Archive for June, 2011

Auction Highlight: Roger Eberhard

Posted by on Jun 22 2011 | Auction

Roger Eberhard made pictures of long passed-by places. I wrote about
his series of pictures published in a book called “Wilted Country”.
Now Mr. Eberhard has been kind to give one of the book’s signature
images for the Eastman House Benefit Auction. It depicts an abandoned
sign for GAS, barely visible in the artist’s construction and an apt
notion of an increasingly faint source of energy.

Roger Eberhard, Untitled (“Gas), 2007, from the series and publication “Wilted Country”

 

Wind and other elements, sand and weed, snow and rain, seed and other
living things, do pass freely now through the abandoned
locations. But people do not pass by very often. Perhaps on occasion,
I wrote. If they pass, and if they look, perhaps they wonder. Maybe
someone who recognizes potential, who has a feeling for history and
appreciation for redemption stops and considers.

Eberhard did. He stopped and produced some haunting images. And we
now, his audience, we stop in fascination.Through the artist’s vision
these abandoned places are transformed. The sign remains in Eberhard’s
picture. Maybe the GAS sign has disappeared out there on the prairie.

The photographer has left his sign too and in some ways just as
fugitively. His images, burnt out by a rural sun, occupy just a faint
edge of perception. But it is enough for our appreciation and
memorialization. And we are grateful to offer it in our October 3
auction.

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Eastman House painted with color— this week with Kodachrome

Posted by on Jun 14 2011 | History, Motion Pictures, Photography

In just over a year’s time George Eastman House has been painted with large splashes of Technicolor, Colorama, and now Kodachrome, via three important acquisitions.

As the world’s oldest museum photography, the vast collections feature all processes and formats of motion pictures and photography. And the color collections continue to expand. The Technicolor corporate archive was formally acquired in March 2010, followed by Kodak’s gift of the Colorama archive – the images and history of the 60×18-foot images that dominated Grand Central Terminal from 1950 to 1990 –  announced in June 2010.

 

An elder from the Rubari tribe, from the last roll of Kodachrome, photographed by Steve McCurry in India.

 

Fast forward one year and the photographs from the last roll Kodachrome were donated to Eastman House on June 12, 2011. Kodachrome was the first commercially successful color film, and experienced a quarter-century of rich, unparalleled colors as well as a love affair with countless photographers. Kodachrome film was manufactured in various formats to suit still and motion picture cameras, and required a complex processing system.

When Kodak announced in 2009 it would no longer produce Kodachrome film, company officials announced two ways the famed film would be celebrated: 1) National Geographic and Magnum photographer Steve McCurry would be given the last roll off the Kodak production line and 2) the images from that historic roll would be donated to the archives at George Eastman House International Museum of Photography and Film.

McCurry’s historic journey took him in 2010 to his hometown of New York City to western India and finally to Parsons, Kansas. That final stop was to the last lab in existence to process Kodachrome, which would close at the end of 2010, but not before developing his precious roll.

“I don’t think there’s ever been, in the history of photography, a better film, a better way to actually look at the world than with Kodachrome,” McCurry said. “This was the only way I shot for decades.”

McCurry spoke at Eastman House this week before a capacity audience, shared the 31 photographs he captured from the 36-frame roll — some frames were duplicate images — and told stories of his travels and his fears the roll would be harmed by airport security scanners. He talked with the audience and Anthony Bannon, the Ron and Donna Fielding Director at Eastman House, about celebrating Kodachrome. A color film process that lasted longer than any other, it was extolled since the Great Depression for its sharpness, archival durability, and vibrant yet realistic hues.

Dr. Anthony Bannon, left, and Steve McCurry with prints from the final roll of Kodachrome.

 

The subjects McCurry shot on the last roll include Robert DeNiro and photographer Elliott Erwitt, plus unknown people in various parks in New York City; McCurry in his hotel room in Parsons awaiting film processing; and in India – where McCurry noted “color is important culturally” and where he used Kodachrome’s magic to subtly render contrast and color harmony in depictions of Bollywood luminaries in Mumbai and the Rubari tribe in Rajasthan on the verge of extinction.

