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09/22 DC Picture Show: SEPTEMBER 11th – A LOOK BACK THROUGH OUR LENS

September 19th, 2011 No comments

Please join us for a special DC Picture Show this Thursday, September 22, 2011

6:30 to 9:00PM

6:30 to 7:00 Networking

7:00 to 9:00 Speakers

Location:

Bus Boys and Poets,K Street Location, Washington, DC

Closest metros: Mt. Vernon Square and Gallery Place-Chinatown (each two blocks away). There is ample car parking space near the venue

Entry to the show is free for ASPP members but we are asking for suggested donation of $5 to 10 for non-members. A portion of all proceeds will go to will to the 9/11 Fund, Guests are invited to attend and the event is open to the general public. ASPP does not provide refreshments for the event, but Busboys and Poets has a full-service restaurant and bar.

Main Presenter:

Aristide “Aris” Economopoulos

We are lucky enough to have award-winning New York based and Bethesda native photojournalist Aristide Economopoulos share his experiences from 9/11.

He’s been a staff photographer at The Newark Star-Ledger since 2000 and covered local to international assignments, ranging from the 9/11 attacks in New York City, Athens Olympics, to hog wrestling in Indiana.

He’s an accomplished and well regarded artist – through his work, he has won numerous awards including World Press Photo, Pictures of the Year International in both the newspaper and magazine divisions and the NPPA’s Best of Photojournalism. Aris is also a four-time winner of NYC & NJ Press Photographer of the Year. In 2005 he was part of the staff that won the Pulitzer Prize for Breaking News Reporting.

Aris resides in Jersey City, NJ, with his wife and fellow photojournalist Julia Xanthos.

Aris running away as the towers collapse

The rest of the evening will be 3 to 8 minute vignettes from various photographers, editors and others in the DC Photo and Arts Community talking about their experiences from 9/11.

It’s not too late if you want to share – contact jennasppdc@gmail.com to be part of this wonderful evening.

July 21st DC Picture Show – “Photo Opportunities All Around Us”

July 18th, 2011 No comments

American Society of Picture Professionals (ASPP) DC/South Chapter

presents a special DC Picture Show:

Jeff Mauritzen & Walter Calahan

Photo Opportunities All Around Us

Photo of an old Irish cottage and sheep. Image taken at sunset in County Kerry, Ireland.

DATE: Thursday, July 21st

TIME: 6:30 – 9:00

6:30 to 7:00 Networking

7:00 to 9:00 Speakers

 

LOCATION – 5th and K Street Busboys and Poets Restaurant, 1025 5th St NW Washington, DC 20001

 

GETTING THERE AND PARKING – Closest metros: Mt. Vernon Square and Gallery Place-Chinatown (each two blocks away). There is ample car parking space near the venue

 

ENTRY FEE – Entry to the show is free for ASPP members but we are asking for suggested donation of $5 per person. Guests are invited to attend and the event is open to the general public. ASPP does not provide refreshments for the event, but Busboys and Poets has a full-service restaurant and bar.

 

Presenters for the evening:

Jeff will talk about the many abundant photo opportunities both locally, in Northern Virginia and Washington, D.C., as well as internationally in the breathtaking country of Ireland. Jeff will be showing his travel images and explaining where he finds inspiration, as well as sharing some of his favorite locations to photograph.

 

Jeff Mauritzen

Jeff Mauritzen is a full-time professional photographer and avid traveler, specializing in photography of Washington, D.C., Northern Virginia and Ireland. Jeff graduated from Pennsylvania State University in 2000 with a Bachelor of Arts in Spanish, and minors in International Studies and Latin American Studies. Jeff has been traveling, studying and living abroad off and on, since first studying in Venezuela, back in 1999. Jeff has lived and worked onboard 7 different cruise ships over the course of 3 and ½ years, and eventually married his beautiful Irish wife, that he met onboard. Jeff currently lives in Fairfax County, Virginia with his wife, daughter, and rescue greyhound but bounces back in forth to Ireland, several times throughout the year. Jeff is always available for corporate, editorial and travel assignment work, and his stock photography can be viewed and licensed on www.jeffmauritzen.com.

