Showing posts with label juliana beasley. Show all posts
Showing posts with label juliana beasley. Show all posts

Monday, March 29, 2010

Center of Photography at Woodstock's Photography Quarterly

Pour, Shihmen Dam, Dasi, Taiwan, © Rona Chang

The Center of Photography at Woodstock have released their Photography Quarterly #98 Magazine, which features portfolios by previous artists-in-residence, many who have appeared on Nymphoto!

Our very own Rona Chang is also featured in the quarterly, along with Hee Jin Kang, Juliana Beasley, Justine Reyes, Kanako Sasaki, Jennifer Williams, and Stacy Arezou Mehrfar to name a few.

There's also a great selection of essays and interviews.

Wendy Ewald interviewed by Emily Glass
There is perhaps no other practicing artist in photography that converges the margins between artist and subject more than Wendy Ewald. Emily Glass interviews this ground-breaking image-maker at her upstate New York home about her process and her ongoing career.

Notes from the Blogosphere by Liz Unterman
Unterman investigates this exciting new platform where ideas are being exchanged, voices are being discovered and the roles of artist, curator, and tastemaker are being converged and asks five leading bloggers about what Blogs they turn to in order to know where photography is at.

Saturday, June 27, 2009

Juliana Beasley's Photographs @ Starlette on PRIDE Night @ Angels and Kings

from Juliana Beaseley:


courtesy Juliana Beasley

The Lovely Ladies of "Red Ruby Photography"
WE SUPPORT OUR LESBIAN SISTERS DURING PRIDE!

Come celebrate pride with us at Angels & Kings' Starlette Sunday on June 28th! Let our all ladies Red Ruby crew provide you with an amazing image to commemorate PRIDE Day, NYC 2009.

We are simply taking RED COUCH PORTRAITS WITH RAINBOW FLAG TO BOOT!

Wanda Owner of Starlette at Angels and Kings and the Super Famous, Marga Gomez., 6/09.


Just take a seat on the a stunning red velvet couch, covered in tasteful plastic. A beautiful rainbow flag behind you! Now all you need to do is sit with your sexy MAMMASITA OR BIG DADDY or better yet, pick up the girl or boy of your dreams and make a fun, very fun memory!!!

This an opportunity for all gender orientations to support the purpose and meaning behind PRIDE. So, welcome! Come away with a keepsake. I've been known to pull out a Sharpie and sign the 4X5" print in front of your face...heee, heee.

Doors open at 7pm till ? !!!

Red Ruby Photography Serves the Gay, Lesbian and Transgender Community in the Tri-State Area. We are available for private parties, club soirees, weddings, bar/bat mitzvahs, etc.

Tuesday, June 23, 2009

Juliana Beasely @ Daniel Cooney

Don't miss out on seeing images from Juliana Beaseley's "Eyes of Salamanca" series at Daniel Cooney Fine Art!


Two Cowboys #2, from the series Eyes of Salamanca. © Juliana Beasley

Summer Salon
Featuring the works of Juliana Beasley, Felix Cid, Bradley Peters and Rebecca Schrock

Daniel Cooney Fine Art
511 West 25th Street, #506
New York, NY 10001
212 255 8158

Opening Reception: Thursday, June 25th from 6-8pm
Exhibition Runs: June 25-July 31, 2009 (Hours 11-6, Tuesday-Friday)

And please re-visit our conversation with Juliana, by clicking here.

Tuesday, May 26, 2009

A big fat congrats to Juliana Beasley


Trainer as James Dean Rockaway Park, NYC, 2003 © Juliana Beasley

Juliana Beasley received an Individual Photographer's Fellowship grant from the Aaron Siskind Foundation. Very awesome news and very well deserved Ms. Beasley.

Tuesday, May 19, 2009

Last Chance to see Nymphoto Conversations @ Sasha Wolf

It's your last chance to see NYMPHOTO Conversations Volume 1 at Sasha Wolf Gallery in Tribeca (it ends tomorrow). I watched the French film La Moustache the other day and it really had me thinking about Jane's Asleep at Sea series. The film starts in Paris and unexpectedly ends up in Hong Kong. The last part of the movie is shot on one of Hong Kong's islands reminiscent of what Jane has captured in the image below, which is in the show. It oozes the tranquility of the island though it hints at where it exists in the larger industrial land.


