Photography Workshops

View Original

#107 The Rhyming Duologues of Nina Welch-Kling

See this content in the original post

https://www.ninaklingphotography.com/

and on instagram: @ninakling

Welch-Kling earned a B.F.A. with a focus in Interior Design from the  School of the Art Institute of Chicago in 1990 and an M.F.A. in Architecture from The University of California, Los Angeles in 1993. She has lived in New York City since 1995, married and raising her two, now college-aged daughters. Welch-Kling continued to explore creative outlets for her ideas and re-discovered her passion for photography. Welch-Kling has exhibited internationally and appeared in online and print journals. 


The Grammar of Photography by Christopher Giglio, (From the ICP catalog)

Based on ideas suggested in two seminal writings on photography, John Szarkowski’s The Photographer’s Eye and Stephen Shore’s The Nature of Photographs, this class functions as a primer of visual literacy for photographers. Through weekly shooting assignments, lectures, and critiques, students learn about balance, tempo, ways of organizing space, the significance of geometric structure, and why the edges of the frame are important. In-class exercises examine how we see what we see, and enable participants to produce stronger, clearer pictures.

ALSO DISCUSSED…

Jason Langer, “Alley” (1998)

Jason Langer is perhaps best known for his psychological and noirish visions of contemporary urban life. His work has been featured in numerous international photographic exhibitions and select publications, including American Photo, Black & White, Life, Photo District News, Popular Photography, Time, and Vanity Fair.

http://www.jasonlanger.com/

We spoke with Jason Langer in Episode #83: https://www.neomodern.com/podcast-blog/2019/9/15/83-jason-langer


I hate flowers. I paint them because they’re cheaper than models and they don’t move.

—Georgia O’Keefe

from Laurie Lisle, Portrait of an Artist: A Biography of Georgia O’Keeffe, 1981


ON THE WALL of Nina Welch-Kling…

Susan Burnstine, “Fading Echoes” from 'Absence of Being', n.d.

http://www.susanburnstine.com/


If you like our show, please subscribe on iTunes, Google Play, or your favorite podcasting app, and please rate the podcast. And don’t forget to join the Neomodern Facebook group to discuss the show, share your photos, hear about specials for printing or framing your best images. Thank you!