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Happy New Year from Ironside Photography!

Happy New Year, everyone! Here’s to a great year and a great 2011.

2010 was a great year for me, and here’s a quick recap:

• January 1st of 2010 marked the launch of this new website.
• I had a show at the Julie Wait Gallery up in Rogers.
• I applied to six grad schools for an M.F.A. in photography, and didn’t get into a single one. I’d like to attribute that to my never having taken an art class instead of my portfolio, but who knows. Then I realized that the academic/fine art route wasn’t the one I wanted to take anyway.
• My birthday, of course.
• I officially, and legally, formed a business. Ironside Photography became real.
• I got engaged. Have you seen our website? www.stephenanddarby.com
• I showed at Art Amiss 12, and participated in many a First Thursday Fayetteville art walk.
•  I drove to Iowa to see the Dalai Lama speak.
• I shot the Wakarusa Music Festival, along with various portraits and a few weddings.
• I did some work for the University of Arkansas Honors College–most of the photos on their new website are mine.
• I went to San Francisco and Yosemite with my family and came back with some portfolio-worthy shots.
• I finished my honors thesis and graduated!
• I traveled to India on assignment.
• Darby and I traveled to Washington, D.C., to see the Rally to Restore Sanity and/or Fear.
• Ironside Photography’s website turned 4!
Help Portrait 2010 happened, and it was great.
• 2010 ended with a nice show at Arsaga’s in Fayetteville, a contest win, and an unusually cool lunar eclipse.

How’s that for quick?

Thank you all for all of your support this year, and I’m looking forward to what 2011 will bring. I couldn’t have done it without you.

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Contest Win + Reception Reminder

I completely forgot to post this here (I mentioned it on Facebook and Twitter), but on the day of Help Portrait a week or so ago, I got a call from the Pack Rat Outdoor Center here in Fayetteville saying that I’d won first place in their annual outdoor photo contest! Here’s the photo that won, from Yosemite this summer.

The first contest I ever entered, placed in, and won, also happened to be this same contest a few years ago in high school. I entered one of my favorite shots of a praying mantis taken with my Canon Powershot as I was first getting into photography, and was ecstatic to get the call that I’d gotten first place. That contest, and this one (or so I’ve heard), was judged by renowned Arkansas nature photographer Tim Ernst, so it’s that much more special. Here’s that photo, just for kicks.

On another note, the (informal) reception for my exhibit at Arsaga’s is TONIGHT from 7-9 p.m. I hope you can make it! A few prints have already sold, and I think more will sell tomorrow night. So if you need some Christmas gifts, now is your chance!

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Summer Part 2: San Francisco!

In my last post, I talked about my trip to Yosemite National Park with my family this summer. After that, we spent about five days in sunny (and  chilly) San Francisco.

My family had been to San Francisco once before (yes, they went without me when I was gone for a summer in high school), but this was my first time. Of course, I only brought one long sleeved shirt. No jacket.

San Francisco is windy.

We did the touristy city things, such as seeing Alcatraz and going to the Fisherman’s Wharf, but we also went out to the Muir Woods and loitered around the shores of Marin County for a day. We had plenty of good food, from little pancakes to Indian, and the hotel’s TV was larger than any I’d seen in a hotel before.

The old trolleys were fun, but of course they were always crowded. You know why? Because we were there on the 4th of July weekend. Crazy. That night, we went down to the Wharf to see the fireworks, but the fog came in and they weren’t much more than bursts of lit-up-cloud.

We saw a lot in the few days we were there — the Ghiradelli chocolate factory, Coit Tower, Legion of Honor, California Academy of Sciences, Lombard Street, Haigh-Ashbury, Alcatraz, the Golden Gate, and more. I’d love to return some day, take it slow, and see what else this city has to offer.

Below are a few photos from the trip, and you can see many more here on Flickr. Hope you enjoy.

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A Little Bit of News

Lots of things have been happening, and you finally get to read about them! Time for some bullet points.

  • I pre-ordered Galen Rowell’s Inner Game of Outdoor Photography a few months ago, and was surprised (and happy!) when it came in last week. I’ve read the preface and the intro, and I can already say that a very favorable review will be coming when I finish it.
  • Last week was the second First Thursday Fayetteville of the season, and I had a pretty successful evening. Looks like I’m finally making a name for myself!
  • Tonight is Art Amiss 12! Art Amiss is an organization for artists in and from Arkansas, and they have a biannual juried art exhibition at the Dickson Street Theater in Fayetteville. I’ve shown at Art Amiss 7,8, 11, and I’ll be at 12!  (You can’t show at more than two consecutive shows, and I was out of the country for 9 and 10 :) ). The event will be tonight from 7 until around midnight, and there will be a fashion show, short films, live music, and plenty of art to peruse. Also a bar. Come!
  • On another note, I’ve (almost) graduated! I finished all of my classes this semester, and all I have to do is write my honors thesis and defend it this summer. Then I will FINALLY be done with my undergraduate career. It feels good.
  • Oh, and one more thing–I’m officially engaged, and I may be moving to Richmond, Virginia, sometime later this year! I’ll keep you posted on both of those things, but feel free to ask if you’d like more details.
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The Birds of Heartwood

I’ve now worked twice at Heartwood Gallery in Fayetteville, and one thing I can say is that when you work there, you get bored pretty easily. By mid-afternoon I was restless, so I grabbed my camera and headed outside to see what I could find. I decided to focus on birds, as it was nearly spring and they were already out and about. Here are a few, and the rest are in this set on Flickr.

