Monday, August 29, 2011

New Beginnings

Obviously I have taken a lot of time off from blogging. I needed a break after the huge amount of work that culminated into my thesis. This summer was great. I have not really been shooting except for jobs, and I got to spend relaxing days with my now 5 year old who will be starting kindergarten in a week!!

A lot has changed for me. I am now a photographer for Bella Baby Photography. Thats pretty awesome because I get to take pictures of newborns. :) I started my own business back in May, so Joy Malone Photography is official. Perhaps most importantly I am now an Adjunct Professor at St. John's University. With all of that, I will still do showings of my night work as much as possible. I am also in the beginning stages of planning my next fine art photography project.

As I begin this new chapter in my life and in my photography I promise to blog much much more!!



Should you be in the NY area on September 11th, 2011 stop by the opening reception to my show. Here is the press release: http://www.greenburghartsandculture.org/

Talk to you soon,
Joy :)


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Monday, September 13, 2010

Thesis Timeline: Conception

In Spring of 2008 I mistakenly took 4 classes at AAU, and it turned out to be one my worst semesters at grade wise, but one of the most enlightening class content wise. I took photoshop which I wound up failing, but I learned so much that it did not matter to me as a photographic technician, that class introduced me to how I now edit my images. I took physics which was simply a guilty pleasure for me, I love all things science. I also took Photography Concepts taught by Tamara Hubbard and Thesis Project Seminar also taught by Tamara Hubbard. She absolutely changed my direction at AAU and that semester was invaluable.

As a stay at home mom, I have always done my AAU work around my daughters schedule, and so I normally get to be my most productive at night. I think there are many more factors besides my daughters schedule that draw me to shoot at night, one of the main reasons is because I have always been drawn to it, the night. I love the stars, and the reduction in people traffic. I like the idea of being out in the night, I always have, I am not a club goer and beside photography I can easily forgo participating in the "night life". I just like being outside at night in almost any setting you can think of (some places are scary though.. so anywhere within reason, lol). I digress.

When I was first made aware of the fact that I had to come up with a body of work and that for the next 2 years I would have to work on it I was intimidated and also excited at the idea of having the potential to create something great. When I was told that my thesis would have to focus on a unifying theme I knew immediately that color and night would be the unifying factors, and so the decision was made that I would shoot at night. I did not know where necessarily and I did not know what I would shoot. Tamara suggested that I explore the night scenes I was most drawn to and shoot what I thought was visually interesting. She said that in giving myself freedom in shooting and then receiving feedback from my classmates and her that a subject matter might emerge. So searching for my thesis theme coupled with my new photoshop knowledge of HDR photography I made this image.


Of course it was taken in Harlem. Harlem is my muse and I go there often times to shoot when I am looking for something to click. no pun intended..

I knew immediately that I wanted to shoot night in the same fashion using hdr. When I asked my professors how to make night hdr imagery and when I googled it I realized that not many people knew how to do it. All that would turn up in the searches would be highly stylized images and people who could not figure out why bracketing at night did not yield the same results as bracketing during the day. I started to experiment with my exposures trying to get that perfect night exposure/edit while simultaneously I was constantly searching for my thesis topic. I shot this image one night and after reviewing the final product I knew that I wanted to piece my images together in triptychs.


I got great feedback on my Harlem and Manhattan night images from my professors and classmates:





but there was something missing from them that would make them a viable thesis series.

And then one night, feeling the crunch of four MFA classes I was exhausted. I did not feel like driving to the city to shoot, I just wanted to go to bed, but an assignment was due and I needed to shoot it. My boyfriend and I brainstormed where to go, and while I sat in indecision his dog needed to be walked. So we decided to walk the dog while I pondered, and as we walked I shot aimlessly up at the houses in his neighborhood and these were the images that came from that night:









Notice my bf and his dog in the second to last image. Anyway the reaction from Professor Hubbard and my classmates was so great, and the thought of all the gas I would save made my decision for me. The suburbs it was, at night, pieced together in triptychs. How ironic, the environment I grew up in and found the least interesting visually was going to be the visual subject matter that I concentrated on for the most important photography series I have ever done to this date.

The following summer semester of 2008 I presented my midpoint proposal to the thesis review panel and received a rare full pass. These were the images I presented:











I will post the link to my review video in another post.

Tuesday, July 20, 2010

Joseph Brookes' debuts Beagle Black 7.2010

I am so proud of my best friend Joseph Brookes. He just debuted his line of clothing called Beagle Black, and of course you know I was there to shoot it!! Here are the pics:
















The rest of the images can be found on my website under events at www.JoyMalone.com

Saturday, June 5, 2010

The Potential for Perfection

So it has been a long while since I last blogged. Finals were extremely intense this semester and although classes ended on the 22nd, I have needed the past few days to unwind and decompress and settle into the summer 2010 flow. This is my first summer off maybe in the past 20 or so years in my life, growing up in camp and then always feeling the need to do something I have never had an open 3 months of gorgeous weather before. Since my early childhood I have been involved in Girl Scout Camp (my mom was the camp director so I went from camper to CIT to darkroom specialist.. lol), as a college student I worked at Ritz Camera and at camp, in the past 4 years as a mother I have been in school pursuing my MFA going all year round including the ever so fun densely-packed-make-you-say-uncle-summer semesters. This is my first summer where I can be at my pace. And this is where the potential for perfection comes in.

