Last night I went to an AMAZING a.r.t. show, Sleep No More, at The Old Lincoln School in Brookline:
Award-winning British theater company Punchdrunk makes its U.S. debut with Sleep No More, an immersive production inspired by Shakespeare’s Macbeth, told through the lens of a Hitchcock thriller. The Old Lincoln School in Brookline, Massachusetts, will be exquisitely transformed into an installation of cinematic scenes that evoke the world of Macbeth . You, the audience, have the freedom to roam the environment and experience a sensory journey as you choose what to watch and where to go. Rediscover the childlike excitement of exploring the unknown in this unique theatrical adventure.
I honestly don’t really know what to say about it because it’s the kind of thing you have to see for yourself. Part art installation, part contemporary dance, part silent play, part haunted house—- I can’t remember the last time I was so completely enthralled and inspired. Experiencing Sleep No More was a great reminder that I’m not nearly dreaming big enough. When you dream big, the art you make doesn’t just make people pause to think or amuse them for a moment; it has a profound affect on all who experience it. I want to be a part of something that big. I need to keep dreaming.
Oh, and PS, the show was followed by an intimate one-night-only set by the ever-entertaining Amanda Palmer. Yeah, my night was pretty good.
Categories: Entries by Caleb
Two images from this year’s PRC Benefit Auction have generated some really interesting reactions from exhibit attendees—
TRIIIBE’s Fine

and Pelle Cass’ Tree, Boston Public Garden

illicit similar and yet drastically different reactions. Both really seem to captivate their audiences and spark imaginations, however most viewers assume that the TRIIIBE image is a Photoshop construction (one woman with different wigs) and that the Cass image is a very real moment in time where a tree is over-run with animal life. What’s hilarious is that the TRIIIBE image shows identical triplets without digital manipulation and the Cass image involves the layering of multiple exposures taken over a period of time. So the question is, why do most people assume the first image is manipulated and the second isn’t? Is it that the TRIIIBE piece is done in a very controlled studio environment and with details that point out that it is a constructed scene? And that conversely the Cass piece is set in an space that is recognizably real and familiar (at least if you live in Boston) and the image, I suppose, does not go out of its way to point out how it is made? I guess I just find it really fascinating that most viewers don’t really question what they are looking at, that they immediately jump to the conclusion that one is Photoshopped and the other isn’t, based on reasons about which I can only speculate. Thoughts?
Categories: Entries by Caleb
October 15, 2009 · 1 Comment
Categories: Entries by Caleb
Wow. When I entered Photolucida’s Critical Mass, I never expected such immediate and heartfelt feedback. I don’t know what I expected, really— maybe my work to disappear into the void, except it hasn’t. At least for some people, it’s spoken to them in some way and that is so amazing to me.
Today I received the best email (which I will keep for myself) and a link to a blog post featuring me in Aline Smithson’s Lenscratch Blog. Lenscratch is one of Source Photographic Review’s 10 Photography-Related Blogs You Should Read, in case you aren’t reading it already.
This and a few bites for group shows and even a solo show have left me feeling really good and itching to make a lot more work. Every time I start feeling like the odd person out, feel uncool or like I’m somehow not as deserving as a lot of the other artists out there, I need to reread Aline’s post and remember that different can be good. I need to stop worrying and follow what excites me, because when I stop worrying about what other people think and just trust myself, what I make is much more honest and much more me. I know this is what I’m meant to be doing. Thank You, Aline.
Categories: Entries by Caleb
I feel like I start each entry these days with “So, I’ve been busy and haven’t posted in a while…”, which is basically true. But this season is going to be the Fall of Photo , I swear!
I started a new day job a few weeks ago, as Recruitment Coordinator at the New England School of Photography — which is where I went to school and also work part-time with Caleb in the Digital Lab. It’s been a great start and I’m excited about working to get folks interested in the school and the program. It’s fall college fair season, so I’ve been traveling around and talking to a lot of high school students. One student told me recently that her school needed to use their darkroom for storage space, so they don’t offer a photography class anymore. Heartbreaking!
I also participated in Jamaica Plain Open Studios — a weekend-long event in my neighborhood in which over 200 artists open their studios or join group spaces to show and sell their work. I sold a few small prints and talked to many, many people. It was energizing but also a little exhausting.
After working hard this summer on promoting my previous work, I feel a serious and impatient desire to spend more time making new work.
Also, have I mentioned that I finished the redesign of my website?
Categories: Entries by Steph
This past weekend I visited Steph at JP Open Studios and while there ran into someone I met at the Danforth opening. Marc Cote is the Chair of the Art and Music Department at Framingham State College and makes some really interesting works on paper and sculptural pieces. Something about how simultaneously dark and yet fragile a lot of it is really speaks to me. Here is how he describes his work:
The images that I create have their roots in snippets of stories that I cull from children’s tales, myths and fables, novels from past and present and my own personal experiences. Character development, the quirkier the better, has always fascinated me. I use physiognomy and gesture to depict characters in varying social stances.
I’m interested in our secret, rarely revealed egos. Often in my prints, I try to simultaneously show our inner feelings and the outer visages that reflect or shelter those emotions. I want to capture the temporal nature of the person: confident, magnetic, animalistic, materialistic, giddy, downtrodden. I want to show the objects we desire and describe the manner in which we seek them.
I scored this fantastic piece and it’s now hanging on my livingroom wall.

Categories: Entries by Caleb
September 30, 2009 · 2 Comments
I was so surprised to find out that the I Like This Art blog mentioned me!
Click on the picture to go take a look.

Categories: Entries by Caleb
Sorting through old film scans on a Saturday while I’m at work. Odds and ends.








And of course, the obligatory long-exposure-at-night-colorful-lights shot.

Categories: Entries by Caleb
I was asked to submit a piece for the most recent Daniel Cooney Emerging Photographers Auction on iGavel– here is a link to the whole set. Some really nice work up there.

Categories: Entries by Caleb
September 24, 2009 · 3 Comments
Leslie K. Brown mentioned Wordle in her blog and I immediately wanted to try it out. I grabbed the entire text of Walter Benjamin’s The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction and here was my result:
[click to enlarge]

The geeky side of me (um, all of me?) is giddy.
Categories: Entries by Caleb
September 23, 2009 · 2 Comments
I was mentioned in a write up on the 2009 Photography Biennial at the Danforth Museum of Art. I find it really interesting the way someone who has never met me and probably hasn’t seen my artist statement figures out how to describe my work in only one sentence. Take a look for yourself (picture links to article).

Categories: Entries by Caleb
September 20, 2009 · 2 Comments
I have a show up right now in an unconventional space, the entrance stairway of my alma mater, New England School of Photography. I really took the opportunity to do something different, showing 15 prints from my Faces series. Here are a few pictures of the show— it’s hard to photograph a stairway! Stop by and check it out yourself before the end of the month.





Categories: Entries by Caleb
You probably thought we had abandoned this pursuit, and even though our lives have gotten so much busier, we’re still at it. Around the middle we’re both antsy to get at making new work instead of marketing previous work, but I am determined to push through and win. Steph, you’re gonna owe me some drinks soon!

Categories: Entries by Caleb
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