© Jane Tam

NYMPHOTO Conversations: Volume 1
Sasha Wolf Gallery
10 Leonard Street (bet. W.Broadway & Hudson)
New York, NY 10013
May 6-20, 2009


Work by Michele Abeles, Juliana Beasley, Rona Chang, Nina Büsing Corvallo, Candace Gottschalk, Jessica M. Kaufman, Klea McKenna, Michal Chelbin, Talia Greene, Maria Passarotti, Susana Raab, Emily Shur, Tema Stauffer, Jane Tam, Garie Waltzer & Jennifer Williams.

And if you can't stop by the show while it is up, there is the companion book/catalog is available for purchase via Blurb.

Tuesday, March 17, 2009

Nymphoto: 2 Shows, 1 Book & 1 Call for Entries

UPDATE: CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS EXTENDED UNTIL APRIL 7, 2009 11:59 PM!


The Nymphoto Collective is pleased to announce its first self-published book & the accompanying exhibit at Sasha Wolf Gallery.

"Nymphoto: Conversations Volume 1" is a collection of interviews (initially published as blog entries) with various women photographers in varying stages of their careers. The interviews reveal not just the work of the artist, but discuss the thought process involved in the creation of work. While some conversations are more revealing than others, they all expose the persona behind the work; they are all a brief glimpse into the minds and thoughts behind the art. In order to establish continuity, all of the questions in the interviews are in essence the same. General and non-specific, they allow the artist to determine how much of the process and self she wants to expose, lending her the power to dictate.

Accompanying the release of "Nymphoto: Conversations Volume 1" is the exhibit of the same title at Sasha Wolf Gallery in New York.

Nymphoto: Conversations Volume 1
Group Show III
Sasha Wolf Gallery
10 Leonard Street
New York, NY
May 6 – 20, 2009
Opening Reception: May 6, 6 – 8PM.

Work by Michele Abeles, Juliana Beasley, Rona Chang, Nina Buesing Corvallo, Candace Gottschalk, Jessica M. Kaufman, Klea McKenna, Michal Chelbin, Talia Greene, Maria Passarotti, Susana Raab, Emily Shur, Tema Stauffer, Jane Tam, Garie Waltzer & Jennifer Williams.


Nymphoto is equally excited to announce its 4th group show and the collective's first public call for entries.

Nymphoto Presents @ Sasha Wolf Gallery - Call for Entries

Nymphoto is looking for the best in female contemporary and emerging photography. Work will be curated by the core members of the collective in conjunction with highly respected curator and gallery owner Sasha Wolf. Works selected will be included in "Nymphoto Presents at Sasha Wolf Gallery" and be on view from May 23 to June 6, 2009. Sasha Wolf Gallery is located in lower Manhattan, conveniently located and easily accessible from both Chelsea and Dumbo, two of New York's artistic centers.

Nymphoto Presents @ Sasha Wolf Gallery
Group Show IV
10 Leonard Street
New York, NY
May 23-June 6, 2009
Opening Reception: May 28, 6-8 PM


Nymphoto is a collective of women in photography that provides a supportive community for (its) artists and strives to send a positive message to the creative world: We firmly believe in the power of community. Through "Conversations" we are able to expand our community by including new artists in each interview and present their work to our growing audience. The collective is a fusion of disciplines: the scholastic, the representative and the museum. The call for entries exhibit serves to expand on this idea and our growing community, and aims to encourage connections and discourse among female photographers. The efforts of the collective are directed to correct the gender imbalance that continues to prevail in today's (art) world.

Find the submissions guidelines at www.nymphoto.com.
(ed.) Submission Deadline extended until Tuesday April 7, 2009 11:59 PM EST
For more information, please contact Nymphoto at contact(at)nymphoto.com.

Tuesday, March 3, 2009

Op-Ed: Juliana's Secret Stash


Juliana as Amanda with Anonymous Customer, Naked City, Queens, N.Y., 1993, © Juliana Beasley

The start of March begins with a slew of art fairs and gallery openings in New York City. For this week's Op-Ed series, we're reposting Juliana Beasley's story behind "Juliana's Secret Stash." Juliana is participating in a group show at Michael Mazzeo Gallery, with an opening tomorrow, and is debuting her personal history. We're honored to have her reveal such an intimate part of her life.



