After awell-rated IstvanVirag exhibitioncalledFotóálmok(Snoviđenja) in Budapest, this setting consisting40abstractphotographs that will be exhibitedin Baja (Hungary), MihályBorbásthe Galleryfrom 13August to 10September2014th
Branislav Strugar was born in Belgrade in 1949.
He has been active in photography since 1968. As member of the Elektromašinac Photo Club, he exhibited his photographs in 107 exhibitions and won 40 awards and diplomas.
He holds a title of a Master of Photography of the Yugoslav Association of Photographers.
He started his professional career in 1974.
He is a member of the Association of Applied Arts Artists and Designers of Serbia (ULUPUDS) and the Association of Journalists of Serbia.
He worked at the Television of Belgrade as photojournalist for over twenty years. In 1996, he left the post and gained the status of independent artist of photography.
In 2002 he was awarded the title of an Outstanding Art Photographer of ULUPUDS, and in 2008 received the LIFETIME ACHIEVEMENT AWARD “for his work and contribution to the development of the applied art and designâ€.
Since 1980, Branislav Strugar has taken part in some thirty group photography exhibitions, and has been member of the jury at many exhibitions. He also has lectured at university, photography courses and workshops.
He has held 19 one-man photography exhibitions.
Over 10,000 of his photographs have been published in domestic and foreign books, magazines, and brochures.
His work includes posters, cover pages, calendars, post cards, and 13 copyrighted monographs: Pećka PatrijarÅ¡ija, Studenica (large), Studenica (small), Sopoćani, Ostrog, Kotor, DeÄani Monastery, Montenegro – the Ecological State, Srednjovekovni srpski novac (Serbian Medieval Money), Montenegro in Picture Postcards, Montenegro (tourist edition), monograph Budva and Belgrade, the Crossroads of centuries.
Note:
Seemorebeautifulthematic variousgallerieson our site in Gallery section, ofBranislav Strugar, famous Serbian artists of photography
IgorRosina, graduatedFAMUAcademy of Applied Artsin Prague, majoring in photography and design. He lives and worksin Celje, Slovenia.
After graduation,hestartedhis own businessrelated tophotography andindustrial design. Since2009. he is editor of PhotographicSalonand deals witheducation related tophotographyandPhotoshopsoftware package.
Since2013. he is began workingas achief editor ofthe photo magazine“Digital Camera“.
Photosof IgorRosinaare likemagic thatyoucarryto thefairy-talelandscapes, sinksinevery scene, as if youpersonallyexperienced.
His photographs are stronglyrealistic, yet somehowotherworldly. The manner in whichIgortellsushisvisionof realitytouchesyoursoul,fineand subtleasthe artist‘s fingers pluckthe strings of lyre,whichhasnone since Orpheus is not yettouched.
Just such alyreIgorRosina reveals us, lavishlysharingwith usand gives usthe power ofthe momentin his photographs.
Biography:
Zoran ÄorÄ‘ević was born in Kragujevac, Serbia, which he is constantly leaving and to which he keeps returning.
He graduated top of the class from the Press Photography Department of the Yugoslav Institute for Journalism in Belgrade.
ÄorÄ‘ević started his career of photographer in the mid-eighties as contributor to magazines Omladinske novine, Mladina (Slovenia), Feral, Oko, Polet (Croatia) and Pogledi, where he soon became photo editor.
In 1986, he accepted an offer by the biggest automotive industry of former Yugoslavia and joined its advertising team, working on advertising campaigns for western markets. He cooperated with the design and marketing departments of BMW and Fiat, with designers in the U.S.A., and with many advertising agencies from the region of former Yugoslavia.
In 1996, working as press photographer for the weekly magazine Svetlost, ÄorÄ‘ević returned to life, the photographic genre which brought him the greatest success.
He won more than 80 awards on exhibition in the world and the most significant awards for photography, among them the Diploma of Anastas Jovanovic and the Award for the Best Photography of Yugoslavia and Serbia.
The Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts included his works in its reference book of photographs that had a historical impact on the development of this art in Serbia.
The artistic jury of the Photo Association of Serbia awarded ÄorÄ‘ević with the greatest photography title – Master of Photography, while the leading International Federation of Photographic Art, FIAP, granted him the title of EFIAP (Excellence FIAP).
