

Real Photo Show with Michael Chovan-Dalton
Michael Chovan-Dalton
Real Photo Show with Michael Chovan-Dalton is a podcast about photographers and the related arts.
Episodes
Mentioned books

Jun 6, 2019 • 51min
Stanley Greenberg | Codex New York - Ep.94
"I think that the early interest in infrastructure came from riding the subway to high school everyday and standing in the front car with my friends and watching the tunnel." Stanley Greenberg stopped by to talk about his new book CODEX NEW YORK - TYPOLOGIES OF THE CITY. It's a fascinating view of New York City organized by infrastructure, topography, carved out spaces, and architectural history. Stanley walked every block of Manhattan as part of this urban catalog of New York. We talk about how the work started and the discoveries along the way and we will talk about how Stanley got started and how his politics influence his work. https://www.stanleygreenberg.org/ https://www.instagram.com/stanleygreenberg/ This episode sponsored by the School of Visual Arts MFA Photography, Video, & Related Media - Charles Traub, Chair. http://www.mfaphoto.sva.edu/ Visit realphotoshow.com @realphotoshow on Twitter/IG/FB

May 25, 2019 • 1h 3min
Michael Joseph | Travelers - Ep.93
"I think they see themselves as a second family, a found family, a supportive family and they're young in a way where they are exploring the world and seeing things for the first time, it's very exciting, it's intoxicating…" Michael Joseph was in town for his solo exhibition "Lost and Found" at Daniel Cooney Fine Art Gallery. Michael has some amazing stories about how the "Travelers" work took shape and about the connections he made along the way. We spend a good amount of time talking about one of the more well known Travelers, Knuckles, and how Knuckles' journey gave Michael a deeper understanding of who the Travelers are. Michael’s work “Lost and Found” has been featured on Vice.com and CNN.com. He has been exhibited nationally, most recently at Daniel Cooney Fine Art, (New York, NY) and the Aperture Gallery (New York, NY). He has lectured for Amy Arbus at the International Center of Photography (New York, NY) in portraiture classes at the New England School of Photography (Boston, MA) and taught at the Light Factory (Charlotte, NC). http://www.michaeljosephphotographics.com/ https://www.instagram.com/michaeljosephphoto/ https://www.instagram.com/wildwestoftheeast/ https://www.facebook.com/michaeljphotographics/ This episode sponsored by the School of Visual Arts MFA Photography, Video, & Related Media - Charles Traub, Chair. http://www.mfaphoto.sva.edu/ Visit realphotoshow.com @realphotoshow on Twitter/IG/FB

May 12, 2019 • 37min
Sasha Waters Freyer | Garry Winogrand: All Things Are Photographable - Half Frame - Ep.92
Sasha Waters-Freyer is a documentary filmmaker and Chair of the Department of Photography and Film at Virginia Commonwealth University. Her film, Garry Winogrand: All Things are Photographable, has been getting a lot of press and great reviews and it just aired on PBS American Masters. Sasha and I catch up on the success of the film, her awards, and what it took to get it made and the decisions that went into how it was edited and cut. We also talk about her Special Jury Prize for best feminist reconsideration of a male artist from SXSW and what that means. https://www.pieshake.com/ https://www.winograndthefilm.com/ Visit realphotoshow.com @realphotoshow on Twitter/IG/FB

Apr 27, 2019 • 1h 10min
Rory Doyle | Delta Hill Riders - with Nicole Craine - Ep.91
"…I'm able to share a story in a small part of American on a large scale and that's not me, per say, that's the story of this culture that's been so overlooked and I feel really thankful that…I've been accepted and I've been able to photograph it…" Rory Doyle, Nicole Craine (Everyday Rural America, Ep.74) and I talk about his award winning Delta Hill Riders photo essay. Rory was in town for portfolio reviews and we talk about the difficulty of getting work outside of the major media parts of the country, which is a large part of the mission of Nicole's Everyday Rural America. We also talk about the responsibility of representing communities that you are not inherently a part of and how you work in those communities with respect. After this recording, Rory was awarded the 2019 Zeiss Photography Award and the 2019 Smithsonian Photo Contest Grand Prize. https://www.rorydoylephoto.com/ https://www.instagram.com/rorydoylephoto/ https://www.facebook.com/rorydvt https://twitter.com/rorydoylephoto This episode sponsored by the School of Visual Arts MFA Photography, Video, & Related Media - Charles Traub, Chair. http://www.mfaphoto.sva.edu/ Visit realphotoshow.com @realphotoshow on Twitter/IG/FB