Juliana as Nico at Naked City, © Juliana Beasley

This series of Polaroid’s is lovingly called “Juliana’s Secret Stash”. I have kept this work hidden in a shoebox away from light and away from the sight of others—except for the occasional friend—for over almost two decades, until now. I will show part of this collection, in the form of larger sized scans of the Polaroid’s, for the first time at the Micheal Mazzeo Gallery from March 4th through April 11th 2009.

During the 1990s, I was dancing and photographing in strip clubs in the tri-state area and around the USA, paving the way to completion of my book Lapdancer. Stuffed away into my duffle bag of g-strips and spandex costumes, I also toted along the SX-70 and Joy Cam Polaroid cameras to photograph dancers, take portraits of myself with other dancers and self-portraits.

Throughout my career as a dancer, I often took the opportunity to be photographed with well known and not so well known feature dancers and porn stars. Feature dancers are performers who come to the gentlemen’s club for the week to perform a "special" routine on stage, bringing in elated customers.


Leah's First Night, © Juliana Beasley

I had many chances to have my portrait taken with these weekly performers. When I worked in Honolulu for half a year, I found a club where porn stars and features were a common part of the program, night and day. They would fly in just to parade their specialty, whether it was grotesquely large implants, the size of three human heads smushed together in one globule, or a bubble bath on stage. They performed several times during a shift. In one week, they definitely earned more money than I did, or at least, this is what I heard from other dancers who estimated that in a year’s worth of work, they grossed 200K and more.

Between stage shows and meeting with adoring groupies, they hid in their personal dressing rooms. The “house” club dancers wondered what they did in there? I imagine apply more make-up upon sweaty made-up faces and calculate the day’s earnings with their traveling managers.

They were the rock stars of the business. I was a supporting actress.

Juliana as Jesse with Goldi Star in Hawaii, © Juliana Beasley

Part of the fanfare was not only an effort to promote their unique performance, but also to sell their fanzines and offer a lasting memory to the customers in return for a nominal fee. After a performance, the male fans would line up in a corner of the club and pay to have a Polaroid taken of themselves and their favorite glamour queen. Instant gratification before the days of digital! The adult starlet would then scribble the customary signature on the Polaroid with something brazen such as the classic "Cum See Me". Sometimes, when they had the time, they would write something more original and address it to the customer.

I often went and took my place at the end of the cue to pleasantly ask the performer, “Can I have my photo taken with you?” Whatever they thought of me, I always walked away charmed and delighted with my new possession. All I wanted was a bit of nostalgia from my dancer days in the form of a celluloid Polaroid to hold onto for future days and laughs.

During the final years of working on Lapdancer, I was no longer dancing myself and traveled the United States simply to photograph. I went to Colorado, Las Vegas, Tampa, Ft. Myers and Miami. I began shooting “house” dancers with my newly bought Polaroid Joy Cam. I had an idea: I would photograph a dancer and ask her to sign the bottom of her portrait with a Sharpie just like the feature and porn actresses had done, elevating her to a higher level of stardom. Instead of the formulaic one-liners, I asked them to write what they were really thinking at that very moment while working a night’s shift at the club.


Pennie, © Juliana Beasley

Many of the dancers wrote the ubiquitous “I want to make lots of MONEY” or something close to it. However, sometimes a dancer would write very personal ironic or sad one-lined commentaries. An older dancer from Ft. Myers named Pennie wrote under her portrait, “Thanks for seeing something in me that I no longer see”.

My concept was a simple. I wanted to create a visual pun mimicking the feature dancers’ flagrant self-presentation, a juxtaposition of fantasy in relation to reality. I knew from personal experience that behind every dancer’s smile and agreeable affect are thoughts far from the external trimmings.


Wanna Dance?, Las Vegas, © Juliana Beasley

I am intrigued with this frank inner monologue within each dancer and how it compares to that of the feature dancers’ contrived scribblings upon the Polaroid’s white edges.

This dichotomy is not singular, nor a detached phenomenon existing only within strip clubs. We are all tempted to pass through life euphorically embracing the consumption of fantasy, rather than facing not only simple joys, but also the reality of pain.

For more information about the story behind the work go to:

http://julianaslovelylandofneurosis.blogspot.com/

-Juliana Beasley

We want to thank Juliana for allowing us to repost this entry. Please go see her work and say hi at the opening.

