Goldfinch, click for full size.
© C. Ford.

Mark Seliger, “Adrian Torres and Carmen Carrera” (2015), gelatin silver print, 36 x 36 inches, Edition of 7+2AP (all images courtesy the artist and Von Lintel Gallery).
LOS ANGELES — Mark Seliger is a widely known photographer, with over 125 Rolling Stone covers to his name, yet there is something new and revelatory in On Christopher Street, his current exhibit at Von Lintel Gallery showing portraits of trans women and men. Seliger lives and works in Manhattan’s West Village, and although he is primarily a celebrity photographer, this new body of work arose from engaging with the trans people in his own neighborhood.
Seliger has the rare ability to get his subjects to open up to the lens, their deeper layers rising to the surface of the picture. The photographs are black and white, executed in the high-gloss stew of hero worship and advertising we have come to expect from images of the famous. Though the Christopher Street subjects are mostly ordinary folk, his visual style confers a measure of stardom upon them without eclipsing their human vulnerability.
You can read all about this fabulous exhibit, and see more, at Hyperallergic.
Click for full size.
First up, the most wonderful photographs from kids – the winners of the 2016 Nat Geo International Photography Contest. Stunning imagery, all the way around, and a whole lot of very talented kids. Go See!
Next up:
It’s MIT’s Self-Assembly Lab. Go explore!
Yep, more. Click for full size.
From rq: 1) busstop artwork, for a campaign to build a publicly but not governmentally funded arthouse/gallery, title: Don’t Need War; 2) a street – if you go to the touristy places, things are cleaned up, but this is more typical, plus some cold February sun right down the middle!
Gotta say, I love Don’t Need War! Click for full size.
© rq, all rights reserved.
