Honest. Advocate: James Haitchwai

James Haitchwai

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James Haitchwai is a photographer, mixed-media artist, musician and writer. "Jack of all trades, master of none," as he likes to put it.

A product of Washington DC's punk scene, he approaches his photography with a do-it-yourself ethos. It is his firm belief that trial and error and a willingness to learn from one's mistakes are the best ways to develop as an artist.

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James uses manual film cameras exclusively. His favorites are a Pentax K1000 and a Nikon FM3A with a broken light meter.
Kodak Portra and Tmax and drugstore color Fujifilm are his go-to films.
James prefers the simplicity and immediacy of this format over digital. He finds that without the option of digitally tweaking pictures later on, he experiences a more direct connection with his subjects.

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These pictures were taken while aimlessly wandering around DC and Baltimore, MD 2013-2015. They are good examples of his spontaneous, instinctual approach to photography. 

Website || Facebook || Twitter || Tumblr

Honest. Advocate: Luisa Hübner

Luisa Hübner

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Luisa Hübner was born 1988 in Germany.

She studied at the Friedl Kubelka school for artistic photography in Vienna / Austria.
Luisa alsp participated in several workshops led
by international artists like Rinko Kawauchi, Antoine d‘Agata, Jessica Backhaus, among others.

She currently lives and works in Vienna / Austria. 

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I use my camera as a tool to explore my subconscious mind. Introspective, capturing visual associations.
Picturing contrasts of absence and presence, of hiding and revealing.

What I am showing is part of an alienated reality. The atmosphere conveyed is not concrete and thus providing space for own projections. Non-obvious, introverted and vulnerable.

I use the medium Polaroid as it adds something abstract and unpredictable to my photographs. Image errors as well as the fragility of the medium are integral parts of my work.
— Luisa Hübner
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Her work was displayed in a variety of exhibistion: Viva Polaroid [Fotoquartier Vienna / Vienna]; Sind im Vesch [Vesch / Austria]; Text:Bild / Bild:Text II [Fotogalerie Vienna / Austria]; Pas de deux [Kunst Haus Vienna / Austria]; Les ateliers [Les ateliers / France]

Luisa is also working on some book projects.

Website

21 Hours in Lisbon

One city, one disposable camera, 21 hours and 21 pictures.

‘Make sure to take some pictures’ - Everyone who has been on vacation, has probably been told to capture their experiences. Experiences that one should share with family and friends upon return. 
Sure, camera phones have made sharing simply easy. Especially when going on a one or two-day trip, where bringing your whole camera equipment would be considered exaggerated. 

So what is the camera phone - equivalence to a film camera? 
We at HONEST. call point-and-shoot cameras into action. 

Our Social Media Unicorn and Globetrotter T. is a big fan of weekend trips, as well as disposable cameras. 
In June she jumped on a plane to Lisbon to meet up with some friends, so we equipped her with a 9,90€ point-and-shoot. 

To make it a bit more interesting we made a challenge out of it.
A challenge with one simple rule: One picture per hour. 

No matter where T. would go, she would have to take one picture every hour, for 21 hours. 

A couple of hours in another city? Sign me up!
It’s been almost a year since my last trip to Lisbon. Portugal is by far one of my favourite countries to visit, no matter if it’s for surfing, road-tripping or visiting friends in the capital.
Therefore I had absolutely no objection to take the little plastic camera with me for the weekend. I was really excited since I didn’t bring any of my other cameras.

I had all these great shots in my head, places that I’ve been to, places I thought would be great to capture for the project.
The 21-Hour-Challenge sounded very easy. I mean, how hard can it be to take one picture every hour?

I arrived Friday night and decided to start shooting Saturday morning (noon-ish) and keep going until Sunday morning before heading back to the airport.

In the beginning I always had to check my bag to see if I brought the camera with me, since it was so light.

We went to the Flea market and I started to check the time more frequently. I think, it was after the first 4 hours that I realised that I couldn’t take pictures of all the things that I actually wanted.

At one point I really did want to break the rule. Lisbon has amazing Miradouros (viewpoints) which I did want to get on film. Unfortunately I just had taken a photo.

By the time I reached the airport the next day, I was pretty much used to take out the camera and just shoot what was in front of me.
— T.
I will definitely do this again. It’s such a fun experiment and it’s definitely a different kind of holiday snaps.
— T.

Top 3 things to do while in Lisbon

  1. Miradouro de Santa Catarina - Bairro Alto
  2. Alfama Flea Market - Feira de Ladra
  3. Take a Tram.

FULL GALLERY HERE

Confession: I gave my best, but I did cheat once when I failed to hear the timer. And once when I was sleeping for a bit. Mum’s the word!

