colorado field notes

Added on by bryce lankard.

just back from an intriguing and challenging trip to colorado, denver mostly. i must admit that i was largely impressed with all that the area had to offer. blown away in fact. really noticed the altitude change when hiking near boulder. couldn't help but observe all the happy, active people, the marijuana shops, and the oddly happy population... coincidence???

parallax pix

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Cape Fear New Music Festival

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    Saturday, April 12th at Methodist University in Fayetteville, NC

I was the Grand Prize winner of Methodist University's "Sight & Sound" photo competition with guest judge Burk Uzzle.
Come check out his photos (and mine) at the Cape Fear New Music Festival starting at 2pm. I will also be part of a panel discussion at 4pm.
Followed by a concert at 730pm.

I hope to see some of you there.

Bryce Lankard Circa 1980 @ Framer's Corner

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Opening Reception: Sunday, April 13, 2014    2-5pm

Exhibition dates: March 1, 2014 - May 15, 2014

Gallery hours: M-F 10-6, S 10-2
The Framer’s Corner, 210 West Main St, Carrboro, NC 27510  919.929.3166

patrick was punished. marriage chapel and motel, dillon, sc

Circa 1980

A small selection of vintage prints, shot and printed mostly in North Carolina during the 1980’s. Early work using 35mm nikon’s and printed in gelatin silver and a few rare cibachrome color prints. Many of these images are from a larger project called Evening Land.

Evening Land

I have been working on this documentary project in one form or another for as long as I have been able to pick up a camera. Initially focused on the South, where I grew up, I have been drawn to subjects that are simultaneously familiar and foreign. I have looked with wonder on an America that has catapulted toward the end of a millenium while clinging for dear life to all its old idiosyncracies.
The title is taken from a line by the great southern writer Walker Percy, with whom I share both North Carolina and New Orleans roots. “It’s an interesting age you live in - though I can’t say I’m sorry to miss it. But it should be quite a sight, the going under of the evening land. That’s us all right. And I can tell you, my young friend, it is evening. It is very late.” (The Moviegoer)

Cibachrome, (currently known as Ilfochrome) is considered by many as being the most beautiful hand color printing process in the world of fine art photography. It occupies a unique position in photography as the only available method to create handmade photographic prints directly from color slide film.

Vintage Print: A photograph printed within a very few years of the date when the negative was made. Prints made recently from original negatives that are old are called modern prints. (from “the Collector’s Guide”)

Drawn to Water

Added on by bryce lankard.

another project i will be unveiling at fotofest is a work in progress called drawn to water. I am posting a draft of my artists statement and a small selection of images, all from one long weekend in edgemont, n.c.:

Drawn to water

This is a work in progress. I began this project with a mind to return to my roots of documentary work and for my subject I was initially attracted to the the notion of fishing piers along the eastern seaboard and how they served as a kind of "Main Street" for its beaches. But now I keep coming back to the simple idea that we, as humans, seem drawn to water. Life as we know it does not exist without water.


Water calls to us as human beings. We are mostly made up of the stuff. We are pulled towards it for many reasons… for health, pleasure, sustenance, for mind and body, for spiritual rites and rituals. It is where the otherwise modest will "let it all hang out". Water attracts every race and social strata. It can calm us or frighten us.  It can be a place of isolation and lone meditation or a location where one rubs shoulders with complete strangers. This project focuses on the interactions that are commonly found around oceans and beaches or along rivers and lakes, where a swimming hole or waterfall becomes a gathering place.

fotofest build up

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Less than a month before departure for fotofest in houston. So much work to do and want to share a sneak preview into a few items of preparation.

Like these mini-scrolls that will be my leave-behinds for the Transience portfolio.

Like these mini-scrolls that will be my leave-behinds for the Transience portfolio.

IMG_4275.jpg

Hay Now: behind the scenes video.

Added on by bryce lankard.

A Pitchfork Posse Production in Zebulon, Ga. Posse Artists...Anne Berry, S. Gayle Stevens, Ann George, Bryce Lankard and Lori Vrba. Video by Lankard and Vrba. Music "Going Down South" by the Red Stick Ramblers all rights reserved

Holy Cross ruins

Added on by bryce lankard.

RUINS: Holy Cross School

A student of mine just turned me on to the fabulous work of Yves Marchand and Romain Meffre. Most of their work relates to ruins, on subjects from the city of Detroit to theaters and beyond. The work is simply staggering in its grandeur and desolation. I am also always intrigued when artists work together in a collaborative style. I recommend having a look at their website. 

This has inspired me to post a few images of my modest efforts along the same lines. These are of the abandoned Holy Cross Catholic School in New Orleans lower 9th ward. Some 4 years later, the school remained as it was right after Katrina. Today most of the complex, with the exception of the old chapel, has been demolished to make way for a development that may never happen. The Holy Cross neighborhood is a fascinating model for post-Katrina recovery. There are new sustainable green buildings in a small pocket, another non-profit has slowly been buying and restoring some historic buildings and offering affordable ways to repopulate the area, and yet large swaths of the area remain in quiet ruins.

the Main Street Rag: Art Unhinged

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image

I am honored to be featured in the Summer 2013 issue of the arts and literary magazine, The Main Street Rag. In addition to giving me this lovely wraparound cover, their is a wonderful intro and interview by Lynda Ward, and a whole host of images, some rarely seen. 

MSR is currently undergoing a bit of a website overhaul, so an online version is not available just yet, but I will repost when it is. In the meantime, I hope you consider visiting their site, and I will include a small excerpt here. Enjoy:

Bryce Lankard: Art Unhinged by Lynda C. Ward

LCW: Two of your pre-Katrina photographs from Land of Dreams are published here: Two Kids on A Car and Basin Street.

