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August 27, 2009

Photographer Howard Bond kicks off 2009 Syracuse Symposium, SU Library Associates lecture series

Howard Bond, a renowned photographer and former student of Ansel Adams, will give a free lecture at Syracuse University. The lecture, “Photography as Art: Trends Since 1839,” is Thursday, September 10, at 5 p.m. in the Peter Graham Scholarly Commons on the first floor of Bird Library (222 Waverly Ave., Syracuse). The event kicks off the SU Library Associates 2009-10 lecture series. It coincides with an exhibition, entitled “Luminous Construction: The Photography of Howard Bond” in the Special Collections Research Center at Bird Library, running September 8, 2009 - January 14, 2010. Free parking for the lecture is available in Booth Garage, on the corner of Waverly and Comstock avenues. The event is followed by a reception, during which Bond will sign copies of his exhibition catalog. Lecture sponsors include the SU Humanities Center, as well as the SU Library and its Special Collections Research Center.

For more information, contact Pamela McLaughlin at (315) 443-9788 or pwmclaug@syr.edu.

Suzanne Thorin, dean of the library and executive director of the Library Associates’ Board of Trustees, says Bond’s presentation focuses on an interesting piece of scholarship. “Ever since early experimentation with photographic processes in the mid-19th century, people have used photography to create art,” she says. “But there is one question that persists to this day: ‘Can an unaltered image produced with a camera be considered art, or must the image be altered by human intervention?’” Bond will address both points of view with a richly illustrated lecture spanning more than 170 years of history. He will consider the early montages of O.J. Rejlander and Henry Peach Robinson; Peter Henry Emerson’s advocacy of un-retouched photos during the 1870s and 1880s; the Pictorialist movement at the turn of the 20th century; Modernism, as advocated by members of Group f/64 in the 1930s; the Post-Modernists of the 1970s; and recent digital techniques.

Since committing himself fully to photography in 1979, Bond has been regarded as a master of large-format film photography. His signature black and photography has been featured in more than 60 single-artist and 40 group shows all over the world. He is the author of two books, Light Motifs (1984) and White Motif: The Cyclades Islands of Greece (1991), both published by Goodrich Press, and more than a hundred articles for Photo Techniques magazine. In addition to Adams, Bond studied fine art photography with 20th-century masters Imogen Cunningham and Brett Weston. The Michigan-based artist has taught workshops on photographic techniques for more than three decades.

Recently, Bond’s photography was the subject of a generous donation to SU by Carl J. Armani ’60 and his wife, Marcy. The gift, which includes a set of 22 portfolios of dramatic landscapes and abstract close-ups taken between 1974 and 2005, is the subject of the aforementioned exhibition in Bird Library. Curator Kelli Pennington ’10, an M.F.A. student in art photography, says Bond’s aesthetic echoes that of his mentors. “I see in Bond’s work a finely trained gaze, an ability to render the details and spaces that make up our world,” she says.

Syracuse Symposium is a semester-long festival celebrating the interdisciplinary humanities at SU. This year’s symposium explores the protean meaning of light in all its senses and myriad of forms, including music, art, dance, film, sciences, religion, and philosophy. Also, it attempts to bring new meaning to light through a diverse array of lectures, performances, exhibits, symposia, and other special events. Syracuse Symposium is organized and presented for The College of Arts and Sciences by the SU Humanities Center. More information is available at http://www.syracusehumanities.org/#/files/2412/4958/5954/5372073566.jpg.

The SU Library Associates is a society devoted to the enrichment of the University Library and the greater campus community. Members share an interest in books, learning, and the preservation of knowledge. For more information, visit http://library.syr.edu/libraryassociates/

Library Open House on Friday, September 11th

Syracuse University Library welcomes new and returning students to its annual Open House on Friday, September 11th from noon to 4 p.m. in the Learning Commons on the first floor of Bird Library.

The event will feature introductions to Library resources,services, librarians and staff. Tours will also be available and refreshments will be served. Attendees may also elect to participate in an activity that facilitates self-paced exploration of the Library. Those who successfully complete the activity will be entered a raffle for a chance to win prizes.

Since the event falls on the 8th anniversary of the 9/11 attacks, there will be a display of Library resources dedicated to this topic.

August 26, 2009

Library Tours during Opening Week

The Library will offer tours of Bird Library and the Science and Technology Library during Opening Week as follows: Monday, 8/31 through Thursday, 9/3, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. daily. To request a tour, stop by the first floor service desk in either location.

August 21, 2009

Trial access to Cabells Publishing opportunities

The New 11th edition of Cabell Publishing provides assistance for professors, graduate students and researchers to publish their manuscripts in academic journals

Trial access for Cabells is available thru November 15, 2009

To access these resources:
http://www.cabells.com/members.aspx
Username : syracuse
Password: syracuse

For additional information or to provide feedback please contact : Natasha Cooper

August 14, 2009

Exhibition and lecture by acclaimed photographer Howard Bond

Syracuse University Library Associates will host acclaimed large-format photographer Howard Bond for its first program of the 2009-2010 season. Bond's lecture, entitled "Photography as Art: Trends since 1839" will take place on September 10th at 5:00 p.m. in the Peter Graham Scholarly Commons on the first floor of Bird Library and will be followed by a reception and book signing.

In his richly illustrated lecture, Howard Bond will trace the answers to the questions Who decides what constitutes art? Is a photograph art? A student of Ansel Adams, Imogen Cunningham, and Brett Weston, Bond will present montages by famous photographers, in addition to his own work. He will discuss photography's relationship with major movements in the art world. The lecture will conclude with a discussion of recent digital techniques.

Syracuse University Library owns all 22 of Howard Bond's limited-edition portfolios of prints, which were donated to the Library in 2008 by alumnus Carl Armani '60. Bond's photographs have been exhibited in some 60 single-artist and 40 group shows, and examples of his work can be found in 34 permanent collections, including the Bibliotheque Nationale (Paris), the Victoria and Albert Museum (London), the University of Michigan Museum of Art, and the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. Bond is the author of two books, Light Motifs (1984) and White Motif: The Cyclades Islands of Greece (1991), and has contributed more than 100 articles to Photo Techniques magazine.

An exhibition of Bond’s work will be on display during the fall 2009 semester in the Special Collections Research Center gallery on the 6th floor of Bird Library, in conjunction with the Syracuse Symposium’s 2009 theme of “light”. The exhibition has been curated by Master of Fine Arts student Kelli Pennington ‘10. A catalog of the exhibition will be available for purchase and signing following the lecture.

Free event parking is available in Booth Garage, on the corner of Waverly Avenue and Comstock Avenue, one block from Bird Library.


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