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TWGA Assesses Market for Digital Cameras, Scanners

11 July 2005
Published in : Industry News

Since the first flatbed scanner debuted in 1994, the market has seen many innovations. Among the creative service fields, planned investment in both digital cameras and desktop color scanners is at record highs, according to a new report from TrendWatch Graphic Arts.

Although both of these technologies have trickled down to the consumer level, the extent to which the graphic art markets have benefited is less clear. The advent of digital ad delivery has done more to impede the market for scanners among magazine publishers and their printers than has digital photography, the report noted.

At most, only 15 percent of print and prepress firms have ever planned to invest in color scanners in any TWGA survey. Web design, development and production firms say that their preferred scanner investment is in the $500 to $1,000 range. In a similar study conducted last year, 23 percent of print and prepress firms planned to invest...



Heart Gallery Helps Children Find Homes

10 July 2005
Published in : Industry News

The Heart Gallery is a New Jersey charitable organization dedicated to helping foster children find families. The project makes portraits of foster children who are at least 3 years old or are in sibling groups, and then places those portraits on exhibit. The goal of the project is to inspire people visiting the exhibit to get involved as mentors, adoptive parents, employers or volunteers.

The 2005 exhibit features 60 portraits by 27 project photographers, all of whom donated their time. The exhibit recently appeared in various sites around Puget Sound, and opened June 12 at the Liberty Science Center in Jersey City, N.J. A sampling of the portraits is available at dshs.wa.gov.



Sack Photographic Trust Offers SFMOMA Gift

09 July 2005
Published in : Industry News

The Prentice and Paul Sack Photographic Trust has promised to give nearly 800 photographs from the Sacks' private collection to the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art.

This group of photographs joins their 1998 gift of nearly 1,000 works.

This summer, SFMOMA is presenting an exhibition drawn from the Sack photo collection. "Taking Place: Photographs from the Prentice and Paul Sack Collection" is one of the largest ever mounted at SFMOMA, celebrating an unparalleled collection that spans the history of the medium from 1840 to 1975.



Santa Fe Workshops Creates Scholarship

08 July 2005
Published in : Industry News

Santa Fe Workshops has established a scholarship fund in memory of Westlight stock agency co-founder Craig Aurness, who taught at the workshops in the early 1990s. The Craig Aurness Memorial Scholarship Fund, sponsored by Corbis, will provide two $1,250 scholarships annually to talented and deserving emerging professional photographers who wish to attend the weeklong workshops in Santa Fe. More information about the scholarship program is available at santafeworkshops.com.



Science Faction Images Aavilable Through Getty

07 July 2005
Published in : Industry News

Science Faction recently announced that its image collection is available for licensing through Getty Images. Founded in 2004 by Roger Ressmeyer, a photographer of space and science and a former executive in the stock photo industry, Science Faction represents imagery that captures the universe of physical and natural sciences, high technology, medicine and space.

The collection includes work by science photographers and artists such as Tony Hallas, Fred and Randi Hirschmann, Nancy Kedersha, Chad Kleitsch, Yoav Levy, Flip Nicklin, Louie Psihoyos, William Radcliffe, David Scharf and Henry Schleichkorn.

For more information, contact Caren Brinkema at 206-232-2300, This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it .



Farestart, Getty Focus on Homeless

06 July 2005
Published in : Industry News

In collaboration with Getty Images and photographer Nicholas Prior, FareStart has designed a project to depict the realities of homelessness in the Seattle area. The project, "Home," was unveiled April 14 at the Henry Art Gallery with a talk by Prior about the ethics of photographing subjects in despair, as well as the privileges and responsibilities of having a home.

After its debut at the Henry, the exhibit will travel to galleries, companies and organizations in the Seattle area through March 2006. Putting "Home" on display in multiple venues around Seattle is intended to raise awareness of the challenges faced by the city's homeless population and to publicize FareStart, a job-training and placement program for homeless men, women and youth in the Seattle area.

FareStart is in the final year of its $8 million Futures Rising capital campaign, having purchased a new facility at 7th and Westlake avenues in July 2004. The new facility will allow FareStart to double the number of homeless individuals...



Adobe, ASMP, APA Establish Photographer Directory

05 July 2005
Published in : Industry News

The American Society of Media Photographers (ASMP), the Advertising Photographers of America (APA) and Adobe Systems have formed an alliance to simplify the hiring of assignment photographers. The Adobe Photographers Directory will provide a searchable list of professional photographers, accessible directly from Adobe's products for creative professionals. ASMP's general members will be charter members of the directory, as will members of the APA.

Users of the directory will be able to search the listings by geographic location and photographic specialty, and view portfolio images. The photographers' experience and competence will be evidenced by their membership in the partnering organizations.

Further details about how ASMP general members can participate in the directory are posted at asmp.org/adobe.



NPPA Decries Newsweek's Retouched Stewart Cover

04 July 2005
Published in : Industry News

The National Press Photographers Association has condemned Newsweek magazine's use of an altered photograph of Martha Stewart on its March 7 cover, calling it a major ethical breach. Stewart's head had been superimposed upon the body of a model who was photographed separately in a Los Angeles studio.

Despite the fact that Newsweek ran a page 3 disclaimer calling the cover image an illustration, the association is concerned that the average reader will not realize that Stewart's body does not appear in the photograph...

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