WIPI
News Features
Archive
16 October - December 2003
WIPI
Distinguished Photographers Award -
Presentation Photographic Editions - Destroy the negative? Where's the value? Important Information Carole Glauber, Three decades history and photography |
Women In Photography International (WIPI) is proud to announce Annie Leibovitz as the winner of our Distinguished Photographer Award 2003. A collaboration with International Photography Awards enables WIPI to continue a time honored tradition of presenting an award to one of the top artists in the field of photography today. Past recipients include: Past Recipients include Eve
Arnold, 1983,
After a long hiatus, WIPI is proud to present our 2003 Distinguished Photographers award, to Annie Leibovitz! There
are so many talented women photographers working in the world today.
From the established classics to new and innovative talent. WIPI has
chosen Annie Leibovitz as the 2003 winner. Annies incredible talent
shines the world over. Outstanding
Achievement in Music Photography -*- William
Claxton Outstanding
Achievement in Still Photography for Motion Pictures - * -
Phil Stern
Photographer of the Year - Chris Frazer-Smith
photos: ©Waldemar Gorlewski \ Agencja Gazeta \ agencja@agora.pl website: http://agencja.gazeta.pl/fotoweb/ Also see: accompanying article about Annie's visit to Poland with her 1998 exhibition Life
is pretty strange anyway: Annie Leibovitz ABB:
- Are you shy?
Photographic Editions - Destroy the negative? Where's the value? Thoughts and e-mail exchanges on the subject by Jean Ferro 6/24/03
between Jean Ferro, (intro and questions) (response) Stephen Perloff,
Editor The Photo Review / The Photograph Collector and Elizabeth Ferrer,
Specialist Mexican Art, along with an excerpt from Alex Novak, iPhoto
Central on Vintage collecting Lithographs
were among the most affordable and popular collectible. First you
had the artist signed litho's and then, followed a supply of unsigned
litho's. The artist would create a limited 2nd generation edition
from his original art work and then destroy the plates that created
the lithograph. Hence, one was left with a limited supply of a 2nd
generation image, the original and perhaps a couple of artists proofs.
read more |
Carole
Glauber All photographs ©Carole Glauber
For three decades, Carole Glauber has combined her interest in history and photography as a photo-historian and photographer In
1974, she became one of two photographers for the Rural Women's History
Project based at the University of Idaho in Moscow, Idaho. Selected
women living in rural settings in the five northern counties of Idaho
were interviewed and photographed. Along with the interviews, Glauber's
black and white portraits and domestic scenes from their homes were
deposited in the University of Idaho archives. In
subsequent years, Glauber taught high school history and students
with learning disabilities, and continued making portraits and photographing
landscapes in the mountains of northern Idaho. A move to San Diego
for four years added black and whitestreet photography to her repertoire
and provided the opportunity to study early photographic processes
and photographers at the Museum of Photographic Arts. The Hebrew Home
for the Aged asked her to photograph residents for an oral history
project of those who entered the United States through Ellis Island.
Returning
to the Northwest-Portland, Oregon-in 1987, she began photographing
her 15 month old son with a 1950's Brownie Hawkeye Camera and color
film, creating lush 16 x 20 inch photographs bycombining her skills
in portraiture and street photography. This project continues, with
the addition of her second son in 1993, at least through her oldest
son's high school graduation in spring, 2005. Around 1989, Glauber began her research on turn-of-the-19th-century Salem, Oregon photographer, Myra Albert Wiggins. Grants from the Oregon Council for the Humanities, Regional Arts and Culture Council, and the Northwest Women's History Project enabled her to travel to the Beinecke Manuscript Library at Yale University and the Library of Congress, expand her research, and subsequently see her book, Witch of Kodakery: The Photography of Myra Albert Wiggins 1869-1956 published by Washington State University Press in 1997. She continues to travel around Oregon presenting slide talks about Wiggins as part of the Oregon Council for the Humanities Chautauqua Program and write about early and contemporary photographers. For three years, she wrote book reviews for the website, womeninphotography.org. Glauber's photographs have appeared in exhibits around the country including Portland, San Francisco, San Diego, Houston, and Buffalo, New York.
Carole
was introduced to WIPI through Peter Palmquist and was our first formal
reviewer which started with our premiere issue of the F2-eZine, October
1999.
Book Review - October 1999- Archive 1-Premiere F2-eZine Witch of Kodakery Book
Review - April 2000 - Archive 2 - Shadows, Fire, Snow: The
Life of Tina Modotti
REVISIT |