Thursday, September 25, 2008

Installation: Saint Petersburg



note from Saint Petersburg... Yesterday the exhibition was installed at the Pushkin Dom. The juxtoposition of the contemporary and classical is appropriately poetic.

Thursday, August 21, 2008

Details, Details



Before it comes off the stands... The August 2008 issue of DETAILS printed a few Volume images to illustrate a lovely piece by Pulitzer Prize winning author Michael Chabon. Clearly I need to add Oakley Hall's Warlock to my reading list. No reason to be sadder than necessary.

Friday, August 15, 2008

Marine Wedding Revisited



Nina Berman's iconic image from the Marine Wedding series has been extensively published and written about. We all agree - it is one of the most profound, important photographs of our time. I truly love this image. This morning I was reading old entries on the Hey Hot Shot! blog and came across Tyler Ziegel and Renee: one year on, published in The Sunday Times last May. 

Monday, July 28, 2008

Going, going, gone?


In June, I considered photographing the collection at Columbia's Medical Library. A staff librarian told me the journals had either been sent to deep storage or to the dumpster just weeks before.

This afternoon I went with my snappy camera to scout at the NYU Medical Center Library. (Pictured above.) I had been forewarned, but the empty stacks were eerie. The NYU journals were sent to the dumpster about two months ago. 

Librarians have predicted Volume will be an important document in ten years. New York, as always, is ahead of her time. 

Thursday, July 24, 2008

My brain knows much more than I do.



Clearly. At the moment I am photographing Columbia's Psychology Library, working on a proposal for the University of Florida's new Biomedical Sciences building (squeak squeak!), re-reading the vision chapter in A Natural History of the Senses, and yesterday stumbled upon a brilliant article in The New Yorker about insight and the brain by Jonah Lehrer that you want to read. Unfortunately it is not available online, so you'll have to pick up the July 28 issue if you want to read it... Below is an excerpt to wet your appetite. 

"The most mysterious aspect of insight is not revelation itself but what happens next. The brain is an infinite library of associations, a cacophony of competing ideas, and yet, as soon as the right association appears, we know. The new thought, represented by that rush of gamma rays in the right hemisphere, immediately grabs our attention. There is something paradoxical and bizarre about this. On one hand, an epiphany is a surprising event; we are startled by what we've just discovered. Some part of our brain, however, clearly isn't surprised at all , which is why we are able to instantly recognize the insight. 'As soon as the insight happens, it just seems so obvious,' Schooler said. 'People can't believe they didn't see it before.' "