Apr 10, 2019 • 57min
Anja Hitzenberger | strudelmediaLive - Ep.90
"I feed off of other people, that's really how I teach, I love teaching this way. I like to improvise, I like to go by what is needed." Anja Hitzenberger and I talk about photography, food, Mozart balls, and her new online venture, StrudelmediaLive, where she sometimes teaches from a mountaintop. Anja Hitzenberger is a photographer and video artist whose work focuses on the body and its relationship to architecture and space, as well as themes relating to food and how people eat. Her work has been exhibited in solo and group shows, as well as at film festivals and on theater stages throughout Europe, the United States, South America and Asia, and published internationally in magazines and books. She is the founder of StrudelmediaLIVE, which offers live online interactive photography courses for students participating from locations around the world. She has received numerous art grants and has completed residencies in Rome, Paris, Warsaw and Beijing. She is on the faculty at the International Center of Photography (ICP) in New York, where she teaches personal vision classes. Originally from Salzburg, Austria, she divides her time between New York and Vienna, Austria. http://anjahitzenberger.com/ https://strudelmedialive.com/ This episode sponsored by the School of Visual Arts MFA Photography, Video, & Related Media - Charles Traub, Chair. http://www.mfaphoto.sva.edu/ Visit realphotoshow.com @realphotoshow on Twitter/IG/FB

Mar 28, 2019 • 33min
Aaron Turner | Center for Photographers of Color - Half Frame - Ep.89
Aaron Turner started @photogsofcolor on Twitter to promote Photographers of Color and we talk about that back on episode 50, but now this social media idea is becoming an actual Center for Photographers of Color at the University of Arkansas. We talk about all of the amazing changes and successes for Aaron in this half-frame episode of Real Photo Show with Michael Chovan-Dalton. https://www.aaronturnerphotography.com/ https://www.instagram.com/aturn_arkdelta/ https://twitter.com/AaronRTurner_ Visit realphotoshow.com @realphotoshow on Twitter/IG/FB

Mar 9, 2019 • 49min
Andrew L Moore | Learning by Inquiry - Ep.88
"We spent a lot of time visiting architectural sites when I was a kid…I really grew up with a kind of 6th sense about buildings, about architecture, and about how architectural space creates a kind of narrative and I've been able to take that and translate that into my photographic practice." Andrew L. Moore took some time after teaching his graduate class at the School of Visual Arts to talk about his work. He is probably best known for his books, Detroit Disassembled and Dirt Meridian and we have a pretty intense discussion about what was wrong with the critique of photographing ruins, known as "Ruin Porn." We have a lovely conversation about Andrew's first mentor, Emmet Gowin, and we will also talk about the influence of architecture and the importance of writing which is all very connected to Andrew's work. Andrew will be the juror for the upcoming Rust Belt Biennial. Check the link below to find out more. https://andrewlmoore.com/ https://www.rustbeltbiennial.com/ This episode sponsored by the School of Visual Arts MFA Photography, Video, & Related Media - Charles Traub, Chair. http://www.mfaphoto.sva.edu/ Visit realphotoshow.com @realphotoshow on Twitter/IG/FB

Feb 24, 2019 • 40min
Rust Belt Biennial | Niko J. Kallianiotis - Yoav Friedlander - Half Frame Ep.87
Yoav Friedlander and Niko J. Kallianiotis call in to talk about their open call exhibition, Rust Belt Biennial. We talk about the logistics of putting together this ambitious exhibition and the leaps of faith you have to make when doing something like this for the first time. We also talk about their desire to change the narrative or the perceptions people have of the rust belt because of the politicization of the media coverage. On a more personal note, the top prize winner chosen by photographer Andrew L. Moore will also be a guest on the Real Photo Show. Find out more about how to apply for the show at: https://www.rustbeltbiennial.com/

Feb 9, 2019 • 36min
Lissa Rivera - BJ Lillis | History and Muse - Half Frame Ep.86
In this half frame episode I catch up with Lissa Rivera and BJ Lillis (ep.51) to talk about their successes with the Beautiful Boy exhibition and how there is more work to come, but there was so much more to talk about as well. Lissa has just organized the first U.S. museum exhibition of Leonor Fini, the Argentinine-Italian surrealist artist, at the Museum of Sex and BJ is busy learning Dutch to help him translate his doctoral work on cultural and interethnic contact in the colonial Hudson valley. Lissa also makes a correction to something we spoke about in episode 51. Links: http://www.lissarivera.com/ https://www.museumofsex.com/ https://www.instagram.com/orkinpod/ https://www.instagram.com/lissa_rivera_/ Visit realphotoshow.com @realphotoshow on Twitter/IG/FB

Jan 27, 2019 • 57min
Katie Sadie | The Way South - Ep.85
"Ended up going on a six month road trip from Toronto to Los Angeles…all through the south…living in a van…lived in that total for a year, but six months on the road for a photo trip" Katie Sadie started out as a fashion photographer but quickly realized she wanted more out of the work she was making. She sold off her studio equipment to pay for a 6 month road trip through the American South ending in Los Angeles. She traded studio backdrops for rolls of 120 film, bought a Pentax 6x7 off of Craigslist and purchased a van that she lived and traveled in for about a year. We also have a pretty intense conversation about a photo project she started with her mother who lives with schizophrenia. In just 3 years after restarting her photo career, Katie was a winner of the 2017 Magenta Foundation Emerging Photographer Competition, did a residency at a naturists colony, had that work published in True North Photo Journal, and more work published in Float Magazine, and Aint-Bad, and she was hired to document the production of holiday films for A&E/Lifetime. Katie was visiting New York to meet with photo editors when we recorded this show. Links https://www.katiesadie.com/ Visit realphotoshow.com @realphotoshow on Twitter/IG/FB


