Category Archives: Photography

Nutricious and Delicious! A Happy Thanksgiving Day Spread.

Happy Thanksgiving, boy!

Fresh Thanksgiving boy with all the trimmings! Have another helping. It’s good for you. And it’s good for the boy!

Oh yes…C’est la vie, c’est la guerre, tout le monde manges pommes des terre.

3rd Eye (I) in the Back of his Head: Wafaa Bilal to transmit live from NYC to Qatar and On-line.

Wafaa Bilal displays his "3rd I" (AP Photo)

Who has the right to record whose image? Where? Under what conditions? Corporate, civic and governmental surveillance are increasingly the norm. Airport security systems strip travelers bare. Businesses record their customers, but often forbid photography on the premises. As our imaging technologies become more sophisticated, ethical questions become more tangled.

Iraqi-born media artist and NYU/Tisch School of the Arts professor Wafaa Bilal is shooting back. He has had a small digital camera surgically implanted into the back of his skull, and for a period of one year, the camera will transmit images in one-minute intervals from the back of the artist’s head to Qatar and On-line. The piece is called The 3rd I, and was commissioned by the Mathaf Arab Museum of Modern Art as one of 23 contemporary works that will inaugurate the new museum that opens in Doha, Qatar on December 30th. What images will come? The On-line launch is the 15th of December, and is counting down now at The 3rd I.

Eye Heart Teh Gaze: Big Deal Art Sale at Visual Aid

Eye Heart Teh Gaze. Dr. Jordy Jones 2010

Saturday is Visual Aid’s Annual BIG DEAL Art Sale…4-9:30pm on Saturday, November 13, 2010 Somarts, 934 Brannan Street, SF. Tickets $50 at the door

Enjoy: Great art and people-watching. Listen: Soulful sonic goodness from DJs N’K and Garlynn. Imbibe: Libations from Blue Angel Vodka, Barefoot Wine and Bubbly, Peroni. Taste: Yummy hors d’oeuvres and desserts from Creole Catering Company, The Only Cookie, Heartbaker. Put Your Hands in the Air: Auctioneer David Sobon will energize the crowd. Feel Great: While raising funds for Visual Aid, providing a gallery, free art supplies and community to artists living with AIDS, cancer, diabetes and other life-threatening illnesses. Obey: Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence

More Info: Visual Aid

Ahoy, boys! Happy Veteran’s Day to our Mermen in Uniform…

Happy Veteran’s Day from friend of this site George Wong. Thanks, George! These sexy mermen sailors make me want to pull in a dock. Ahoy, boys…and thanks so much for your Service!

Update for Veteran’s Day, 2011: George Wong passed away this past summer. He will be missed.

Three Generations of Leather: Wet Plate Ambrotype Photo by Eric Robinson

Leather Family: Three Generations. photo: Eric Robinson

We learn from our elders and teach the young. And sometimes vice-versa. As a community that has collectively lost so many and so much in the last three decades, it is more important than ever that we pass on our best traditions to the generations coming up. It is equally important that we incorporate the fresh energy and ideas of youth into our clubs, institutions, dungeons and families. Make no mistake about it: this is a family photograph. It is a scan of a wet-plate ambrotype, a singular photo on black glass, a 19th century process turned towards 21st century subject matter. Taken by Eric Robinson as part of a project in which he made portraits of Leather families in San Francisco. July, 2010. For more on Eric, click here and here.

Ooogabooga Under Fascism: Juba Kalamka’s Awesome Album Odyssey

Class Photo (and CD Cover) Juba Kalamka (lower left) and Zulu Level (ages 6-7) classmates at Shule Ya Watoto (School For Children) Chicago, Illinois April 1977 photo: Mama Anita "Kofi" Douglas (RIP)

Juba Kalamka is a 21st century African-American renaissance man, a one-time bougie boho post-pomo afro homo* with a vita that includes being a founding member of the seminal homo-hop group Deep Dickollective, a featured role in Alex Hinton’s 2005 documentary on the homo-hop scene Pick Up the Mic, and ongoing work as a bi/sexual activist, speaking, writing and appearing in films. His lyrics will also be included in the Yale Anthology of Rap, to be released in the winter of 2010. The anthology contains lyrics from the Ooogabooga Under Fascism album track Yeoman Johnson, academic essays by Kalamka, and a song from his previous group project, Deep Dickollective.

Kalamka’s current project is called “Ooogabooga Under Fascism.” A multimedia project, it will include cds, chapbooks, 7″ vinyl 45 rpm records, and assorted ephemera, including stickers. He is raising completion funds through kickstarter.com. Kickstarter is an on-line project for funding-raising for creative projects.

