New York photographer and filmmaker Harvey Wang will be exhibiting at the NYC Tenement Museum at Orchard Street, opening reception Nov. 3rd. For Harvey we made high res scans and outputted to digital on Hahnemühle Fine Art Baryta 325gsm. It was a joy to see Harvey’s portraits of Chinatown transform from silver gelatin prints to large pigment prints. We cannot wait to see the new space at the Tenement Museum and more of Harvey’s NYC archive.

From Italian Academy press release: Using a plastic camera from the 1960s, Amy Bedik photographs sculpture and landscape, creating images of startling intensity and sophistication.  In Figure and Ground, she exhibits work made in Italy, Turkey, and New York.  And from Russell Hart: If the shapeliness of Bedik’s subjects makes her viewer cognizant of their creators’ tools—chisel or clippers, wind or water—the visual qualities of her photographs raise the question of what was used to make them. Her perfectly named Diana, an inexpensive plastic camera with a crude plastic lens, produces images that are less sharp than those from a “serious” camera and that become softer still, and also darker, toward the edges. “It would certainly be easier to work with a conventional camera,” Bedik says. “The Diana is unreliable at best, but the way it renders subjects is the closest I’ve come to replicating the way I see.” In fact, Bedik insists that the images no longer appear distorted to her.

We are thrilled to have worked with Amy over the past two years. Amy’s beautiful and transformative work is shot with a toy Diana camera, scanned and outputted to pigment prints – printed on Hahnemühle Bamboo 290 (90% bamboo fibers and 10% cotton) 280gsm. And best of all – we will be at the opening!

Opening Reception: Tuesday, October 18, 2011

6:00 – 8:00 p.m.

RSVP at www.italianacademy.columbia.edu / The Italian Academy / 1161 Amsterdam Avenue / Just south of 118th Street / New York, NY 10027

Review of show by the Columbia Spectator

From MICA:
The exhibition will showcase more than 35 images made by DeLuise with an 8×10 large format camera while in India, Nepal, Italy and Bhutan. From the start, travel has been integral to DeLuise’s creative process. Throughout her career, DeLuise has traveled to India and Nepal on a Guggenheim Fellowship, to Italy both to study and teach, and to Bhutan on a recent sabbatical. Although the destinations have varied, DeLuise has been moving in the same direction, desiring to roam toward the unknown and bowing to her subject through the lens of her camera. In the making, printing and exhibiting of her photographs, DeLuise’s journey reflects what Nietzsche called “a long obedience in the same direction.”

We were thrilled to have worked with Regina by drum scanning her 8″ x 10″ negatives and producing luscious pigment prints (Ilford  Galerie Gold Fiber Silk 310gsm) for this show.  At MICA both palladium prints and pigment prints will be on view. Regina traditionally creates gorgeous palladium prints so this was quite a joy for us to be trusted through this process from film to digital output.  Quietly thoughtful photographs of extraordinary landscapes, portraits and sublime moments will be on view at MICA from Oct 21st to November 13th. See more of her work here.

Sculptor and architect Mark Kramer recently hired Fiber Ink Studio to print limited edition artist posters marking his Retrospective of Figurative Bronze Sculptures at Gallery B in Bethesda, MD.

Three limited edition posters will be signed and numbered by the artist. Printed on archival Espon Matte paper with HRD inks.

A Retrospective of Figurative Bronzes
Opening Reception: Oct. 14, 6-9pm
Sculptor and architect Mark Kramer exhibits a series of new and prior Bronze Bas Relief sculptures. Works include Parisian themes of French landmarks and a Zodiac series inspired by the symbolism of astrological signs.