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You are here: Home / Archives for Jason D. Page

Light Painting Shops

December 17, 2013 by Jason D. Page

Herramientas-light-painting

There are two exciting new light painting shops that you should know about especially with Christmas time fast approaching. The first is Herramientas Light Painting, this is the first international light painting hardware store with many essential light painting tool like LEDS, ElWire, and RGB lights.

THE-LIGHT-PAINTING-SHOP

The second is The Light Painting Shop created by Patrick Rochon. This shop features affordable light painting prints from Patrick and other international light painting artist. The Light Painting shop is also the exclusive place to buy Patricks Light Painting Blades.

Both shops are great places to get a gift for your brother, sister, friend, neighbor, or anyone else that might be a fan of light painting photography!

Light-Blades

Filed Under: Light Painting Photography

LPWA Paris Exhibition December 13th-15th 2013

December 11, 2013 by Jason D. Page

LPWA-Paris-Show

The greatest light painting exhibition on earth is about to happen!

LPWA (Light Painting World Alliance) is putting on the 2ND World Light Painting Exhibition showcasing some of the greatest light painting talent from around the globe! The show will include 100 works of art from 60 different artists spanning 13 different countries!

Not only will the event display photographs it will also showcase light painting animations and live performances! This will be an event to see with light painting artist Jozef Sedlak, John Hesketh, and Brian Hart revealing never before seen works!

The show is being held in Paris at Espace Pierre Cardin December 13th-15th! All are welcome to attend and the event is free!

Below is the full list of amazing artist that you will be able to see and MANY you will be able to meet in person! If you can get to Paris and you don’t go to this event you are crazy!

AUSTRALIA
Rob Turney

BELGIUM
Jan Teunis

CANADA
Anton Julmy
Luc Pigeault
Patrick Rochon

CZECH REPUBLIC
Kamil Varga

IRELAND
Gareth Nathan

ITALY
Carlotta Bertelli

FINLAND
Janne Parviainen

FRANCE
Stephane Babatasi
Quentin Bischoff
Tubault Blanchet
Jul’s Boo
Julien Breton
Vincent Bruno
Césium LightGraff
Cisco
Dawn
Diliz
Frederic Ferreira
Jadikan
Konte Rast
Gildas Malassinet
Chanette Manso
Romain Millet
Marko
MASS
Nico Luz
Rezine
SWIT LightGraff

GERMANY
Cenci Goepel and Jens Warnecke
Jürgen Gnass
Gustavo Mercerat
Timo Rehpenning
JanLeonardo Wöllert
Heinz-Jörg Wurzbacher

NETHERLAND
Hugo Baptista

RUSSIA
Sergey Churkin

SLOVAKIA
Jozef Sedlák

SPAIN
Erasmo Daaz

SWITZERLAND
Pablo Pietri

UK
Alan Jaras
James De Luna
Gabby Vicente
Rosetta Whitehead
Daniel Whitaker

USA
Todd Blaisdell
Dennis Calvert
Alexander DeForest
Steven Erra
Brian Matthew Hart
John Hesketh
David Hull
Jeremy Jackson
Eric Mellinger
Michael Newcomer
Darren Pearson
David Schlaich
Eric Staller
Jamie Wyman

Filed Under: Light Painting Photography

Light Painting Sculptures of Patrick Scherer

December 9, 2013 by Jason D. Page

Patrick-Scherer-Light-Painting-04

Light Painting photographer Patrick Scherer has been creating some beautiful light painting sculptures recently using a drill, yes I said drill.

As with most things that are worthwhile the process is labor intensive. The most difficult part of creating one of the beauties is getting the combination of exposure time and light elements just right, it a lot of trial and error. Patrick says “We must not hesitate to make tests of all kinds even if the results are sometimes catastrophic.” I think that is great advice we can all apply to our work.

Patrick was kind enough to share a selection of his latest images and a couple of behind the scenes shots to hopefully inspire you to make your own, check them out below!


To see more of Patricks work check out his Facebook page HERE or Flickr page here.

Filed Under: Light Painting Photography

Light Painting Photography Contest for Dec/Jan 2014

December 1, 2013 by Jason D. Page

Well, well, well…. for most of the northern hemisphere its starting to get a little chilly outside so the theme for this light painting photography starting December 1st, 2013 is interior landscape. What we are looking for is a room, church, abandoned building, tunnel, kitchen, bedroom, bathroom, parking garage, empty hotel lobby, somewhere inside WITHOUT PEOPLE. Get your single best entry in to contest [at] lightpaintingphotography.com by Jan 21, 2014 for a chance to win a featured post on the LPP website and a light painting prize pack from our super awesome sponsors listed below! Please remember to follow the THEME of the contest, include your name in the title, and resize your image to 600 pixels on the longest side and 72 dpi. If you do not follow the theme of the contest your image will not be accepted, and as always no F#@&*! photoshop. Here are a few examples to get you going in the right direction, from Dean Chamberlain, Troy Paiva, and Jan Leonardo!


The light painting photography contest series is sponsored by the best damn companies on earth COAST Flashlights, Neon Flexible, and LED Flexible! Please support these  companies that support our light painting art from, without them this contest series would not be possible!

