Harvey Stein
#Photographe
- Exposition
Animal World
We are seeking photographs of animals that are a bit unusual and out of the ordinary, not the conventionally cute images that are often seen. The photographs certainly can be amusing, interesting, frank and biting.
We define animal as anything that breathes and is not human.
The tone can convey an appreciation of the joys and difficulties experienced by animals in the essentially absurd predicament of domestication. Animals pictured in environments from homes to zoos, from city streets to rural farms, from natural habitats to the ends of the earth, with and without man are all sought.
Toad Turtle, 2010, Dennis Savage, Photography, 11 x 14 Inches
... - Exposition
Paul Bobko, WATER LANDSCAPES - SUSPENDED ENERGY, at Alan Klotz Gallery
In his magnum opus, Gravity's Rainbow, Thomas Pynchon introduces us to the German concept of Brenschluss in the telemetry of the flight of the V2 rocket. The rocket is propelled by its engines and travels along its parabolic arc. At a certain point the engines turn off, this flameout is called brenschluss. At brenschluss the rocket's ascendancy is checked by gravity, and before it begins to fall to its target on earth, it hesitates for just a moment. After this moment gravity and momentum alone, not a rocket engine, define the inexorable trajectory of descent to its inevitable, calamitous end.
So to do Paul Bobko's Water Landscapes-Suspended Energy photographs allow us to see that very moment of hesitation when the force of nature that is the ocean wave, ceases to be propelled by the surging forces of ... - Exposition
Coney Island 40 years - Harvey Stein
Harvey Stein has been a fixture on the New York photo scene for many years. He has photographed the city from every angle with every kind of camera, at every time of day and night. Beyond these shores he has led photographic seminars and workshops all over the world...He's gone everywhere, and for the last 40 years he's been going to Coney Island...where New York City flows into the Atlantic Ocean at the end of Ocean Avenue, in Brooklyn. There is a particularly Brooklyn flavor to Coney Island, and it's not just the Nathan's hot dogs or the cloyingly sweet smell of cotton candy mixed in with the salt air, it's the beckoning path of the boardwalk, the signature architectural landmarks of the parachute jump, the Wonder Wheel and the Cyclone, but mostly it's the people who go there. They...
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