 

 

Walter Calahan

Walter Calahan’s career has taken him under the Atlantic Ocean aboard a US Navy Trident Submarine, to lava tube caves in Idaho, into surgical clinics for Afghan refugees in Pashawar, Pakistan, canoeing the Okefenokee Swamp of Georgia and the great northern woods of Canada, launched off the deck of a US Navy Aircraft Carrier, to children learning to tap dance, as well as the tumult of the Romanian Revolution.

Walter teaches ‘Introduction to Photography’ for the Art Department of McDaniel College, insuring a love for photography in the next generation of photographers to come. His portfolios can be seen at www.walterpcalahan.com.

June 30th DC Picture Show “The Mystery of Weather”

June 14th, 2011 No comments

DC Picture Show

American Society of Picture Professionals (ASPP) DC/South Chapter presents a special DC Picture Show: The Mystery of Weather: A Fundraiser for the Red Cross Disaster Relief Fund


LOCATION CHANGE

Busboys @ 14th & V.
2021 14th St
NW DC 20009
(202) 387 – POET (7638)

Map Link: http://maps.google.com/maps?q=2021+14th+St+NW,+Washington,+DC+20009,+USA&hl=en&oe=utf-8&client=firefox-a&t=h&s=AARTsJqAh1ODmCLKXNCD7k6TaF-0IWFpbg&view=map&z=16

Located at the corner of 14th and V Street NW – 2 blocks from the Metro Green Line – U Street Cardozo stop

Parking

Parking is available after 5PM at the Reeves Government Center for $10 – the entrance to the parking is on U Street between 14th and 15th. Street parking is also available – best times for street parking is early in the evening on 14th Street or V Street – it is free after 6:30PM and on Weekends all day.

DATE: Thursday, June 30th

TIME: 6:30pm – 9:00pm

6:30 to 7:00 – Networking

7:00 to 9:00 – Speakers

ENTRY FEE – Entry to the show is free for ASPP members but we are asking for suggested donation of $5 to $20 per person. Guests are invited to attend and the event is open to the general public. All money will be donated directly to the Red Cross Disaster Relief Fund.

ASPP does not provide refreshments for the event, but Busboys and Poets has a full-service restaurant and bar.

Presenters for the evening

Washington Posts’ Capital Weather Gang:

Jason Samenow, Chief Meteorologist and founder of the weather blog , Capital Weather,  and the Washington Post’s Weather Editor

Kevin Ambrose, Washington Weather Photographer and  Senior Capital Weather photographer

Kevin and Jason will talk about all the crazy weather we have had in Washington DC area and beyond over the past several years. From Snowmageddon in 2010 to our share of powerful thunderstorms this spring, they will entertain and inform us about the roller coaster weather can have here in DC area. Kevin will share some of his secrets for storm chasing and his amazing weather photography.

Jason Samenow

A native Washingtonian, Jason Samenow has been a weather enthusiast since age 10 (1987) — the year of the “double whammy” snow storms that shut schools down seven straight days in the D.C. area. Before graduating from high school, he interned for NBC4 chief meteorologist Bob Ryan. At the University of Virginia, he earned a degree in environmental science, focusing in atmospheric science. He went on to earn a master’s degree in atmospheric science at the University of Wisconsin-Madison in 2000. Jason is currently the Washington Post’s weather editor. From 2000 to September 2010, he worked as a climate change analyst for the federal government, monitoring, analyzing and communicating the science of climate change. He founded CapitalWeather.com in early 2004, the first professional weather blog on the Internet which was absorbed by the Post in 2008. Jason is a past chairman of the D.C. Chapter of the American Meteorological Society and a Weather and Society Integrated Studies Fellow. Jason lives with his wife, Deborah, in Washington, D.C.

Kevin Ambrose

Kevin Ambrose is the author of “Washington Weather,” “Blizzards and Snowstorms of Washington, D.C.” and “Great Blizzards of New York City.” Ambrose is also a professional photographer and avid storm chaser, specializing in photography of Washington, D.C. area snowstorms, cherry blossoms, sunrises, sunsets, storms and lightning. He holds a B.S. in computer science from the University of Virginia and currently works as an account executive for Adobe. Kevin’s interests include weather forecasting, history, archeology and running. Kevin, his wife Elisa and their two children live in Northern Virginia. His photography and books can be found at his Web site, WashingtonPrints.com.