HONEST. Advocate: Urizen Freaza

Urizen Freaza - Dobles

Emulsion lift of color polaroid on monochrome polaroid
'Doble Luisa' - 2015

Urizen Freaza is a self-taught filmmaker and photographer, born in Tenerife, Spain in 1982.
Since 2010 he is based in Berlin, Germany.

In the past years Urizen took part in a variety of group exhibitions in the UK, as well as the United States. 2010 his work was featured in the ARTE documentary "Polaroid - magische Momente".
Urizen is no stranger to the Impossible Project and has won their "Face the Impossible" contest in October 2014. 

Some of his work can also be found in Filmshooters Collectiv's  "Fading From Memory".

Emulsion lift of color polaroid on monochrome polaroid
'Doble Evelyn' - 2015

To say an image consists of many layers sounds very obvious, but i do believe instant photography has one extra layer, which is the physical one.
Even more than film in general, polaroids are objects that you can hold.
When you see a polaroid you know the photographer, and most likely everyone appearing on it, touched it.
They passed it around and looked at it and reacted to it. It’s a fetish in the animistic sense of the word.
— Urizen

Emulsion lift of color polaroid on monochrome polaroid
'Doble Pablo' - 2015

For the ‘hidden’ picture in the background only UV light was used.
This light found in the part of the spectrum invisible to the eye, was meant as a tool to look behind, to see what was hidden.
A portrait is by definition superficial, a two-dimensional representation of a person.
In order to show the person, one layer doesn’t suffice.
— Urizen

HONEST. Words: Christian Fuchs

We are so psyched to introduce to you a new series on our blog: HONEST. Words. We want to invite people to share their thoughts and stories on photography with us, no matter if it's about technique, inspiration or simply reflexions on the art itself.

Our first guest is Christian Fuchs, known as one half of the former band Bunny Lake and through his work at Viennese radio station FM4. You can read more of his work here.

 

© Stefanie Neunteufl

© Stefanie Neunteufl

 

Innehalten vor der Welt: Notizen zum Boom der analogen Fotografie

Ist es pure Romantisierung, wenn jetzt wieder vorwiegend jüngere Fotografen Kleinbildfilme in Spiegelreflexkameras aus dem Second-Hand-Laden einlegen? Übernimmt in einer Gegenwart,  in der der Schock des Neuen fehlt, die Nostalgie nach einer verklärten Vergangenheit die Macht, was sich auch im Boom von Vinylplatten niederschlägt oder gar in Nachwuchsautoren, die wieder in Kofferschreibmaschinen hämmern?

Blättert man ein Magazin wie „Honest“ durch, findet man glücklicherweise andere Gründe abseits des Retro-Biedermeiers. Da lassen sich Fotografen vom Charme der Unvollkommenheit verführen, der in der Ära der Photoshop-Allherrschaft nachvollziehbar anziehend wirkt. Neben all der Körnigkeit, den Kratzern und Unschärfen, die mit der veralteten Technologie einher gehen, üben im Meer der digitalen Möglichkeiten natürlich auch die Limitierungen, die zum analogen Material gehören, einen Reiz aus. Eine freiwillige Beschränkung der Mittel und Möglichkeiten scheint überhaupt zum wichtigsten künstlerischen Gestus zu mutieren, auch in der Musik oder im Film.

Mit Bildern gegen den Bildervirus

Auf der Suche nach der wirklichen Sogkraft der analogen Fotografie kommt man aber an Jean Baudrillard nicht vorbei. Der 2007 verstorbene Philosoph und (Quer-)Denker hätte einerseits wohl den Authentizitäts-Gestus attackiert, mit dem manche Neo-Analog-Fotografen gerne kokettieren. Beschrieb er doch bereits in den frühen 80er Jahren eine Welt, in der Bilderfluten und Simulationen von Reality längst die Wirklichkeit abgelöst hatten, ein postmodernes Zombie-Reich, in dem speziell Kunst und Kultur eine untote Existenz führen, gefangen in diversen Zeitschleifen.