His works were exhibited in Argentina, Austria, Belgium, Canada, Croatia, Czechoslovakia, Danemark, Deutschland, England, France, Hungary, Italy, Israel, India, Ireland, FRY Macedonia, Poland, Portugal, Slovenia, Singapore, South Africa, Spain, Portugal, Poland, Czechoslovakia, Serbia, Spain, Switzerland, Yugoslavia.
Books: The Guardian of Your Dreams.: “Slovoâ€, 1992.
Zoran ÄorÄ‘ević, monograph, Belgrade 2012.
Apart from being a photographer, ÄorÄ‘ević is also a lawyer by profession.
He is honorary member of “Cadre 36″, Zagreb, Croatia, photographers associations to promote analog photography.
He is member of FIPRESCI, the International Federation of Film Critics, and The Association of Applied Arts Artists and Designers of Serbia.
He is also a film lecturer at the Students’ Cultural Centre of Kragujevac.
ÄorÄ‘ević is one of the establishers of BELDOCS, the International Festival of Documentary Film in Belgrade.
He works at TV Kragujevac as documentary and film editor.
Dear photo friends!
The PC Infinity & PCCD cordially invites you to enter the:
1st International Salon of Photography “INFINITY 2014â€
Many awards, excellent themes .. OPEN, PORTRAIT, WOMEN, LANDSCAPE.
Apply now: http://infinity.fotodoboj.com/
The essence can not be seen by eyes.
The time that you’ve spent about your rose makes this rose so precious.
People have forgotten this truth.
But you should not forget about.
You are responsible forever for what you have tamed.
You are responsible for your rose…”
So it is with a photographs of Branislav Strugar.
The camera paints by his heart, and keeps preciously that the artist unselfishly gives to us: his feelings
In thinking about the aesthetics, Giovanni Segantini, Italian painter of the 19th century, we find a dilemma:
“Depicting nature in the absence of contemplative depth of thought is just a mere reproduction of the material“.
Therefore, we see how important is the beauty of man for thousands of years trying to understand its nature and essence.
Just as art is not a story about beauty, her task is not to enchant, but to upset.
Segantini, who lived from 1858th until 1899, to challenge white cloth gave the following answer: “Because the art is an interpretation of the nature, the more spiritual elements it is contains, the more it moves away from the trivial experience . A work of art can be judged only by those who have long and patient love, able to elevate their minds to understanding and acceptance levels of all these elements.”
I am convinced that these thoughts shaped into January in 1891., has the equal worth in the second decade of the third millennium, and that will take us closer to understanding the abstract realization of the Sombor photo-artist Istvan Virag.
Photography actually keeps a latent image that is – say the words photo-artist Zoltan Moser (Moser Zoltán) – “It is important what it shows – without it, there is no photography at all. Without it the photography would not exist. But its essence is in that which is not shown – and it is very important. I could somehow cryptically, to formulate what is behind the paper and the image.”
Istvan Virag abstractions are based on a strong manifestation of the latent image. The exposure is truly expected only from the public, watching the photographs .
Visual art of Istvan Virag shows the artistic path so uncommon for photographers, but more common among painters. He is started from the most demanding photographic means of expression, slides – a basic image that does not allow any manipulation to get to “laboratory work” which delves into all aspects of creative photography.
The only common thread is that the creator, in both cases, has the maximum control of visual space.
The computer laboratory of his photography, but Istvan Virag not used it for trimming, repair, rearrange their shots, but for the realization of new areas, new structures, new colors, new textures – a new visual creations.
And that process make transition of the world of photography into painting art.
The two main characteristics of the photo-painting of Istvan Virag are convincing impressiveness and experimentation.
Together they may be called to outwit the convention.
Is it, finally, Istvan Virag creation art painting, or a photograph?
Looking the medium – the last one, given the end result – the first one, and this duality is not covered by the term that I use: photo-painting.
Before all, we could call it a kind of digital art mutation, which gives a characteristic artistic sensibility of Istvan Virag.
Jozef J. Fekete,
regular member of the Hungarian Academy of Arts
Budapest, 09.05.2014.