II DC Picture Show – Photos

June 23rd, 2010 No comments

Lesley Frowick

Steve Crowley

Steve Crowley and Lesley Frowick

II DC Picture Show

IV DC Picture Show on July 15, 2010

June 22nd, 2010 No comments

Photograph courtesy Yanina Manolova

American Society of Picture Professionals (ASPP) DC/South chapter invites all photography enthusiasts to join us for the fourth DC Picture Show on July 15, 2010.

The DC Picture Show will be held at the 5th and K Street Busboys and Poets Restaurant in downtown Washington DC.
DATE – July 15, 2010 (Thursday)
LOCATION – 5th and K Street Busboys and Poets Restaurant 1025 5th St NW Washington, DC 20001 (MAP)
TIME – 6:30 pm to 9 pm
GETTING THERE AND PARKING – Closest metros: Mt. Vernon Square and Gallery Place-Chinatown (each two blocks away). There is ample car parking space near the venue.
ENTRY FEE – Entry to the show is free for ASPP members. Non-members will be charged $5.00
ASPP does not provide refreshments for the event, but Busboys and Poets has a full-service restaurant and bar.

If you have a Facebook account please RSVP here or email sjohn24@gmail.com

The presenters for the ourth DC Picture Show are Yanina Manolova and Maria Izaurralde

Yanina Manolova is a visual journalist based in Washington, DC area. A native of Bulgaria, she received her BFA in education and minor in speech pathology at Sofia University “St. Kliment Ohridski”. In 2000 she moved to the United States and later studied MA in photography at Ohio University’s School of Visual Communication.

Photograph courtesy Yanina Manolova

She has worked on different projects in Africa, Latin America, Europe and USA. Her real dedication is working on worldwide humanitarian and health care associated projects.

Her work has been featured in the World Health Organization (WHO), United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA), USA Today, The New York Times, The Washington Post, The Boston Globe, and many others.

Her photos appeared at numerous exhibits and she has won several international awards and various nominations including in the NPPA: Best of Photojournalism, Alexia Foundation for World Peace, Northern Short Course in Photojournalism, Southern Short Course in News Photography, NPPA: Women In Photojournalism and many others.

Her latest work is a short documentary film detailing her experience while following five Appalachian women during a period of their recovery from substance abuse and domestic violence.

Yanina will present videos and photographs of her projects -

1. Neverland: Appalachian Women- Substance Abuse, Domestic Violence, Recovery

A documentary that details the individual struggles of five Appalachian women during a period of their recovery from substance abuse and domestic violence. Most of them are mothers who have lost custody of their children. All five women graduated from the Rural Women’s Recovery Program in Athens, OH.

2. Born Addicts: Drug-Addicted Babies in the United States

In the United States, the number of women abusing prescription pain medications (OxyContin, Percocet, Vicodin, Darvon, Dilaudid, Demerol, Lomotil) and become opioid drug addicted is growing. “They are women that have had very rough backgrounds,” says Steven Clay, D.O., Addiction Specialist in Ohio. “About 80-90% of women are coming here sexually and/or physically abused. About 80-90% of our patients are mothers. Women going in and out of prison. Kids being taken away. The way addiction is treated in the United States is – we put people in prison. We think the way to treat it is to punish people.”

Photograph courtesy Maria Izaurralde

Maria Izaurralde received her first DSLR as a Christmas gift in 2007, she found it intimidating. It was from someone who had taken notice of how she got lost once with a point- and-shoot, taking pictures of a lady with a mule in Ecuador. She waited until months later, when no one was looking, to pick it up and start photographing her vast surround

ings; DCstreets, alleys, urban decay, and the debaucheries of nightlife. She carried her camera always, and in time it was her camera that started taking her places. Soon enough photography opened up her world; she explored the local music scene, went to go-go’s, photographing acts such as Chuck Brown, Thievery Corporation, Zero 7 and Bajofondo; she went to Vermont with a reggae band, to Boston with a rapper. Maria used social networking sites to show the world her work, and with the power of the Facebook tag, it was the latter photographic theme that she became most known for.