“I thought, ‘What better way to honor the memory of Kodachrome than to try and photograph iconic places and people?’ It’s in (my) DNA to want to tell stories where the action is, that shed light on the human condition,” McCurry said. He planned the trip, which he calls “a six-week odyssey,” for nine months. A crew from the National Geographic Channel followed him on his journey. That special has not aired yet in the United States but debuted this spring on European television.

Kodachrome was produced for 74 years, from 1935 to 2009, in a wide variety of formats, including 35mm slide film and 8mm movie film. McCurry used Kodachrome for his well-known 1984 portrait of the green-eyed “Afghan Girl” on the cover of National Geographic.

Kodachrome is appreciated in the archival and professional market for its dark-storage longevity, with colors remaining intact for decades. The early papers of one of the creators of Kodachrome, Leopold Godowsky, are held in the archives at Eastman House, as are many varieties of Kodachrome film in original boxes from several decades as well as moving footage, slides, and photographs, including the documentation of Sir Edmund Hillary’s history ascent of Mt. Everest.

“It’s definitely the end of an era,” he said of Kodachrome. “It has such a wonderful color palette…a poetic look, not particularly garish or cartoonish, but wonderful, true colors that were vibrant, but true to what you were shooting. It was the gold standard of imagery.”

Proof of its affect on popular culture, Kodachrome was the subject of Paul Simon’s song “Kodachrome” and Kodachrome Basin State Park in Utah was named for it, becoming the only park named for a brand of film.

Eastman House will present a display of projected images in early July and will mount an international tour of the photographs in 2012.

 

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You Never Know Who You’ll Meet at an Eastman House Gathering

Posted by on Jun 10 2011 | Other

Trustee Victoria Cherry refers to this as the Eastman House “portal”, and it was in full effect this past Tuesday evening in New York City.

Actor Julian Sands and trustee Victoria Cherry.

Victoria and her husband Bill hosted a gathering in their New York City home, where British actor Julian Sands gave a poetry reading of the works of the late Harold Pinter. Julian worked closely with Pinter before his death on tone and inflection, and it is with both Pinter and his widow Antonia Fraser’s blessing that Julian uses his gift to keep the voice of Pinter alive.  If  you’re not familiar with Pinter….do an imdb search and ogle at the list of 29 screenplays he wrote. I venture you’ve seen many of them. As for Julian, you know him from Merchant Ivory’s A Room With a View, Boxing Helena, and many more, including the upcoming David Fincher version of The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo (check out the trailer on YouTube!) 
And now i feel like i’m writing page 6: 

Artist Edward Mapplethorpe, Trustee Elaine Goldman, and actor Julian Sands.

In attendance was artist Edward Mapplethorpe, whom had last seen Julian 22 years ago in Los Angeles when he photographed Julian.  Julian maintains that the portrait Edward took of him has become the iconic photograph of him, with fans often sending downloaded copies of it to him for autographs.  Without much urging, Julian coaxed Edward into a new edition of the photograph, which was auctioned off Tuesday night with proceeds benefiting Eastman House.  Incoming trustee Elaine Goldman was the winning bidder. 

 

 

Barbara Steele, Julian Sands, and Lisa Marie.

Also attending were actors Barbara Steele and Lisa Marie and I have to admit my head turned a bit. It’s not every day you meet someone who worked with Fellini, and it’s not every day you meet someone who was in several of your favorite films (I’m a sucker for Ed Wood and Sleepy Hollow).  I hope to see them both at Eastman House one day soon.  Eastman House trustees Susan Robfogel, Nathan Benn, and David Neill were also on hand, as were photographers Jessica Burstein and Renate Aller.

 

Julian Sands with his brother -in-law Rob Citkowitz.

