goatislandperformance.org
Goat Island Performance Group - Upcoming
http://www.goatislandperformance.org/current.htm
New DVD: A Last, A Quartet a collection of films by Lucy Cash. UK) and Goat Island (USA) began making moving image works together in 2001 and have since made four uniquely cinematic films which explore different kinds of choreographies for the camera:. It’s Aching Like Birds, Dark, Daynightly They re- school you The Bears-Polka. A Last, A Quartet. Shot on S16mm film in Chicago and the UK, each work is both independent of and a companion to the last three live performances by Goat Island:. Unbound: www...
sissonphotography.blogspot.com
Captionless: The Morning Walk
http://sissonphotography.blogspot.com/2008/02/morning-walk.html
An Occasional Photoblog by John W. Sisson, Jr. Thursday, February 21, 2008. I've started a regular routine of morning photography again. The strong urge to resume doing this coincides, of course, with the darkest depths of winter here in Chicago. We've had a string of days with single-digit temps the past two weeks. Seems like the worse the weather the more I want to be outdoors with a camera. Other things are happening as well. I'm reading a new photo book: The Ongoing Moment by Geoff Dyer. I'm grateful...
tyrellcannon.com
links
http://www.tyrellcannon.com/links.html
My blog where I dive into my process and inspirations. Good place to get a glimpse at work in progress. Yeah, I have this too. Flip throughs, Time-lapse of me working, performances, panels, etc. This Is Infamous , Gary: Book 1-3. Ghost Volta , Simon: The Collection. Spandexless, Gary: Book Three. Spandexless, Gary: Book Two. Spandexless, Gary: Book One. High-Low, Gary: Book's One and Two. Panelbound, Gary: Book's One and Two. Brain Frame, Comics Performance. Artagem Graphic Library , Text Interview.
sissonphotography.blogspot.com
Captionless: Reflections
http://sissonphotography.blogspot.com/2009/05/reflections.html
An Occasional Photoblog by John W. Sisson, Jr. Saturday, May 2, 2009. I've been photographing reflections again recently, something I return to occasionally as a photographic exercise, or more accurately an exercise in seeing. Jean-Claude Lemagny's essay "Is Photography a Plastic Art" from the book "Poetics of Space, A Critical Photographic Anthology" is a favorite of mine and particularly insightful when thinking about photographing reflections. Posted by John W. Sisson, Jr. Visit my photo website:.
sissonphotography.blogspot.com
Captionless: January 2009
http://sissonphotography.blogspot.com/2009_01_01_archive.html
An Occasional Photoblog by John W. Sisson, Jr. Sunday, January 25, 2009. Flax seeds, Londonderry Linen sample with overshot weave pattern, explanatory note, hand-colored ferrotype photograph. This photograph is of my grandmother's great-great-grandmother, Sarah Stuart (McCauley) Weston, born in 1787 in Merrimac, New Hampshire. The photo dates from the early 1850's, shortly before her death. Great-grandparents came to America in about 1720 from Ulster in the north of Ireland. They settled in.
sissonphotography.blogspot.com
Captionless: February 2008
http://sissonphotography.blogspot.com/2008_02_01_archive.html
An Occasional Photoblog by John W. Sisson, Jr. Saturday, February 23, 2008. The city is covered in plywood. Everything in the process of. Construction seems to be surroun. Ded by the swirling knots and grain patterns of a plywood barrier. I'm interested in plywood as an assemblage of layers of frozen, visible time. Photography is a meditation on. The perception of time. Movement, any type of movement, fascinates me because it is an exploration of. Of course this logically brings me to the study of plywood.
sissonphotography.blogspot.com
Captionless: Forgetting
http://sissonphotography.blogspot.com/2008/11/we-shall-not-cease-from-exploration-and.html
An Occasional Photoblog by John W. Sisson, Jr. Sunday, November 23, 2008. I finally visited '. Henri Cartier-Bresson and the Art and Photography of Paris. At the Art Institute of Chicago last week. Seeing these photos was a great reminder to stop editing, stop saying to myself "no, that's not quite right. don't shoot that. that won't work" and just trust my eyes and proceed on instinct. We shall not cease from exploration. And the end of all our exploring. Will be to arrive where we started.
sissonphotography.blogspot.com
Captionless: Photography: Reading, Talking and Writing
http://sissonphotography.blogspot.com/2007/12/photographing-reading-talking-writing.html
An Occasional Photoblog by John W. Sisson, Jr. Wednesday, December 5, 2007. Photography: Reading, Talking and Writing. But writing is the most difficult of all. I love to do it but it's challenging and time consuming. Challenging (in a good way) because it forces me to fully digest the things I'm seeing, reading, thinking and trying to discuss intelligently. I'm resolving to do more of it. Conversations With Contemporary Photographers" is wonderful because it is actual interviews with incredibly gifted a...
allthingsdianna.blogspot.com
Life is Wasted on the Living: February 2010
http://allthingsdianna.blogspot.com/2010_02_01_archive.html
Life is Wasted on the Living. You can't take a picture of this - It's already gone" -Nathanial Jr., 'Six Feet Under'. Tomorrow is the day - - The movers arrive at 9am. This is my first time ever using movers - I'm PSYCHED to not have to carry heavy objects up 3 flights of stairs. Yeah, our new place is on the 3rd floor. Awesome exercise when you coming and going from work - - awful to be carrying a box full of books! I'll take pictures and post them of the new place, I promise. To some more info about it...
sissonphotography.blogspot.com
Captionless: May 2009
http://sissonphotography.blogspot.com/2009_05_01_archive.html
An Occasional Photoblog by John W. Sisson, Jr. Saturday, May 2, 2009. I've been photographing reflections again recently, something I return to occasionally as a photographic exercise, or more accurately an exercise in seeing. Jean-Claude Lemagny's essay "Is Photography a Plastic Art" from the book "Poetics of Space, A Critical Photographic Anthology" is a favorite of mine and particularly insightful when thinking about photographing reflections. Posted by John W. Sisson, Jr. Subscribe to: Posts (Atom).