Don’t miss it: “CC52: The Exhibition” tonight at Industrial Color

RSVP if you haven’t already. It’s going to be a great night!

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Supersized food photos styled by Victoria Granof for The New York Times Magazine

The New York Times Magazine last weekend ran a feature by Keith O’Brien on “how McDonald’s came back from the brink of a public relations nightmare bigger than ever,” and the story opened with a massive double-page, full-bleed, up-close photo of a fish filet sandwich stacked atop a big, juicy bacon cheeseburger, with some salad and crispy chicken strips in the mix for good measure. The photo was styled by our own Victoria Granof, who also styled an inside shot that’s chockablock with McDonald’s menu items and a Happy Meal toy to boot. Anyone have a spare Lipitor?

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Food styling by Victoria Granof. Photo by Stephen Lewis. Click for a closer, yummier look.

Food styling by Victoria Granof. Photo by Stephen Lewis.

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Styled by Sam Spector: Daniel Radcliffe at the Met’s Costume Institute Gala

At the Metropolitan Museum of Art‘s star-studded Costume Institute gala on Monday night, Daniel Radcliffe stepped out in a smart-looking tux by Antonio Azzuolo. It was a savvy sartorial move directed by our own Sam Spector, and the choice was not lost on GQ‘s online style columnists, who featured it in their Met Gala best-dressed-men slideshow yesterday.

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Celeb stylist Sam Spector chose a tux by Anthony Azzuolo for Daniel Radcliffe’s appearance at the Met’s Costume Institute gala Monday night.

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Julia Louis-Dreyfus by Melanie Acevedo

Julia Louis-Dreyfus. Photo by Melanie Acevedo.

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With the recent debut of Julia Louis-Dreyfus’ new series, the HBO comedy Veep, the former Seinfeld star has been getting lots of press—and from what we’ve seen, this portrait by Melanie Acevedo seems to be a favorite of Julia’s and the photo editors. It’s a photograph that Melanie shot a couple of years ago at the Viceroy in Los Angeles for Harper’s Bazaar. Julia wore Narciso Rodriguez, and the wardrobe stylist was Elisabeth Stewart. “Julia was great, fun, and down to earth,” Melanie recalls. “I LOVED her!!!”

While we’re on the subject, here’s a look at some of Melanie’s other celebrity portraits…

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Rolph Gobits’ “Life at 27 Degrees Below Zero.” Part 1: “Swimmers”

London-based portrait and landscape photographer Rolph Gobits has just produced a series of images inspired by his wife’s hometown of Vladivostok, Russia, and taken during a period of extreme cold. Called “Life at 27 Degrees Below Zero,” the project ranges from street photographs and portraits Rolph took around town to images of ice fishermen and women and hearty, colorful souls out for a bracing swim in the frigid ocean.

The photos are by turns stark and richly saturated, their mood sometimes almost philosophical and other times quite immediate and fond. But they all in some way reflect Rolph’s theory of what it means to be alive. “The analogy I always use is of a lighthouse (man) in a very hostile and choppy vast ocean (life),” he explains. “In some of these images, there is a single person or several people apart from each other but together in a landscape to accentuate this image of lighthouse and ocean. However close we are with a person or persons at the end of the day, we are all alone because in certain circumstances nobody can help us with our pain or private thoughts…”

But a theoretical exploration wasn’t Rolph’s only ambition in doing this project. “I have always been fascinated by how people can survive in extreme weather conditions and wondered if I could do likewise,” he says. “Being able to swim in ice is all about mind over matter, for example. If you brain persuades you that you can do something that seems impossible, then you can do it—anything is possible.”

Here’s “Swimmers,” part 1 of a three-part series of photos from Rolph Gobits’ “Life at 27 Degrees Below Zero.” Next week, I’ll post “Vladivostok Portraits,” and after that, “Ice Fishing.”

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Photo by Rolph Gobits. From the series “Life at 27 Degrees Below Zero.”

Photo by Rolph Gobits. From the series “Life at 27 Degrees Below Zero.”

Photo by Rolph Gobits. From the series “Life at 27 Degrees Below Zero.”