The album cover features a very young Kalamka. Four children look directly into the camera’s gaze. Its focus is intense. They return its intensity fearlessly . These are kids coming up in a particular educational environment at a unique moment in time. The place, Chicago, near Douglas Park in the North Lawndale neighborhood. They are being schooled in, among other things, a certain strategic fearlessness in the face of a powerful, always potentially hostile, white gaze.  The children wear colors of pan-Africanism, the red and green that represent blood and  life. The adult figure is cut by the photographic frame at the face. His gaze is concealed, although his position and influence are clear.

The Gay Highwaymen talked to Kalamka, who said that: “Thematically, Africentricity and Black Nationalism and how they shaped my later politics, identity formations and aesthetics are a part of the theme of the album.” A short interview follows.

GH: I didn’t pick up on little Juba at first. Fierce! Great photo. Shule Ya Watoto was your school, right?

JK: Correct.

GH: How old were you?

JK: I’m six years old in the photo, turned seven that July 12.

GH: Rites of Passage Academy? Primary or supplementary?

JK: Shule ya Watoto was a full-time primary-1st Grade school and was so from 1972-1982. I attended from January 1974-June 1977. It has mostly been a “Saturday Academy” and Rites of Passage Academy in years since, mostly thru the mid 1990s.

GH: It was associated with Malcom X College of Chicago?

JK: Shule Ya Watoto at one time belonged to CIBI (Council of Independent Black Institutions) of which Uhuru Sasa (NYC) and IPE/New Concept Development Center (Institute Of Positive Education) were affiliated as well. The Shule was co-founded by Hannibal Afrik (the adult in the photo, upper left corner) who most recently ran Community Youth Achievers/Environmental Village Campus in Hermanville Misssissippi. Malcolm X College is actually one of The City Colleges of Chicago. It is the former Wilson Jr, College which has been around since the 1940s, but was re-named Malcolm X in 1971 when the new campus opened. “Malcolm” as it’s affectionately known in the community, has been ground zero for Kwanzaa events and Africentrist anything on the west side of Chicago since around 1973 or so. I’ve been there for some event or other every year since about 1976 or so, the last time this past June.

GH: What about the title “Ooogabooga Under Fascism”?

JK: “Ooogabooga Under Fascism” is taken from a quote by Illinois Black Panther Party Chair Fred Hampton. Hampton had been indicted by a number of members of cultural nationalist organizations because the Panthers didn’t wear the popular quasi-african garb (dashikis and the like) or have African names. Hampton responded by saying (paraphrasing) that if one was in a room that was on fire, that your politic would not be a dashiki- it would be a bucket of water.

He saw nothing wrong with African names and such, but he thought the criticism was short sighted- saying in (another paraphrase) that if he changed his name to “Ooogabooga” and didn’t do anything about the fascist conditions that he lived under, that he would in effect be “Ooogabooga under fascism”**

The message has lost no political vitality. On a another note, Juba pointed out in reference to the cover photo: “…how insanely jealous I was of Osei’s afro. My mom kept cutting my hair!!”

For details on how to support this project, go to his Kickstarter site.

For more on Juba Kalamka, read an Amoeba interview by Billy Jam here.

*From the Deep Dickollective album of the same name.

** J.F Rice. Up On Madison, Down On 75th Street: A History of the Illinois Black Panther Party. Evanston, 1983.

Eric Robinson shoots wet plate Photography at Dore / Up Your Alley Fair

This slideshow requires JavaScript.

Photographer Eric Robinson set up his view camera and portable darkroom on 1oth and Folsom to take wet plate photographs at the Dore / Up Your Alley street fair in San Francisco. 19th century processes meet 21st century subject matter. He is in California working on a project that he began in Illinois. Click here for more on Eric. More later. [photoevent: July 25th, 2010]

19th c. Technology 21st c. Subject Matter: Artisanal Photographer Eric Robinson to shoot SF Leather

Eric Robinson takes the techniques of photography back to its roots. He works in wet plate collodion processes, producing one of a kind plates on glass. Using a traditional view camera, he cuts an anachronistic figure while exposing the plates. No shutter, he lifts a sliding door on the camera to expose the plate and counts. One, two, three…twenty-nine, thirty seconds or more. A portraitist, his subjects experience a taste of the early sitter’s experience. It is important to stay still. The help of devices may be sought. Portraiture at its best is a collaborative process, an agreement between the photographer and the model. What began in the midwest as a series of portraits by a graduate student of his professor and his partner has become the focus of a cross-country road-trip to document a lifestyle, a subculture, and the extended family of a friend and rogue scholar. On the road somewhere in Nevada as of this posting, Eric should be arriving in San Francisco sometime late Friday, in time for many of the festivities associated with the Dore (Up Your) Alley street fair. Read more about Eric at the HomoGenii site. The photos in the slide show below were taken during a shoot in April, 2010 in Carbondale, Illinois, where the photographer is taking an MFA in Mass Communication and Media Arts at Southern Illinois University. His undergraduate degree is in Chemistry.

This slideshow requires JavaScript.

San Francisco Street Art Seen

San Francisco Street Art Seen on June 26th, 2010 in the South of Market (SOMA) neighborhood.