With all of the hard work I have done these past 3 years toward my MFA, and now finally coming to my impending fall 2010 graduation, there still remains the potential to do great work. My thesis at this point has the potential to be magnificent, as all creations/projects/intentions/ideas etc etc have at this stage of existence. This is the perfect place the idea of work exists in prior to the artist/creator turning it into physical material substance. Before being introduced to the public and receiving praise, scrutiny, or the death blow. I am creating a seed in my work and whether or not it becomes great art depends on how the seed germinates in the rich soils of current humanity. Will it rot and be consumed, recycled in the dirt or will it thrive and with its addition add one more component to the intricate balance that is this experience. Will my visions, my art be well received?

It depends on how I go about the next few months. My career, my MFA, the strength of my thesis, my life's trajectory will be set during this summer. I have the free time to immerse myself in my creative processes, and the free time to think of how best to market me, the free time to shoot every night, or the option to put my feet up and relax.....

Enough long thought... decisions, decisions, so much plotting and planning.. when all I want to do is take pictures..

I am going to come back to the now and go do some yoga.. I am trying to get fit this summer too..

BTW.. went with Johnny Nunez, "O", and my Dawny all over the city last night.. from the Frank Lucas book signing to a penthouse party of a well known mogul to the Styles P book release party, to BK back to Lotus.. maybe last night is what brought back to reality.. while I am sitting debriefing from my semester, Johnny Nunez who I respect and want to emulate is doing this every night.... hard work never ends on the path to success..

here are a few pics for you from last night... and for me yoga then my daughters private swim lesson then my daddy's house.. :)






Monday, April 19, 2010

Perception

In my class this week we are having a discussion on perception of the artwork/piece and how viewers react to work. Here is my contribution:

I think my imagery grabs peoples attention within the first few moments they see it, however I keep getting people questioning whether or not it is art. I have not shown many people my thesis work, so these comments came mostly in response to my NYC @ night stuff. The last 4 months or so of last year and the first month and a half of this year I had my work up on a pretty regular basis here in New Rochelle, in Chelsea in Manhattan, and Harlem. I think people look at me, and then question whether or not it is art. I do not dress crazy, I am no longer all pierced up, I am always nice and gracious when I meet people, but I find dialogue about my work to be tedious. I often feel socially awkward and hate public speaking.. I am learning to get over that, but somewhere I am not being artsy enough or something. The reasons I shoot are wrapped around the notions of death, global warming, apocalypse, cruelty of time, beauty of now, questions of reality, science and philosophy, and scary world news stories etc etc. I often feel odd engaging people in this level of conversation. I am socially uncomfortable sharing that side of myself in public. So I think people think I am just shooting pretty colors.
I took an anthropology course here at AAU, and I remember an essay where a woman recounted the friendly empty American social interactions. We are polite on the surface, but the meanings of our words and the meanings of our interactions mean 2 different things. We say hello, how are you? We don't really want to know, and it is hard for me at art openings to become the person who answers truthfully.
So in saying this perception is everything. It starts with whatever the viewer sees first. Artist, building art is housed in, wall composition, and then the piece itself. Everyone is different and so what happens when one is alone with the piece is personal to them. I think so many people have come to understand the art world as exclusionary and do not understand once they choose to engage in it their vote counts too. The idea of the sensitive viewer is a device used to make others feel that because they do not appreciate a piece it is not the piece it is them. Yes it is true that a piece I do not like today I may like tomorrow, but it is also true I may never like the piece.

Also here is last weeks thesis image:

Monday, April 5, 2010

Some more inspiration

So I watched this documentary last night and I HAVE TO SHOOT DETROIT!!! anyone wanna sponsor an artist?!?!? The decay of this once vibrant city is exactly what I foresee happening all over America in the next few decades. Anyway please watch this.



what do you think?

I know this has nothing to do with photography in itself, but it has everything to do with my artistic flow. I feed on documentaries, books, and pretty much all information to get my visions.

Sunday, April 4, 2010

Happy Easter!!

Thanks to my sister, I had some extra time this week, and that allows me to enjoy this beautiful day fully without the idea of hw tagging along with me. Woohoo!!...

I have a few non related things to share regarding my photography in this blog.

1. This week in my Concept and Critical Analysis Class we are finishing the book Camera Lucida by Roland Barthes. As a photographer and someone with my Bachelors in Philosophy I am loving this book. It is the philosophy of a photograph. Very interesting stuff, depending on what your into.

2. I found a great place to get Camera Equipment repaired and over the spring break I had my Canon EFS 10-22mm lens repaired and OMG I never knew it was that broken until I shot my good friends house the other night. Here is the image from that shoot, which I am ecstatic with. Although the shadows are a little deep in parts of the image the overall color quality is what I am going for and the clarity is amazing. These images are going to be printed large and so there is a vast difference between viewing them on a monitor and seeing them in person, but I guess that can be said for all of my work, well actually any art work period needs to be experienced in person, but I digress.. here is my thesis development image for this week.



3. I purchased another external hard drive, my first 1 terabyte drive! And so now begins the long drawn out process of backing up and organizing my entire photographic catalogue. I am kind of excited about doing this, but also a little intimidated. Taking 1000's of images and filing them away so they can be found easily is daunting. Also I need to twin my drives, another task all you people with critical info on your hard drives need to consider doing. (Twining is when you make an identical replica of a hard drive so just in case one fails you have a copy, you then store them in separate locations so that you are safe from theft and fire). So much to think about, but if you do not back up your work, when your computer or hard drives fail, AND THEY WILL FAIL, you will have nothing). So over the next few weeks/months I will be backing up my work and as I see imagery I would like to share I will post it.

With that said HAPPY EASTER!! or have a beautiful day in this lovely weather if you don't celebrate it.