Juliana's Secret Stash at Art Fair!
Michael Mazzeo Gallery
March 4 through April 11, 2009
526 W. 26th street
NY, NY 10001

Thursday, January 22, 2009

A Conversation with Juliana Beasley

Juliana Beasley is a wower. I first came across her Lapdancer work at a benefit auction several years ago. Her personality, writing, and her photographs are bold and gutsy, at least more than I could ever be. Her project Last Stop: Rockaway Park along with the amazing tales on her blog, Juliana's Lovely Land of Neurosis, has become a photo memoir, in which she recounts her experiences with her subjects. I've thoroughly enjoyed her virtual company the last couple of weeks as we worked towards sharing the following Conversation with you. Grab a coffee or a tea before going on and be prepared to be taken by Juliana.


Fish Bowl, from the series Last Stop: Rockaway Park. © Juliana Beasley

NP: Tell us a little about yourself.

JB: I spent the first five years of my childhood in Philadelphia at 3110 West Penn St. I lived across the street from my best friend, Liz Fritz and her tag-a-long baby brother, Georgie. They both had electric red hair like Ronald McDonald in the cartoon commercial. My Mom called Liz, “the Lizard”. I was just Jul, a nickname only a few people in my life still call me.

On summer evenings, when my Mom returned from work, we begged her to drive us around in her red TR6 Triumph named Tony. The sun was low and the heat still. We sat up on the back of the hood, held onto the convertible’s roll bar and she eased up on the gas as we circled the block again and again. I felt the air rush through my hair and over my sweaty face. She played a precarious game of stuttering the pedal with her foot, stopping and starting the engine. We laughed. Could we stand up, we asked.

On summer nights we played with my sister and the other older kids in a game of hide and seek reaching as far as the perimeters of the entire block, avoiding the backyards of disagreeable neighbors and those haunted with ghosts and witches.

The Lizard and I caught fire flies in jelly jars. We also built a playground set, complete with a slide, in a shoebox built for inchworms we had collected from leaves. We crushed their little bodies, in an attempt to teach them how to use the juggle gym. They died before term. We dug their graves with sticks, in a secret burial site on the side my house, performing the most loving memorials in the name of every one.

These are the sweet memories; the flawless nostalgia read in a required reading book for a high school English class, two hundred pages before the darkness and the shadows reveal themselves to our sweet and fragile narrator.

How magical the past can appear after a frontal lobe lobotomy!


Paddy's Mid Afternoon Nap, from the series Last Stop: Rockaway Park. © Juliana Beasley

NP: How did you discover photography?

JB: My unfailing consumption of photography began when I discovered a family in a series of photo album—my family.

I found them in a collection of snapshots, meticulously arranged, glued in with Elmer's, and bound my silver screws. There were five books in all, numbered one to number five.

On nights of Ritalin and Seconal, my mother had painstakingly, pasted pictures of me and my sister, wearing matching outfits (my father always forever absent) into two early albums. We were stacked single file in-between numerous postcards she had bought at Buckingham Palace of her latest obsession, Queen Elizabeth.

Album Number One: there was my mother in black and white, before I even knew her, a young woman on her way to medical school in a series of photographs, hamming it up for the camera in a storyboard performance from beginning to a finale where she mocks her own death at the gas station pump, her tongue hanging out.

What I had believed was my life and family, abruptly ended short mid-way through Album Number Five. My intuition told me the author had lost interest like a child who tosses last year’s favorite toy away and moves towards the next fad.


Isabelle's Room, from the series Last Stop: Rockaway Park. © Juliana Beasley

After the predictable order of a perfect life filled with beaming smiles, birthday parties and aging parents had disappeared; I felt an empty void, a huge misunderstanding in my formative years.

In junior high school, your family became my family. I spent evenings on sleepovers at my friends, Nancy Goldman and Nancy Kaufman. The traditional bonding ceremony towards best friendship meant pulling out the family photo albums, revealing un cool fathers with plaid polyester pants and mother’s who wore their hair the same way that they always did. My mother was avant-garde in the suburban realm.


Henry, from the series Last Stop: Rockaway Park. © Juliana Beasley

NP: Where do you find inspiration?