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Project XXX Follow Up

Project XXX has now been taken down at the Anne Kittrell Gallery. After phoning the Provost to get it extended a week and to complain about the paper on the windows, they finally took it down because the next artist needed a week to set up (sounds fishy to me…). All in all, the whole endeavor turned out magnificently. Darby stirred up a ruckus in the community and at the university, made the news, is going to be featured again in The Arkansas Traveler next week, and may even make the yearbook.

It turns out that the reason the “controversy” started was that two women who work for University Housing complained to the ART gallery, then to the Provost, then to the Chancellor, and then to the Sheriff. The Sheriff? Seriously? I guess these ladies had nothing better to do and were incredibly offended by seeing a penis on the wall…maybe they don’t have kids of their own. I don’t know.

In any case, needless to say, I’m proud of Darby and her courage to associate her name with such a touchy subject. Her exhibit was the most popular in years, I’d say, and everyone–faculty, students, etc.– that we’ve talked to about it has been amazingly supportive. Hooray for a liberal pocket in Arkansas.

Here are a few photos I took of Darby by her exhibit. (Yes, I made sure to not get any parts in the photos :)  ). They’re also on Flickr.

Update 3/24/10: Darby has now put 32 photos, the ones that she printed for the exhibition, on her Flickr page. Feel free to peruse them–and leave comments!

Update 5/27/10: A video from the reception has FINALLY been posted online for your enjoyment. Here it is.

Darby’s “Project XXX” Artist Reception from Stephen Ironside on Vimeo.

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A Plug for Project XXX

This post relates to me only in that it is on behalf of my better half.

Two years ago, Darby Gieringer embarked on a term project for a Gender Studies Honors Colloquium taught by Dr. David Fredrick at the University of Arkansas. In this project, she photographed 30 people nude and analysed how their poses reflected society-based gender roles.

This one-class project eventually turned into her honors undergraduate thesis. She photographed 70 more people, about evenly split between males and females (and one transsexual), for a total of 100. Most people said afterwards that the experience was very “liberating.” Its title, Project XXX comes simply from what it was lovingly called by its participants.

She received a SURF research grant from the Arkansas Department of Higher Education to do her project–something that noone, not even her advisor or herself, thought would happen due to the conservative nature of the ADHE and the outlandishness of the project. You can see an article about it on The Arkansas Traveler here.

While not part of her actual thesis project, Darby is going to have an exhibition showcasing her photographs in the Anne Kittrell Art Gallery in the student union at the University of Arkansas.She has printed 30 of her 100 photographs, all in black and white, all on metallic paper.

All of the photographs are anonymous; either each photograph was taken with the face out of the frame, it was cropped out during post-processing, or the subject had turned away from the camera. Participants were allowed to choose any pose they wished, and chose one out of three frames taken to best represent themselves for the project.

The reception for the exhibition will be on Thursday, February 25, 2010, from 5-7pm in the Anne Kittrell Gallery in the union. A gallery talk led by Dr. David Fredrick, Director of the Humanities department and Darby’s thesis advisor, Dr. Jennifer Hoyer, Associate Professor of German, and Darby herself will all be speaking. Coffee and desserts will be provided.
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UPDATE 03/05/2010

The project has been getting a lot of attention. First of all, the reception had a tremendous turnout, and all of the speakers did quite well. The gallery has had more visitors during Darby’s project than they usually get in months; on the opening day, it got more visitors than it usually gets in a week.

Darby was featured on The Arkansas Traveler’s site, on UATV, and also on the local KNWA news station. Even the UA chancellor supposedly went to see the exhibit, and they have now hung paper on the windows that look into the gallery–it should be noted that the black paper they originally placed was soon replaced with yellow paper because they deemed the black to be too ‘erotic.’ There is talk of the project being taken down early due to the supposed ‘controversy’ that’s being aroused (pun intended), but if that happens, a faculty-led offensive is likely to ensue. I say if you don’t like it, don’t go see it.

Stay tuned…

UPDATE: Another follow up post: http://www.ironsidephotography.com/569/

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Tying Up Lose Ends

Well, just a little news to get out there. I’ve sent off four of my six applications to MFA programs, so that feels pretty good. Hopefully I’ll get in somewhere!

I took a bunch of work to Heartwood Gallery, so you can officially go there and check it out.

My reception at the Julie Wait Designs gallery turned out pretty well! Somewhere around fifty people showed up, and there was plenty of good food. Now that the reception is over, I guess I can put up a few shots of the gallery.

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Heartwood Gallery, Part 1

Just a note–I got a call today from Anita at the Heartwood Gallery in Fayetteville saying that they’d accepted me and had a spot available to display. Heartwood Gallery is a small, quaint, interesting little gallery/co-op that is pretty lacking in the photography arena, so hopefully I’ll be there to fill that void!. I’ve also offered to redesign their website, which needs quite a bit of work. I should have some stuff up there by next week, so be sure to check it out if you’re in the Fayetteville area.


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