Friday, June 8, 2012


I was in Toronto a few weeks ago and went to this grat talk on Berenice Abbott: Photographs.

One of many photogrpahers that I learn to see for taking photos!

Berenice Abbott: Photographs

In Toronto at the Art Gallery of Ontario (AGO) from May 23 to August 19, 2012


http://www.ago.net/berenice-abbott-photographs

May 23 – August 19, 2012

The Ryerson Image Centre (Toronto) and the Jeu de Paume (Paris) have co-organized the exhibition Berenice Abbott: Photographs, the first retrospective of the American photographer, Berenice Abbott, presented in France and Canada. Curated by Dr. Gaëlle Morel, Ryerson Image Centre, Berenice Abbott: Photographs will be on view in Paris from February 20 to April 29, 2012, and the exhibition is being presented in Toronto at the Art Gallery of Ontario (AGO) from May 23 to August 19, 2012, in partnership with the Scotiabank CONTACT Photography Festival and the AGO.
Famous for her tireless fight for the recognition of French photographer Eugène Atget, Berenice Abbott is also prominently known for her documentary project Changing New York (1935-39). The exhibition Berenice Abbott: Photographs explores the different stages of Abbott's expansive career through more than 120 photographs. In order to provide a larger context for her œuvre, the exhibition will present her photographic prints alongside a series of never before exhibited personal documents - including letters, book mock-ups, drawings, magazines, and scrapbooks - and a collection of first edition books.
The Ryerson Image Centre and the Jeu de Paume have produced two editions (French and English) of a catalogue edited by Dr. Gaëlle Morel to accompany the exhibition.
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Conference
To accompany the exhibition Berenice Abbott: Photographs the Ryerson Image Centre and the Scotiabank CONTACT Photography Festival are pleased to present a one-day conference addressing the work of Berenice Abbott.

Participants include:
Doina Popescu, Director of the Ryerson Image Centre
Bonnie Rubenstein, Artistic Director, Scotiabank CONTACT Photography Festival
Ron Kurtz, Owner of Commerce Graphics
Dr. Gaëlle Morel, Curator at the Ryerson Image Centre
Dr. Sarah Miller, Terra Foundation Postdoctoral Scholar in American Art at the University of Chicago
Dr. Terri Weissman, Assistant Professor of Art History at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
Sophie Hackett, Assistant Curator, Photography at the Art Gallery of Ontario and adjunct faculty in Ryerson University's Masters program in Photographic Preservation and Collections Management.

Sunday, April 15, 2012

Photo Selection Magazine Joshua Radu





Saturday Night Magazine


After a shorter winter and a busy winter of selling prints and grearing up to grow the bussiness more in the art market from Canada, a hard place to grow from.
I have some great new images to show and they be on my web site ASAP.
please if you need art for the home or cottage or for a birthday gift , look at my web site.

Thanks

Sunday, August 7, 2011

The web site.....

The web site is at www.joshuaradu.com

Micmac Indians poetically named the archipelago "Menagoesenog", a word that means "islands brushed by the waves". Well before the arrival of the first Europeans, Indians were coming to the Islands to fish, and to hunt for seal and sea cows (walrus).

In June 1534, Jacques Cartier inscribed in his diary the first written report about the Islands, which he called "Les Araynes" (from Latin "arena", meaning "sand"). He named the first islands he came upon Île Margaulx (today Rocher aux Oiseaux) and Île Brion. He wrote in his ship's log: "These islands have sandbanks and good passages around them, 6 or seven fathoms. This island is the best land we have seen, better even than Terre Neuve (Newfoundland). We found a land with great trees, fine meadow, fields of wild wheat and flowering peas, as many species as I ever saw in Brittany, and it seemed as if all had been planted by man's hand."

In 1629, Samuel de Champlain wrote on a map, "La Magdeleine", near the area of Île du Havre Aubert. However, it is said that the archipelago's present name, Îles de la Madeleine, was given in honour of Madeleine Fontaine, wife of François Doublet de Honfleur, and concessionaire of the Islands in 1663. Under the French Regime, the Islands were passed from hand to hand without lasting colonisation or exploitation.