WON Magazine // Issue 02

05.05.08 - Chris Barton - art, design, photography, publishing

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selected pages from… 

WON Magazine – Vol. 1. Issue 02.

featuring…

Daniel Wang, Will Sweeney, Aaron Rose, Ken Werner, Mårten Lange, The Changes, Nienke Klunder, Robert Cook, Thobias Fäldt, Amanda Maxwell, Linus Bill, Jeremie Egry, Andrew Long, Thomas Baldischwyler, Ben Barretto, Holger Czukay, Vernon Treweeke, Deanna Templeton, Matt Wolf, Rosemary Scanlon, Sarah Larnach, Martin Bell

soon to be available for online purchase…

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Point of View // Ben Pobjoy

02.04.08 - Chris Barton - photography, point of view

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PHOTOGRAPHY – Ben Pobjoy

NOWNOW – Where are you and what are you doing?

BEN POBJOY – I’m in Montreal, Quebec sitting at my desk in my work/loft space. I’m eating a banana and listening to Suicide before starting my workday.

NN – How did you start taking photos?

BP – In 1998, when I was 16 years old I picked up a Polaroid camera and began to document my life. I was touring America quite a bit with my band at the time and was friends with a bunch of shitfuckers and I felt compelled to photograph my travels and the mischievous tendencies of this group of friends. I meticulously documented my life with my Polaroid camera for the next nine years shooting over 2000 Polaroids (each of which is accompanied by a hand written anecdote) and now it’s 2008 and I’ve ended up with nine Polaroid journals on my bookshelf. Nine years of living compressed into less than 2 cubic feet of space.

Since I was constantly photographing my friends, and it was their actions that inspired me, I felt it was only fair to let them leaf through my journals. Ryan Foerster and Eva Michon, two outstanding photographers who were living in the Toronto area at the time were two of my good friends that I’d let look through the journals. Both of them were established photographers in Toronto and they pushed me to pick up a 35mm camera. They both photographed with point-and-shoot cameras and the ‘ease of use’ of their cameras spoke to me given that I was photographing with Polaroids. Because of their ‘push’ I bought my first point-and-shoot camera in 2005 and I’ve been shooting with a range of point-and-shoot cameras ever since.

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NN – What is the most important aspect of (your) photography to you?

BP –I’m concerned with capturing essence and I try to shoot subjects in different environments over long spans of time as series so that their essence can triumph the ‘constructed image.’ My photography, in this capacity, is an exercise in suppressing my ego and personal mythology in order to capture people as they are, not as what I want them to be. Truthfully, it’s an exercise that can never be mastered since photography is a subjective medium.

NN – Who is your favourite photographer?

BP –I don’t think I have a favorite photographer per se. I am, as mentioned, a big fan of both Ryan Foerster and Eva Michon. I know both of them quite well and, because of this, I have a genuine appreciation for their work. I find that the photographers that I like the most are the photographers that I know intimately. Knowing a photographer seems to positively affect my perception of their work. Off the top of my head, I’m also a fan of Boogie, Agnes Thor and Robin Schwartz. I like the way they photograph the world or the worlds they create and thereafter photograph.

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NN – Do you see photography as a part of a bigger creative urge/scene/force?

BP –In a Jungian sense photography, to me at least, satiates the need for a personal mythology. I believe that many photographers photograph to document the world. However, the world, when viewed through their lens, inadvertently becomes their representation of the world. So, even though they may not be photographing themselves, they’re photographing as themself. Their work, regardless of the subject matter, I believe, is inseparable from their self and is therefore part of their personal mythology, a personal mythology that is continually deepened with every photograph that is taken.

NN – What could you look at for the rest of your life?

BP – People and animals.

NowNow Gallery // March 2008

01.04.08 - Chris Barton - photography

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PHOTOGRAPHY - Chrischa Oswald

NOWNOW GALLERY MARCH – FEATURING:

Gilda-Louise Aloisi | Gabriel Barros | Tristan Ceddia | Paolo Di Lucente | Thobias Fäldt | Zack Genin | Rohan Hutchinson | Thomas Jeppe | Mikael Kennedy | Johannes Kjartansson | Matthew Koudys | Bryan Lear | Andrew Long | Chrischa Oswald | Ben Pobjoy | Lele Saveri | Courtney Weber

Point of View // Mike Marcelle

08.02.08 - Chris Barton - art, photography, point of view

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NOWNOW – Where are you and what are you doing?

MIKE MARCELLE – I’m in Brooklyn, New York, processing digital files and listening to Brian Eno.

NN – How did you start taking photos?

MM – My father did a lot of photography when I was young, so he was always giving me cameras and encouraging me to shoot. It didn’t really become serious until I took a photo class in my senior year of high school, and then sort of randomly decided to major in photography in college. Thankfully I picked a school with a great program, Bard College, where I just got totally immersed in it. Stephen Shore, who is probably my biggest influence, was one of my very first professors there, and he taught me all about importance composition and framing, etc. He basically completely changed the way I saw photography.

What is the most important aspect of (your) photography to you?

It’s ability to elevate images from the world into something totally foreign and mysterious. A lot of my work is very influenced by film, especially science-fiction and horror, and I think I’m always trying to make photos that are charged with that same kind of tangible otherness that is found in those genres.

NN – Who is your favourite photographer?

MM – I can’t say I have one particular, but usually my friends are my favorite artists; Cody Trepte, Brad Troemel, Johnny Misheff, Tim Davis, Paul Sepuya, John Pilson, Bryan Schneider, and Catherine Feeney are all amazing photographers who I am very influenced by.

I am also totally crazy over non-photographers Kenneth Anger, Banks Violette, Stanley Kubrick, and the Maysles Brothers

NN – Do you see photography as a part of a bigger creative urge/scene/force?

MM – I think it depends on the individual photographer’s artistic vision and how it relates to what’s going on in the rest of the world. But I also think that most art movements are all just a bunch of friends working off of each other, regardless of the medium.

I think in my case, I don’t usually look too much into what’s going on in the contemporary photography world, and look more to film, conceptual art, and painting, which then influences my own work. So it then becomes this messy network of connections from all mediums.

NN – What could you look at for the rest of your life?

MM – “Invocation of My Demon Brother” by Kenneth Anger

Links:
www.michaelmarcelle.com
Michael Marcelle – NowNow Gallery

NowNow Gallery // February, 2008

03.02.08 - Chris Barton - art, photography

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PHOTOGRAPHY — Bob Myaing

NowNow Gallery – February 2007 featuring: Antonio Civita | Tristan Ceddia | Jon Feinstein | Guido Gazzalli | Straton Heron | Anya Jasbär | Thomas Jeppe | Michael Marcelle | Asen Ognyanov | Josh Robenstone | Garry Trinh | Bob Myaing

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