Archive for April, 2008

Hillary Clinton Campaign Appearance

April 25, 2008

Last night I had the opportunity to photograph presidential candidate Hillary Clinton, when she stopped into town for an appearance. There were people lined up for hours to make it into the Thomas Wolfe Auditorium to see her.

After her speech the crowd waited outside for an appearance. I stuck around to wait and see if she would show. Sure enough, she got out and went around shaking hands. The security was as one would expect, quite heavy. I found that to be one of the more interesting aspects of the evening.

Homemade and campaign signs were sprinkled throughout the crowd.

Before Hillary appeared outside, bomb sniffing dogs checked the parked cars.

New Website

April 23, 2008

Well, after four years since my last site I’d decided it was time for a total redo. My work has changed and I’ve grown so I needed a site to reflect this.

After a few months of researching, thinking and meditating on what I liked and didn’t like, I had enough info to move ahead. I’ve found the splash page to be helpful as it can link directly to my blog, website and archive. So here it is, please take a look. I hope you enjoy it.

Statue

April 21, 2008

Scott Lessing Hubener

Interesting Photo Choice

April 18, 2008

Sweet Jane

April 17, 2008

Standing on the corner,
suitcase in my hand
Jack is in his corset, and Jane is her vest,
And me I’m in a rock’n'roll band Hah!
Ridin’ in a Stutz Bear Cat, Jim
You know, those were different times!
Oh, all the poets they studied rules of verse
And those ladies, they rolled their eyes

Sweet Jane! Whoa! Sweet Jane, oh-oh-a! Sweet Jane!

I’ll tell you something
Jack, he is a banker
And Jane, she is a clerk
Both of them save their monies, ha
And when, when they come home from work
Oh, Sittin’ down by the fire, oh!
The radio does play
The classical music there, Jim
“The March of the Wooden Soldiers”
All you protest kids
You can hear Jack say, get ready, ah

Sweet Jane! Come on baby! Sweet Jane! Oh-oh-a! Sweet Jane!

Some people, they like to go out dancing
And other peoples, they have to work, Just watch me now!
And there’s even some evil mothers
Well they’re gonna tell you that everything is just dirt
Y’know that, women, never really faint
And that villains always blink their eyes, woo!
And that, y’know, children are the only ones who blush!
And that, life is just to die!
And, everyone who ever had a heart
They wouldn’t turn around and break it
And anyone who ever played a part
Oh wouldn’t turn around and hate it!

Sweet Jane! Whoa-oh-oh! Sweet Jane! Sweet Jane!

Heavenly wine and roses
Seems to whisper to her when he smiles
Heavenly wine and roses
Seems to whisper to her when she smiles
La lala lala la, la lala lala la
Sweet Jane
Sweet Jane
Sweet Jane

-Lou Reed

Cat Power and Photography

April 16, 2008

Cat Power is one of those artists that impassions many diverse fans. How is it there are so many good photos of her? William Eggleston was in her video and Alec Soth has even photographed her. She’s an original and that seems to inspire. She has a quirkiness and uneasiness as well as Chanel knows, an incredible sex appeal. Others are drawn to these qualities in her as a person but especially as an artist. Originality isn’t as easy it seems and other artists recognize this. I’m drawn to her because of this.

So Cat Power, I too like Soth ask if you need any other cameo’s in your videos, give me a shout. I’m available. Also I’d like to take your picture.

The Windsor

April 16, 2008

I’ve had my eye on this hotel for awhile.  I’m hoping the renevations they’re doing don’t change the exterior.

Short and Sweet

April 15, 2008

Something new. Brevity today.

Copyright Scott Lessing Hubener

Tammy Mercure

April 14, 2008

Tammy Mercure is working on her MFA from Eastern Tennessee University. I’d seen her photos recently on Rob Haggart’s promo group and then again at the Humble Arts Foundation. Her series, More Places for People can be seen here.

Tammy’s site also has a series entitled The Blue Ridge is quite good and I really enjoyed seeing photos from nearby places. Obviously there are some really good photographers in Johnson City coming out of Eastern Tennessee’s fine art program. Mike Smith, who had a recent show at UNCA is a big credit to that.

Copyright Tammy Mercure

ASMP-NC

April 12, 2008

The ASMP-NC chapter has launched a new blog, which I am helping to manage. Be sure and check it out here. I’ve also added a link to it over on the left. We’ll be adding listings of events as well as ASMP news etc. It will be a good resource to have for our chapter. As well, it will allow readers to communicate and give feedback, which is one of the things that is so great about blogs. They can really become communal and the sharing of information goes two ways.

Oh, and BTW I saw Dolly Parton today.

Watershed

April 9, 2008

I was at the Asheville Art Museum today and saw an exhibit at the Pack Place Community Gallery by Jeff Rich, which was really impressive. Jeff documented the French Broad River Basin. I’m excited to see more documentary work being shown in Asheville.

Jeff’s show will be on display from April 2nd-May 5th. There will be a reception on April 19th from 1-4PM. There is more information at Riverlink as well.  After visiting Jeff’s site, I noticed he had a nice blog as well, so be sure and check that out.

Dogwoods

April 7, 2008

Some recent Polaroids from a trip to the eastern part of NC last weekend.  Because our elevation here in Asheville is a couple thousand feet higher, our trees bloom a couple weeks after theirs.  So I had an opportunity to get some nice shots again of redbuds and dogwoods.  They will be blooming here by this week.