Gleichzeitig versuchte sich Baudrillard, trotz seiner militant kunstkritischen Essays, in späten Lebensjahren selber als Künstler. Ausgerechnet der Mann, der so viele Texte über die virusartige Verbreitung von Bildern verfasst hatte, ging nicht ohne Kleinbildkamera auf Reisen. Mit seinen unaufgeregten und sehr spontan anmutenden Fotos schaffte es Jean Baudrillard sogar in renommierte Ausstellungsräumlichkeiten. „Die Lust am Fotografieren ist eine objektive Lust. Derjenige, der diese objektive Leidenschaft für das Bild am Morgen in einer Stadt, in einer Wüste, nie verspürt hat, wird auch von der paraphysischen Feinheit der Welt nichts verstehen“ schrieb er dazu etwa 1998 in einem Katalog der Neuen Galerie in Graz.

Den Alltag und die Zeit anhalten

Dieser Widerspruch zwischen einer permanenten Klage über die Diktatur des Visuellen und einer ganz schlichten eigenen Lust an der Fotografie ist nur auf den ersten, oberflächlichen Blick unauflösbar. In seinen Texten zu seinen Fotoarbeiten beschwört Baudrillard einen fast meditativen Charakter des Mediums Fotografie.

Das Foto schweigt. Eine der wertvollsten Eigenschaften, im Unterschied zum Film und zum Fernsehen, dem man das Schweigen immer aufzwingen muß, ohne daß es einem wirklich gelingt. Das Foto schweigt, es braucht (oder bräuchte) keinen Kommentar. Aber auch das Objekt schweigt; das Bild entreißt das Objekt dem platzraubenden und lärmenden Kontext der realen Welt. Unabhängig vom Lärm, von der Gewalt, die es umgeben, gibt das Foto dem Objekt die Immobilität und das Schweigen zurück. Das Foto ist in der Lage, mitten im Gewirr der Stadt Leere und eine phänomenale Isolierung wiederherzustellen. Es ist die einzige Möglichkeit, die Städte, die Welt in aller Stille zu durchqueren.“ Wenn dann der Meisterdenker Jean Baudrillard auch noch notiert, dass im Foto „eine Form von Verblüffung“ steckt, „eine Form von Aussetzung, von phänomenaler Unbeweglichkeit, welche die Schnelligkeit des Ablaufs der Ereignisse unterbricht“, dann schält sich eine andere, eine sanft widerspenstige Haltung heraus. „Das Innehalten beim Bild ist ein Innehalten vor der Welt.“

In der Slowmotion-Welt der Dunkelkammern

Man muss kein verstaubter Kulturpessimist sein, wenn man die digitale Fotografie, insbesondere die Amateurvariante mit ihren Milliarden in der Cloud versammelten Handy-Schnappschüssen, als Gegenstück zu diesem Innehalten sieht: Nämlich stattdessen als Komplizen in einem unentwegten Beschleunigungsprozess. Der Bildersturm der Smartphone-Kameras ist untrennbar mit der Nonstop-Raserei des neoliberalen Hier und Jetzt verbunden.

Möglicherweise, zumindest wäre es ein schönes Motiv, ist ein Teil der jungen Fotografen, die sich begeistert in die Slowmotion-Welt der Dunkelkammern begeben, die aber auch das lange Warten auf entwickelte Filme zelebrieren, im Gegenzug auf den Pfaden Jean Baudrillards unterwegs. Vielleicht geht es bei manchen der Fotos, die in „Honest“ auftauchen, bei diesen Bildern von ländlichen, urbanen und menschlichen Landschaften aus verschiedensten Kontinenten, auch darum: Sich vom Lärm und dem Getriebe der Maschinerie etwas zu lösen. Bild für Bild. Fotos wieder schweigen zu lassen, inmitten des omnipräsenten Gebrülls.

 

Have something to say? We wanna hear your thoughts on photography! Send your words to team@honestwithyou.com and be our next guest blogger! 

HONEST. Advocate: Soi Park

SOI PARK - Where Are We Going?

2010 - Las Vegas, Nevada
4x5 large-format film camera

A native of Korea, Soi Park received a BA in Visual Information Design at Ewha Women's University in Seoul, Korea before earning her BFA at SUNY / Purchase College in New York.

She holds a MFA from the Yale School of Art where she was also awarded the Alice Kimball English Traveling Fellowship.

2009 - Mashantucket, Connecticut
4x5 large-format film camera

I often find myself in transient places, waiting for people to share those moments of awe and wonder, or silence.
My persistence act of taking pictures might remains a fundamental question of human being and surrounding.

However, I believe that photographs itself surpasses of my intention.
— Soi Park

2010 - Bethlehem, Pennsylvania
4x5 large-format film camera

Soi Park has been featured in Art Chicago NEXT 2011, New Insight by the Renaissance Society, and Spectra 2010 by Silvermine Art Center.