Inspiration! I am inspired when I see, for example, a grown woman who collects a specialty brand of dolls at fairs where they meet other woman whom collects the same dolls. No less, the man who teaches his dog to count to ten with his paw thrills me. These people prove to me everyday that without purpose—however stupid or great—there would be little left for most people to ponder, including myself. I revel in the differences of other people and places…I dare to see things from a fresh perspective. I am admittedly, greedy to fill my belly with information. I want to devour it all…the stories of Oliver Sach’s patients, the characters in Edward Gorey’s Poems, the gritty starkness of Boris Mikailov’s work, the soft nurturing of the portraits of Sally Mann, the raw poetry of Eileen Mayle's, the perfect word beyond the idiom, the sugar coated grandiose and morose memoirs of Elizabeth Wurtzel.


Leopard Lady, from the series Last Stop: Rockaway Park. © Juliana Beasley

I have been working on a project about a community on the Rockaway’s peninsula called “Last Stop: Rockaway Park”. I began in 2002, when I was a passenger in a car driving with friends on a tour ride throughout Queens. I hadn’t been out to the Rockaways since my college years. I never thought about the Rockaways; I suppose most people living in the other boroughs rarely do, unless, they are hipsters who go out there to surf throughout the year. Before, Rockaway Park became part of my life-repertoire; it was simply just a nebulous point on a map. After, repetitious traveling from one point to another, the two hour trip became ingrained inside me more as a feeling than a location, breathing and alive with photographs to be reinterpreted every time, I looked over contact sheets and work prints. 116th St. became a second family of people, who really didn’t know much about me and nonetheless, accepted me into their lives.

“Last Stop: Rockaway Park” came into my life like many projects—unexpectedly. A witness to a fight at a boardwalk bar, I watched the bartender jump the bar with a bat in his hand, chasing away an angered ragged man. I later learned his name was Butchie, a soft and generous man at the core.


Maria, from the series Eyes of Salamanca. © Juliana Beasley

NP: How did this project come about?

JB: In the spring of 2006, I went down to Mexico on a vacation with my dear companion, Victoria. I learned a photographer’s vacation is difficult without indulging in snapping the shutter. Upon driving into a small town in the Southernmost part of the Yucatan coast, I noticed an older man, white and quite freckled and burnt by the strong sun. He was talking at a pay phone, along the main street. He wore a uniform, a blue-checkered shirt, suspenders, and a straw hat. Stop the car, I said, a block away.

I approached him while he was on the phone and he motioned for me to wait until he was finished. When he had finished, we met at a stucco wall outside of a Catholic orphanage. We began a conversation in broken English which pleased him, and even more so, that we were Americans. He introduced himself as an elder of the Mennonite Camp called “Salamanca”. His name is Isaac Schmitt. Soon, into our conversation, he invited us to afternoon lunch after their church services on Sunday.


Holding Hands, from the series Eyes of Salamanca. © Juliana Beasley

When we first arrived, the “elders” invited us inside Isaac’s aluminum built home, into a cramped living room where they surrounded us and in what seemed a multicultural round table meeting. One younger man began to ask us about our American lives. I noticed a piece of paper in his hands as he delivered a Q&A. I felt like an American ambassador.

We spent a sweaty afternoon, playing with curious children (initially, they ran away from us in fear) and exchanged information about our very different cultures with the adults. The children marveled when I pulled out my digital camera and began to take photographs. I was showered with young “oohs and ahhs” in unison, when I showed them their semblance on the back of the Canon LCD. For once, digital truly might have a purpose.


Sunday After Church, from the series Eyes of Salamanca. © Juliana Beasley


Young Cowboys, from the series Eyes of Salamanca. © Juliana Beasley

NP: What's next?

JP: In the spring of 2009, I will be returning down to the South of Mexico to live with the Schmitt family amongst the other Mennonites in the Salamanca farm community. At this point, I couldn’t tell you what the project is about even if I go there with a few ideas. I think this is way I normally work. I go in with a larger net than necessary and come out with the small fish in the end. It takes me more time, as it does in all relationships, to understand things clearly and to move beyond the external. My plan is to live in the community for one month, photograph, blog at a computer center in the closest town, ride in the back of buggies and have a Mennonite dress tailor made to fit me. Maybe even relax a little.


Blonde Braids, from the series Eyes of Salamanca. © Juliana Beasley

Thank you Juliana! To see more of Juliana's work, pay a visit to her site, and her blog, Juliana's Lovely Land of Neurosis. To own a piece of Juliana's work, go to her sale.