BL: Both are emblematic of what I was trying to show. New Orleans was very poor and, yes, some people were living in squalor. But there was hope and a certain joy to life and living that was beautiful. These boys are playing in a junkyard, yet they are happy. They embrace the spirit of New Orleans. Basin Street reveals my love of New Orleans’ aesthetic of decay. The city is sub- tropical. Things peel and rot very quickly. Not a lot of money to keep things up. Yet literally that very street, Basin Street, is the birthplace of Jazz.

LCW: In terms of your 9/11 photographs, two images, Pigeon Man and Dalmatian, are perhaps good examples of how photography can freeze a moment and contain a story.

BL: I lived in New York City on 9/11, but I was in eastern Europe for a wedding. Ironically I photographed Pigeon Man at almost the exact moment the planes hit the towers, just before 3 o’clock in the afternoon in Poland. I remember. I even wrote it in my photo journal. I was walking back from touring Krakow. It was very quiet and not a lot of activity. When I came to the main square, I saw this guy feeding pigeons. They were all over him. But it was this oddly peaceful moment. A few minutes later, when I got back to the hotel, I realized what had happened. That is when the Europe trip ended for me. Of course I was stuck in Europe and had to go on with my trip because I had no choice, but everything after that, everything I saw touched my sense of disconnection, loss, and fear: from shooting the Jewish cemetery, which was beautiful yet haunting, to this Dalmatian left outside of a café, staring in the window waiting on his owner. He seemed all alone. It struck me. I felt alone too and was waiting: on news of loved ones and others. Yet like this dog I couldn’t come in, I had to stay where I was and wait.

LCW: Your nostalgia—a desire to hold, in your heart, to a time that has passed—is one of the things that makes your work unique and empathetic, for example your photograph Playground, China Lake.

BL: Many images from my Blink of an Eye deal with childhood or youth or summertime because they are things you think will last forever then—wham!—they’re gone. I just turned 50. I thought I would be young forever, now mortality is creeping up on me. I took the Playground image about twenty years ago. I was nostalgic even then. I was reflecting on my childhood, thinking about the passage of time: how time moves on, how we grow old. I went on a trip by myself to find the place I was born, a place I lived for only a few months before my parents moved to North Carolina. Suddenly I’m there, in a deserted town on the edge of Death Valley. There’s this empty playground in the middle of a cracked-earth desert. The houses were uninhabited. No more kids to play. This really affected me. I held on to the image and idea. So when 9/11 and Katrina happened, I wanted to explore and express it. Today I’m still exploring change, transition, and time passing. Transience, my current project, is a work-in-progress and can be seen on my website [www.BryceLankard.com]. In Transience I continue to examine change, transition, movement through time, progressions—the sense of how a moment is so brief and never the same thing twice.

Registration now open for "The Enduring Image"

Added on by bryce lankard.

I am pleased to say the inaugural on-line photo class for CDS, The Enduring Image, was both a technical and educational success. We had a great time and all the students seemed to think it was a remarkable experience. I saw vast development in all of their work, style and personal projects. Duke is offering this class again this fall and registration is now open. As a reminder, you can take this class from anywhere on the planet…just imagine. Hope you consider alerting all your friends in Bora Bora.

Registration now open for Advanced Projects Seminar at Duke's Center for Documentary Studies

Added on by bryce lankard.

I am excited to be teaching my first live class at Duke this fall. I hope you will consider taking this course or passing it along to others who may be interested. Here is a course description:

The Advanced Audio, Photography, and Video Projects courses provide documentary artists with the opportunity to work with award-winning professionals in small group settings. Each term, CDS invites three established artists to teach the Advanced Projects Seminars, which are designed for individuals who are working on projects and are seeking creative guidance. This is an opportunity for students in the certificate program to refine their work before applying for the Final Seminar. Participants are required to share excerpts from their works-in-progress, and the courses are designed around the specific needs of participants. 

Different artists will teach the seminars each term, giving students the opportunity to hear multiple perspectives on their work. Students may take the course for credit more than once. This is also an ideal course for students who have completed the Certificate in Documentary Arts and are looking for professional advice to move forward in their careers, including information on finding resources (grants, fellowships, artist residencies) to support their work. Certificate students are required to take a seminar in their chosen concentration before enrolling in the Final Project Seminar. (12 hours)

SXSE-Street Photography Issue

Added on by bryce lankard.

I have been woefully MIA from the blog of late. I would like to say that it is because I have been busy making tons of new work. Well, at least that is partially true.

I have had a flurry of good things happening and tidbits of news, so I am about to try and catch up with the backlog. A good place to start will be with a recent issue of SXSE. Once again Nancy McCrary has chosen my work to include in this issue. My work appears under the theme of street photography, which as some may know, has been at the core of my work for a long time. I hope you get a chance to check it out.

SQuare Magazine: SP 03- Toy Cameras

Added on by bryce lankard.

I am pleased to announce that an image of mine was selected for inclusion in the latest issue of Square Magazine. Square is a cool zine out of France and Great Britain that is dedicated, obviously, to images shot in a square format. This issue’s theme is toy cameras. Here is a link to view the whole issue on issuu.com. I guess the only complaint I would have is that there are no photo credits alongside each image. Perhaps the winners page is in the same order as the images, but that is kind of a pain. Just FYI, my image is on page 74.

enjoy.

SXSE Magazine

Added on by bryce lankard.

I am pleased to announce that my project, “The Illuminated Shadow”, is featured in the current issue of SXSE magazine, which has a two-fold theme of Cuba and Nudes. I believe this is a subscription based online mag, so unless you subscribe you may not be able to see the story. I am honored to be included in this issue and delighted that my friend, Raymond Grubb, is also featured in the same section.