Gallery of the Culture, Kispest
After graduating from Wellesley College in 1963 with a degree in Art History, Olivia Parker began her career as a painter.
She became intrigued with photography in 1970.
Mostly self-taught in photography, she usually constructs what she photographs in the studio.
Her photographs are fundamentally still life inspired by those painted in the traditional Dutch, Flemish and Spanish 17th century style, with their torn petals, sumptuous but imperfect fruit and improbable insects.
Her photographs are fundamentally still life inspired by those painted in the traditional Dutch, Flemish and Spanish 17th century style, with their torn petals, sumptuous but imperfect fruit and improbable insects.
Parker feels that photographic still life is still an open arena precisely because of those intrinsic qualities of this contemporary medium that distinguish it from painting.
She says that the expression of the classical ideals of form is “dead matter” because the objects she chooses to photograph, whether alive or dead, are instead all signs of life.
She is drawn to the implication of visual edges; the swollen limits of a ripe pear touching a hard line or light downy feathers, confined by a metal grid. Her photographs ask viewers to continually evaluate their meaning by never truly defining where the eye comes to rest.
Olivia Parker has had more than a hundred one-person exhibitions in the United States and abroad, and her work is represented in several major private, corporate and museum collections.
She has exhibited at the Art Institute of Chicago, Museum of Modern Art in New York, Museum of Fine Arts – Boston and International Museum of Photography at the George Eastman House. There have been three monographs of her work published (Godine and New York Graphic Society).
Still Life is one of the rarer themes in photography and it is a pleasure to find such an artist.
“Well, I suppose nothing is meant to last forever. We have to make room for other people. It’s a wheel. You get on, you have to go to the end. And then somebody has the same opportunity to go to the end and so on.†– Vivian Maier
Vivian Maier (February 1, 1926 – April 21, 2009) was an American street photographer born in New York City. Although born in the U.S., it was in France that Maier spent most of her youth. Maier returned to the U.S. in 1951 where she took up work as a nanny and care-giver for the rest of her life. In her leisure however, Maier had begun to venture into the art of photography. Consistently taking photos over the course of five decades, she would ultimately leave over 100,000 negatives, most of them shot in Chicago and New York City. Vivian would further indulge in her passionate devotion to documenting the world around her through homemade films, recordings and collections, assembling one of the most fascinating windows into American life in the second half of the twentieth century.
Sometime in 1949, while still in France, Vivian began toying with her first photos. Her camera was a modest Kodak Brownie box camera, an amateur camera with only one shutter speed, no focus control, and no aperture dial.
In 1952, Vivian purchases a Rolleiflex camera to fulfill her fixation.
In 1956, when Maier moved to Chicago, she enjoyed the luxury of a darkroom as well as a private bathroom. This allowed her to process her prints and develop her own rolls of B&W film. As the children entered adulthood, the end of Maier’s employment from that first Chicago family in the early seventies forced her to abandon developing her own film. As she would move from family to family, her rolls of undeveloped, unprinted work began to collect.
It was around this time that Maier decided to switch to color photography, shooting on mostly Kodak Ektachrome 35mm film, using a Leica IIIc, and various German SLR cameras. The color work would have an edge to it that hadn’t been visible in Maier’s work before that, and it became more abstract as time went on. People slowly crept out of her photos to be replaced with found objects, newspapers, and graffiti.
Similarly, her work was showing a compulsion to save items she would find in garbage cans or lying beside the curb.
In the 1980s Vivian would face another challenge with her work. Financial stress and lack of stability would once again put her processing on hold and the color Ektachrome rolls began to pile. Sometime between the late 1990’s and the first years of the new millennium, Vivian would put down her camera and keep her belongings in storage while she tried to stay afloat. She bounced from homelessness to a small studio apartment the Gensburgs helped pay for. With meager means, the photographs in storage became lost memories until they were sold off due to non-payment of rent in 2007. The negatives were auctioned off by the storage company to RPN Sales, who parted out the boxes in a much larger auction to several buyers including John Maloof.
In 2008 Vivian fell on a patch of ice and hit her head in downtown Chicago. Although she was expected to make a full recovery, her health began to deteriorate, forcing Vivian into a nursing home. She passed away a short time later in April of 2009, leaving behind her immense archive of work…