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Kehinde Wiley by Kwaku Alston

Superstar artist Kehinde Wiley sat for a portrait by Kwaku Alston that’s now being used to promote the painter’s debut show at Sean Kelly Gallery, titled “An Economy of Grace,” here in New York…

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Kehinde Wiley, whose first show at Sean Kelly Gallery has just opened. Photo by Kwaku Alston.

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Wiley—whose work is in the permanent collections of the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York and the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, among many others—is best known for his portraits of African-American men. But for this exhibition, on view through June 16, he turned his focus to African-America women, using models he found primarily through street casting. Their poses were inspired by famous works by artists such as John Singer Sargent, and the women are attired in long dresses designed by Riccardo Tisci, creative director of Givenchy, reports ArtDaily.org. Read more about the show at the Sean Kelly Gallery site.

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New work: Jason “Giblin” Hindley shoots vintage piggy banks for NatWest ad campaign

M&C Saatchi recently commissioned Jason “Giblin” Hindley to shoot the new NatWest and RBS ad campaigns. The former, explains Keiko Hindley at Jason’s blog, centers on promotional piggy banks given away by NatWest in the 1980s. “Nostalgic to those who are old enough to remember!” she writes. “Apparently, these have turned into collector’s items over the years. So if you have any lying around in the attic, I suggest you dig them out!”

Here’s a look at the campaign. Check out Keiko’s blog post, “Have you seen the piggies?”, for behind-the-scenes photos.

CREDITS

Agency: M&C Saatchi London
Art director: Paul White
Photographer: Jason “Giblin” Hindley
Copywriter: John Peacock
Prop stylist: Keiko Hindley
Model maker: Millar Models

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Photo by Jason “Giblin” Hindley for NatWest and M&C Saatchi.

Jason on set.

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PhotoShelter’s upcoming photo conference to take broad view of industry, draw speakers from tumblr, Hipstamatic, Blurb, and more

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Celebrity and entertainment photographer Michael Muller will be speaking at Luminance, a photo conference organized by PhotoShelter—which specializes in photographer websites and marketing tools—and taking place this fall in New York City.

The two-day event, scheduled for September 12–13 in New York City, is aimed at “photographers, technologists, designers and those who care about the direction of photography,” and in addition to Michael the two dozen speakers include decisionmakers who are not strictly photo people but whose businesses directly affect the photo industry—such as Lucas Allen Buick, the cofounder and CEO of Hipstamatic; Eileen Gittins, the CEO and founder of blurb; John Maloney, CEO of tumblr; and Srinivas Narayanan, engineering manager of Facebook Photos and Facebook.

“Each speaker will present a 20-minute TED-style talk on a topic relevant to their area of expertise,” according to the conference’s official site. Find out more here.

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Doug Menuez’s “Fearless Genius” exhibition travels to China

Steve Jobs. Photo © Doug Menuez. From the exhibition “Fearless Genius: The Digital Revolution in Silicon Valley 1995–2000,” which will go on view at the 9th Photographic Art Festival starting May 23.

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Doug Menuez is really on a roll with his exhibition “Fearless Genius: The Digital Revolution in Silicon Valley 1995–2000.” The show, which made its debut at the Moscow Photobiennale last month (read about it on here, on Doug’s blog), will be mounted in China on May 23rd as part of the 9th China Photographic Art Festival. The fest is organized by the Chinese Photographers Association and will take place in Wudang Mountain, which happens to be the birthplace of Tai Chi—something the 100-hour-workweek digital pioneers who Doug photographed all those years could have really used…

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Walter Iooss photographs golfer Kyle Stanley in Miami Beach (with behind-the-scenes video)

Walter Iooss recently photographed golfer Kyle Stanley for the May issue of Golf Digest, a shoot set amidst the neon and palm trees of South Beach for a story titled “Think Young, Play Hard.” Kyle posed with Miss Tennessee USA 2011, Ashley Durham, and a sweet 1957 Thunderbird…

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Kyle Stanley and Ashley Durham in Miami Beach. Photo by Walter Iooss for Golf Digest, May 2012 issue.

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There’s also a breezy behind-the-scenes video of the shoot that was edited by Stephen Barrante for the mag’s iPad edition. Click here or below to view it…

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