Julian’s brother-in-law, Rob Citkowitz, lives in New York, and he and his wife joined us for the event as well.  As it turns out, Rob’s father Israel Citkowitz had has portrait taken by Stieglitz a number of times….and there may just be a photograph of his father in the Eastman House collection. 
okay, enough namedropping….it was an amazing evening….and we hope to repeat it soon.  let us know if you’d like to organize an event like this in your neighborhood!

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Charlie Chaplin at the Dryden Theatre

Posted by on Jun 07 2011 | Motion Pictures

When you ask someone who their favorite silent film comedian is you’ll probably get the go-to answer of Charlie Chaplin. There’s a simple reason for that: because Chaplin is indeed one of the greats. There were, however, other silent-film comedians who were just as prolific as Chaplin. Personally, I have a fondness for the big three: Charlie Chaplin, Buster Keaton, and Harold Lloyd. With the Dryden Theatre at the Eastman House showcasing a collection of Charlie Chaplin films during the month of June,  I thought there was no better time for me to share some random thoughts on my favorite comedians of the silent film era.

Chaplin in a scene from 1936′s ‘Modern Times’.

For me, Charlie Chaplin is a ballet dancer. Watch the roller skating scene in Modern Times and tell me that Chaplin couldn’t have easily become a world-renowned dancer if he hadn’t been an actor. Where his comedy comes from is in the way he used those elegant movements and then combined them with absurd situations and melodramatic story elements. Chaplin is perfection on the big screen and there’s a reason that nearly one-hundred years after his first film debut audiences are still delighted at what he does.

If Chaplin was a ballet dancer then Buster Keaton was an acrobat. Keaton designed and performed stunts of such outrageous construction that it’s amazing that he was never seriously hurt while performing them. Buster Keaton’s trademark stone-face that never once showed a single trace of emotion adds an action hero aloofness to his act that is hard not to like. In spite of Keaton’s emotionless demeanor you’ll be amazed at how easy it is to connect with the actor.

Then of course there’s the lovable Harold Lloyd who is perhaps more forgotten to today’s audiences than either Chaplin or Keaton. Lloyd’s personality is that of the everyman and he so perfectly personifies the self-motivated, go-getter attitude of the American audience in the 1920’s. With his boyish charm and round glasses to see Harold Lloyd is to instantly love him. Lloyd, like Keaton, was very much an acrobat and his stunts were so dangerous that I’ve witnessed even today’s audience’s gasp at his death-defying feats.

There were others of course. Harry Langdon still has his devout followers and Laurel and Hardy are still well known. But Chaplin, Keaton, and Lloyd are the best of the best. With the advent of services like Netflix and cable channels like TCM it’s easier than ever to find these silent comic gems, but like the comedic films of today half of the fun is watching them with an audience. This is why the George Eastman House and the Dryden Theatre are so important to our Rochester community.

Throughout June, you’ll have a number of chances to share with an audience the great humor of Charlie Chaplin. The big ones will be there: The Kid, The Great Dictator, and Modern Times, but don’t miss his early shorts and lesser-known movies.

Tuesday, June 07 2011, 8:00 pm Sunnyside / Payday / Shoulder Arms
Thursday, June 09 2011, 8:00 pm The Great Dictator
Sunday, June 12 2011, 2:00 pm The Circus
Tuesday, June 14 2011, 8:00 pm A Woman of Paris
Thursday, June 16 2011, 8:00 pm A King in New York
Sunday, June 19 2011, 7:00 pm Modern Times
Tuesday, June 21 2011, 8:00 pm Monsieur Verdoux
Thursday, June 23 2011, 8:00 pm The Kid
Sunday, June 26 2011, 7:00 pm City Lights
Tuesday, June 28 2011, 8:00 pm The Idle Class / A Day’s Pleasure / The Pilgrim
Thursday, June 10 2011, 8:00 pm Limelight

Buster Keaton appears in a cameo with Chaplin in 1952′s ‘Limelight’- their only on-screen pairing.

 

Editor’s note: Originally appeared in Democrat & Chronicle Rochester Young Professionals blog page.

 

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