Wednesday, January 21, 2009

Last Day Of Daniel Cooney's Emerging Artist Auction


© Juliana Beasley

Head over to www.igavel.com to see the latest Emerging Artists Auction curated & presented by Daniel Cooney. The works are also available for viewing at Daniel Conney Fine Art in Chelsea.

You will find one of my works as well as many great works by artists such as Juliana Beasley, Nadine Rovner, Toni Pepe, Sarah Palmer, Nyra Lang, Pixy Liao, Shane Lavalette, Timothy Briner & others . But hurry up. The auction ends today! Happy Bidding!

PS: And stay tuned for Rona's upcoming conversation with no other than the formidable Juliana Beasley herself!

Wednesday, January 14, 2009

Juliana Beasley on Lens Culture


View of Rockaway Park, from the series Last Stop: Rockaway Park. © Juliana Beasley

"Here one still finds friendship, laughter and even love."

Juliana Beasley's Last Stop: Rockaway Park series is featured on Lens Culture.

Sunday, January 11, 2009

Everyone Loves Juliana

This is just a reminder to go check out Juliana Beasely's newly started blog. Julianna is a gifted storyteller in any medium. You can find Juliana's blog at: www.julianaslovelylandofneurosis.blogspot.com.
Juliana is also participating in Daniel Cooney's 2nd Emerging Artist Auction at www.igavel.com.

Sunday, December 21, 2008

More Juliana Beasley Prints for sale

More of Juliana Beasley's prints are up for sale on her blog.

I love this one from City Heat:

Schmatta ©Juliana Beasely

And this one from Eyes of Salamanca:

Maria ©Juliana Beasely

For the full selection and more info, check out Juliana's blog.

Saturday, December 20, 2008

On view at CPW: Converging Margins & Angle of Repose

from CPW:

CONVERGING MARGINS
curated by Leah Oates | Station Independent Projects.

artists: Juliana Beasley, Paul D'Amato, Rachael Dunville, Lucas Foglia, Richard Gary, Lauren Greenfield, Miles Ladin, Deana Lawson, Stacy Renee Morrison, Stephen Schuster, and Ed Templeton.

ANGLE OF REPOSE
a solo exhibition of work by Toni Pepe

on view thru January 11, 2009*.

CPW's galleries are free and open to the public, Wednesday - Sunday from 12 - 5pm and by appointment.

*Please note CPW's offices and galleries will be closed from December 23, 2008 - January 1, 2009.

Tuesday, December 9, 2008

Print Sale: Rona Chang, Juliana Beasley

Two outstanding photographers have print sales going on right now:

First up is Nymphoto's Rona Chang's "Breathing in Series" - I love this series and I think it reflects much of Rona's creativity & personality and also connects to her larger body of work. These open-edition prints are a steal; you can find Rona's store at: www.plumandlion.bigcartel.com. Make sure to check in frequently as Rona will continue to update the selection.


Granny's Rowboat & Calendar ©Rona Chang


Next up is award winning photographer Juliana Beasley who is offering 4 limited edition prints from her series "Last Stop: Rockaway Park". All images are printed on 18" x18" paper (14.5" x14.5" image) as a edition of 15 with 2 APs. Her pricing is also very reasonable - and allows you to own prints that are already in important collections! You can find the print sale at: www.julianabeasley.com/holiday_sale.htm.

Juliana also has joined the blogging world, to check out her journal, head to: www.julianaslovelylandofneurosis.blogspot.com


Frieda & Last Stop Diner ©Juliana Beasely

Friday, November 7, 2008

Limited Edition Prints from Humble

Humble Arts Foundation has a great selection of limited edition prints. Here are the latest two gems.


Untitled (Lily Eye), 2007 © Ahndraya Parlato


Two Cowboys, 2006 © Juliana Beasley

Tuesday, August 19, 2008

Juliana Beasley Opening

(via Amy Stein) See the work of Julianna Beasley, starting Thursday at Farmani Gallery in Brooklyn:

Human Condition
Farmani Gallery
August 21-31, 2008
111 Front Street, Gallery 212
Brooklyn, NY
Opening Reception: Thursday, August 21, 6-8:30pm

Saturday, February 23, 2008

Juliana Besaely on "The Picture Not Taken"

Juliana Beasely talks about the picture that got away and gives the reader an insight to her process on: www.thephotographsnottaken.com