Copyright 2008 Scott Lessing Hubener

Jonathan Williams RIP

April 4, 2008

The poet and publisher Jonathan Williams passed away last month in Highlands, NC. Williams was the founder of the Jargon Society. His book A Palpable Elysium is a fantastic work featuring Jonathan’s photos of friends and acquaintances.

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From Wire Reports

Jonathan Williams, founder of the Jargon Society, died March 16 in Highlands. The small publishing house in the western mountains of North Carolina for more than 50 years has introduced the works of unknown, little-known and soon-to-be-better-known writers, photographers and artists.

Williams, 79, lived and worked in Scaly Mountain. The cause of death was pneumonia, said Thomas Meyer, his companion for more than 40 years.

Williams was a poet, essayist, photographer and graphic artist — talents he brought to the meticulously refined design of the approximately 100 books of avant-garde poetry and fiction, folk art and photography that Jargon has published since 1952.

“The face he presented to the world was of an irascible crank, a loose cannon, a gadfly,” Meyer said. “But as a publisher he was extraordinarily generous, always looking for the overlooked.”

Among the writers whose careers budded or bloomed through Williams’ attention were James Broughton, Basil Bunting, Robert Creeley, Robert Duncan, Denise Levertov, Paul Metcalf, Lorine Niedecker, Charles Olson and Louis Zukofsky. Williams published a book-length poem about the history of industrialization by futurist Buckminster Fuller in 1962.

Look 3

April 3, 2008

Look 3 is coming up this summer in Charlottesville, VA. The three day festival features various speakers, workshops, gallery exhibitions and more.

The Festival is a not for profit celebration of photography — created by photographers. With a program of exhibitions, workshops, interviews, outdoor screenings, and special events, the Festival will attract professional and amateur photographers from around the world to Charlottesville’s picturesque historic downtown.

Exhibitions include:

Mary Ellen Mark, “Prom,” McGuffey Art Center
James Nachtwey, Les Yeux du Monde
Joel-Peter Witkin, “The Marriage of Heaven and Hell,” Second Street Gallery
Steve McCurry, “Faces,” The Transit Center
Jeff Jacobson, “Melting Point,” McGuffey Art Center
White House News Photographers Association, “Eyes of History,” McGuffey Art Center
Lori Grinker, “Afterwar”,” McGuffey Art Center
Nubar Alexanian – Standard Operating Procedure,” The Bridge

Workshops offered are:

William Albert Allard – Looking For Pictures: The Puzzle Making of Photography
Eugene Richards – Photographing People (portfolio submission required)
David Alan Harvey – The Photographic Essay (portfolio submission required)
Lynn Johnson – Crafting Your Own Photographic Adventure

 

Helvetica

April 1, 2008

There’s a great documentary called Helvetica about the aforenamed typeface and the graphic arts field in general since Helvetica’s inception. It’s a very enlightening and eye-opening look at how types and graphics influence our lives. Not only is the history of Helvetica discussed, but also the post-modern period and subsequent rejection of modernism and Helvetica. The bindings of modernism seem to outweigh the reactionary nature of postmodernism. Modernism, in its architectural and design desciplines had more cohesiveness as a movement and practicality behind it.

This movie made me take another look at the Bauhaus movement.  What a great period of art and design. I love the work and thinkers that came out of this period and whose influence continues today.  Just a few miles away from where I live is where the Black Mountain College was located.

 The story of Black Mountain College begins in 1933 and comprises a fascinating chapter in the history of education and the arts. Conceived by John A. Rice, a brilliant and mercurial scholar who left Rollins College in a storm of controversy, Black Mountain College was born out of a desire to create a new type of college based on John Dewey’s principles of progressive education. The events that precipitated the College’s founding occurred simultaneously with the rise of Adolf Hitler, the closing of the Bauhaus by the Nazis, and the beginning of the persecution of artists and intellectuals on the European continent. Some of these people found their way to Black Mountain, either as students or faculty. Meanwhile, the United States was mired in the Great Depression, and Franklin Roosevelt, committed to putting people back to work, established the Public Works Arts Project (a precursor of the WPA).

The founders of the College believed that the study and practice of art were indispensable aspects of a student’s general liberal arts education, and they hired Josef Albers to be the first art teacher. Speaking not a word of English, he and his wife Anni left the turmoil in Hitler’s Germany and crossed the Atlantic Ocean by boat to teach art at this small, rebellious college in the mountains of North Carolina.

Black Mountain College was fundamentally different from other colleges and universities of the time. It was owned and operated by the faculty and was committed to democratic governance and to the idea that the arts are central to the experience of learning. All members of the College community participated in its operation, including farm work, construction projects and kitchen duty. Located in the midst of the beautiful North Carolina mountains near Asheville, the secluded environment fostered a strong sense of individuality and creative intensity within the small College community.

Legendary even in its own time, Black Mountain College attracted and created maverick spirits, some of whom went on to become well-known and extremely influential individuals in the latter half of the 20th century. A partial list includes people such as Willem and Elaine de Kooning, Robert Rauschenberg, Josef and Anni Albers, Jacob Lawrence, Merce Cunningham, John Cage, Cy Twombly, Kenneth Noland, Ben Shahn, Franz Kline, Arthur Penn, Buckminster Fuller, M.C. Richards, Francine du Plessix Gray, Charles Olson, Robert Creeley, Dorothea Rockburne and many others, famous and not-so-famous, who have impacted the world in a significant way. Even now, decades after its closing in 1957, the powerful influence of Black Mountain College continues to reverberate.