Since 2011, she has exhibited widely - Including a solo exhibition at the CUE foundation in 2013. This year she has been awarded an Engaging Artist Residency from the Mort Art, New York, NY.  

Website

HONEST Advocate: Fritz Lichtenwagner

Fritz Lichtenwagner

Fritz Lichtenwagner is a photographer born in Vienna, 1994.
He prefers mechanical cameras without any batteries. To Fritz the process of developing film is more honest and authentic.
Using his Leica M2 (with Tri-x 400) or his little mju, he went from Austria to Romania, Croatia, Slovakia and Switzerland, bringing back this wonderful captivating photographies.

The human, lost in his environment and in the perception of others, fuses with his surroundings.
Lost in billion of humans, I like to capture the essence of his own.
Cut off from others, the illusion of isolation.
Just them, the humans on their own given priority.
— Fritz Lichtwagner
I like giving focus to the people - with a clean and composed background.
— Fritz Lichtenwagner

His next project is a book called "Kabelwerke".

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HONEST Advocate: Johams Leguisamo

Johams Leguisamo

On the top. November 2013 - Panama 

Johams Leguisamo is from Panama City, where he works as graphic designer - but on weekends it's a different story: He tries to go out of the city to new places as often possible, where he gets inspiration for new projects. Johams started shooting film in 2009 with a toy camera and since then he has not stopped, it's second his nature now! When he goes skating with friends or travels around the country, his camera is  always with him - as well as some film rolls.

Cameras & Films Johams uses: Seagull 4a-103 and Fuji GW690ii || Kodak Portra 400 and Ilford HP5+

Los cajones. February 2015 - Panama 

Los cajones. February 2015 - Panama 

It is the best feeling in the world!
Shooting and not knowing what will be the outcome of it, cause it does not matter how much effort you put into getting the best out of your frames.
Film will always make it look even better!
It’s always Christmas when I get my negatives back.
— Johams Leguisamo on why he chooses analogue photography.

La Fortuna. February 2015 - Costa Rica 

Johams's work was shown in London, Rome and Panama as well as published in books and magazines in Australia, Mexico and Guatemala. Future projects will include a set of nude people in landscape with his 6x9 camera. We are excited to see more of his work!

Portfolio || Blog || Instagram

HONEST. Advocate: Oleg Koval

OLEG KOVAL

Oleg Koval, was born in 1989 in Dier, Hungary, while he spent most of his childhood in Truskavets, Ukraine and is now living and working in Lviv, Ukraine. He started photographing in 2011, his main focus being documentary projects about the city he lives in and the ordinary life surrounding him. 

Oleg uses different cameras: Contax G2, Mamiya 645, Yashica T*, and a variety of color films: Provia/Velvia/Ektar.

Film photography is a great process of transferring the world on a physical, analog medium - not fixing it in a digital way.
— Oleg Koval

Oleg spent a lot of time in Poland and has published a photo book called '4,2km' in 2013.
In 2015 he published another photo book called 'Sicily'.

Website || Instagram || Twitter

HONEST. goes Heuer am Karlsplatz

Guess what peeps! You can now see the amazing works of Nika De Carlo at Heuer am Karlsplatz the whole summer through!

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After successfully launching our Issue Ø at Heuer am Karlsplatz, including a beautiful garden exhibition, we are happy that some of the prints have found a temporary home in this stylish spot! Drop by for a drink and get inspired by these extraordinary photos!

Love, 

HONEST.

HONEST. goes Surf Worldcup Podersdorf

Two weeks ago we packed our bags and headed to beautiful Lake Neusiedl for the 2015 Surf Worldcup in Podersdorf. Every year we cheer for the best Kiters and Windsurfers, relax at the beach and celebrate life all night long. This year we decided to bring more than good vibes and set up HONEST. at the Royal Surfhouse.

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HONEST. goes SCHON SCHÖN Pop-Up Store!

Last Friday we went to the new Pop-Up Store of our friend JCHOERL, who is known for his design for no other than Conchita Wurst! You could take a look at the fashion designs that have been worn by Miss Wurst and obviously buy exclusive items by the designer himself! And guess what: HONEST. is there too! 

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HONEST. goes ZÅMM Coffee Collective.

HONEST. has hit the store!

YES! After successfully launching ISSUE 0 this February in New York and sending out the magazine to our dear followers, we can proudly announce that you can now also buy HONEST. in store! 

Last Friday we joined our friends from ZÅMM Coffee Collective at their new location in Vienna for their Grand Re-Opening! And I can tell you – we had a lot of fun:

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