, the best camera you can own is the one you’ve got with you…

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500 Photographers

by Brian Smith on May 31, 2010

in Blogs

BIG THANKS to Pieter Wisse for featuring me as today’s photographer on his 500 Photographers blog. Peter is profiling five active photographers a week for 100 weeks. It’s a very clever way of compiling the work of 500 photographers and shucks, I’m very honored to be Photographer #041…

500 Photographers Blog Brian Smith #041

500 Photographers has spotlighted the work of a number of familiar names like Todd Hido, Dave Hill, Marc Hom, Nadav Kander, Benjamin Lowy, David Maisel and Michael Wolf, but it’s even more fun to “discover” the work of someone you might not have been familiar with.

Pieter Wisse is a photographer based in Rotterdam. He’s owner of Four Eyes Photography & Art, a gallery and bookstore that publishes Four Eyes Photography Magazine and recently published his book ‘I believe in 88′. When Pieter is finished, 500 Photographers will be an amazing archive of photographers of the 21st century. Thanks for making me a part!

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Is it Time for another WPA?

by Brian Smith on May 18, 2009

in Art & Soul

Maybe it’s time for a new WPA…

The last time America was mired in an economic crisis like the one we face today, the Works Progress Administration was created to put America back to work. The Works Progress Administration brought us The Federal Arts Project (FAP) maintained more than 100 community art centers which produced 2,566 murals, 17,744 sculptures, 108,099 paintings and 240,000 prints from 1936 to 1943 creating a new awareness of and appreciation for American art.

Not only did the WPA put artists and Artisans back to work, it left lasting symbols of civic pride.

During The Creative Coalition’s May 2009 visit to Capitol Hill, Senator Jeff Merkley (D-OR) mentioned the Timberline Lodge was built as part of the WPA and is an enduring source of pride in the community. A WPA mural by Grant Wood graced the wall of the college library of the small town where I grew up.

The Works Progress Administration was also responsible of the Farm Service Administration which resulted in some of the best photographs of the 20th century from the FSA photographers Dorthea Lange, Berenice Abbott, Walker Evans, Arthur Rothstein, Marion Post Wolcott, Carl Mydans and Gordon Parks.

migrant-mother

"Migrant Mother" by Dorthea Lange/FSA - Nipomo, California 1936

American Gothic 2008: Foreclosure of America

“Foreclosure of the American Dream” Merced, California 2008

The Creative Coalition Executive Director Robin Bronk writes in the foreword of Art & Soul:

“When faced with a collapsing economy, President Franklin Roosevelt tried to put Americans in all lines of work back on the job. Instead of singling out artists as somehow frivolous and unimportant to our nation’s economy, he instituted a host of programs designed to put federal funds into the arts, employing America’s creative talent and leaving a cultural legacy that endures still today.

“The highpoint of this commitment was the Works Progress Administration’s Federal One program, which put thousands of Americans to work in the arts. The government program was a lifeline for Jackson Pollock, Burt Lancaster, Sidney Lumet, Ralph Ellison, Studs Terkel, John Cheever, Saul Bellow, and thousands of other artists across the country.

“These programs created much-needed jobs in the immediate term, but they did much more. They fostered great talents that otherwise may have been lost. The work of the many great artists supported by the government in the 1930s still benefits us today. Their contributions to our culture endure, and their successful careers resulted in employment for many others in the years that followed.

“We cannot forget this lesson of our not-so-distant history. Faced with an economic downturn of staggering proportions, some attack any help for the arts as waste, ignoring the millions of Americans who earn their livings and support their families through their artistic endeavors and arts-related enterprises.”

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