Every time she received a notification that someone had commented on or ‘liked’ a photo of a party they had been to, it meant that people were actually looking at her pictures.  For Maria, this triggered an addiction.  She began to take seriously the idea of chasing the wildest parties around the city; working her craft meant knowing where the night’s debauchery would play out, or where the more city’s more interesting, eclectic people could be found. It was in this way that she carved out her niche and became known as JPEG. By June of 2009 she was written up in the Washington Post as the newcomer on the scene of “partyrazzi’s,” and a few months later she struck a book deal with an owner of Eighteenth Street Lounge, which is scheduled for release in the Fall.

Maria will present her work photographing the nightlife of Washington DC.

III DC Picture Show on May 20, 2010

April 28th, 2010 No comments

American Society of Picture Professionals (ASPP) DC/South chapter invites all photography enthusiasts to join us for the third DC Picture Show on May 20, 2010.

The DC Picture Show will be held at the 5th and K Street Busboys and Poets Restaurant in downtown Washington DC.
DATE – May 20, 2010 (Thursday)
LOCATION – 5th and K Street Busboys and Poets Restaurant 1025 5th St NW Washington, DC 20001 (MAP)
TIME – 6:30 pm to 9 pm
GETTING THERE AND PARKING – Closest metros: Mt. Vernon Square and Gallery Place-Chinatown (each two blocks away). There is ample car parking space near the venue.
ENTRY FEE – Entry to the show is free for ASPP members. Non-members will be charged $5.00
ASPP does not provide refreshments for the event, but Busboys and Poets has a full-service restaurant and bar.

If you have a Facebook account please RSVP here or email sjohn24@gmail.com

The presenters for the third DC Picture Show are students of Critical Exposure, and Patrick Allen.

Photograph by Byron Coleman

Critical Exposure

Critical Exposure is a Washington, DC-based nonprofit that teaches youth to use the power of photography and their own voices to become effective advocates for school reform and social change. By empowering young people to develop skills in documentary photography and advocacy, and to exhibit their images and stories in galleries, coffee shops, and other public spaces, we expose citizens and policymakers to the realities and challenges faced by DC youth.

A class composed of about fourteen 7th and 8th grade Truesdell Elementary students are taking student government as an elective. The class recently identified several issues they want to address at their school including: the need for lockers, improved school lunches, a change in the uniform policy, and concerns about the required book bag check. Students have created shot lists around these issues, have learned basic photo techniques and are currently shooting photos on these issues to support their campaign.

Students were introduced to documentary photography and learned how the power of photography can be a catalyst for change. They are taking this concept and using it to create positive change on their school campus by bringing attention to these issues to their principal, teachers, and other key decision makers via visual imagery and written word.

Byron Coleman (former student at Spingarn STAY) -  Byron graduated in June 2009, and his project focuses on his personal experience with education. Byron will be presenting his multimedia piece and his story on the project.

Spingarn STAY is a night school in NE DC for students who have left traditional day schools, and are back to complete their high school diplomas.  Byron was one of Critical Exposure’s students from October 2008 – January 2009.

Patrick Allen

Between 2005 and 2007 Patrick traveled the country in a small two seat R22 helicopter and an RV. With one other photographer and a pilot, he was hired to photograph every marina, lighthouse, harbor, and inlet in North America. While photographing the clients targets, he was determined to make the most of his time in the air and capture a more meaningful view of the changing landscape and our interaction with it. His photographs challenge the viewers sense of perspective and space and present to them what they have seen before in a new light.

Patrick Allen is an art history and philosophy major from the St. Mary’s College of MD. He interned at the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Gardens photography department. He was the chief aerial photographer for a boating & GPS company, which allowed him to travel the U.S. and Canada and served as the photo editor for the same company. He has worked as a photography assistant for photographers in the D.C. area, while developing his own creative fine art photography. Patrick currently works at  Ken Allen Digital where the focus is on fine art pigment ink prints and digitization of photographic collections.