COAST-600px

Neon-Flexible-Banner-Ad

Filed Under: Light Painting Contest

Patrick Rochon on Lozeau

November 22, 2013 by Jason D. Page

Light-Painting-Patrick-Rochon

I really don’t know what is being said here but the light painting images create by Patrick Rochon shown in this interview with Lozeau are simply amazing! Enjoy and enjoy twice as much if you speak french.

Filed Under: Light Painting Photography, Light Painting Video, Patrick Rochon

Vicki DaSilva’s Paris Light Painting Tour 2013

November 14, 2013 by Jason D. Page

VickiDaSilva_EiffelEiffel_2013
LPP ∇ Soooo…. Vicki DaSilva I see you recently did a light painting tour in France can you tell me more about it? What was the main purpose of your trip? Did you go specifically to light paint, as part of a vacation, were you invited by some gallery, or a little of all three?

VD ∇ The main purpose of the trip was all three! We went to Paris for 2 weeks for a combination work/family trip. We were long overdue for a visit! We have a long history with Paris!! It had been 10 years since we were last there. I met Antonio (my husband/partner/father of our girls) there. His family emigrated to Paris from Portugal when he was 9. We lived there from 1990-1993. Our younger daughter was born there, so Paris is always in my heart!

LPP ∇ Since you have history there did you have specific shots in mind that you wanted to create from places you had been before?

VD ∇ I had planned 4 specific shoots. My work is two fold, graffiti oriented and spatially oriented. The photo shoots were a combo of both.

The first shoot was at the Jardin de Tuileries at the entrance near the Place de la Concorde. The piece, ‘Antonio Antonio’ was my artistic response/homage to Richard Serra’s sculpture ‘Clara Clara’ originally installed in 1983.


My work with the 8 foot fluorescent lamp is very influenced by his ideas about sculpture. Moving the lamp with my body in the space, live, on site, is my way of connecting to his thinking about “the idea of the body passing through space, and the body’s movement not being predicated totally on image or sight or optical awareness, but on physical awareness in relation to space, place, time, movement.” Richard Serra, in an interview with Lynne Cooke and Michael Govan, in *Richard Serra: Torqued Ellipses* (New York: Dia Center for the Arts, 1997), pp. 27–28.

Having spent 10 years working for the Serra’s provided me with an incredible opportunity to learn from one of the most important artists of the 20th century. The ideas evolved as my work evolved.

When I began moving the lamp vertically with my body in 2009 it was a culmination of everything I had learned about Richard’s work. I have also taken his site-specific concerns and tried to elevate that process through the act of the work existing as it is created as opposed to creating a work for a site and installing it. My carbon footprint is also non existent as the work exists as the act and the photographic/video documentation of the act.

The second shoot was to commemorate the Tour Paris13 http://www.itinerrance.fr/ on the final night of the installation exhibition on October 31, 2013. The exhibition was extremely popular, especially as the end drew near there were tens of thousands of people trying to see the show, which of course was impossible. Lines were around the blocks! We tried to see the show, but it was impossible so we returned that night to do that shoot to capture the feeling of that last night with all the people there. I did 3 photos, ‘FOY’ which is my tag, and stands for Fountain of Youth, ‘ce moment’, which means ‘this moment’ in French, and a piece with the 8 footer, ‘TourParis13’. An incredibly special night for sure!


The third shoot was at the Place du Trocadéro facing La Tour Eiffel. I am currently enjoying the inclusion of the figure in my work as it happens spontaneously at public spaces. The random act of movement is very much in connection with dance. Navigating a popular space such as the Place du Trocadéro with so many people was a great challenge! People were generally very receptive of my interaction and intervention. I will be exhibiting the photo, ‘Eiffel Eiffel’ at Context Art Miami with Cheryl Hazan Contemporary in NYC Dec 3-8.
http://www.contextartmiami.com/DesktopDefault.aspx?tabid=10&tabindex=9&dealerid=27587&curidx=17&back=name

LPP ∇ About the evolution of your work, can you talk a little bit about that and how important it is for the work of a light painter or artist in general to evolve? How do you avoid getting stuck or uninspired?

VD ∇ I think it is very important for the artist to try as much as possible to keep the work evolving and fresh in some way while possibly connecting ideas to history, to other artists, to contemporary culture, etc. Especially for the artist to not get bored! After 33 years of light painting photography I need to keep myself challenged! I now think about my work more in terms of art than light painting. Light painting photography is the medium but technique is not the only artistic message I am trying to communicate. And I am learning and researching new media alternatives for my work for installation shows to expand the work from the traditional photo on the wall. I am interested now in working more in public spaces with crowds, for example, as I did with ‘Eiffel Eiffel’ and ‘Tour Paris13.’ And I continue to think a lot about activist art and how I can contribute to that. I see a lot of shows in NYC, I saw the Philippe Parreno show in Paris which was incredibly thought provoking!
http://palaisdetokyo.com/en/exhibition/philippe-parreno

Seeing art helps me to question and inspire my work on an ongoing basis. If it’s not possible to visit in person, seeing work online is the next best thing.

LPP ∇ Besides creating beautiful works of art did you have anything else exciting happen on your trip?

VD ∇ While in Paris I had several meetings with a gallery interested in my work. I am very excited to possibly have a solo show there in the fall of 2014. It is too early to discuss that publicly but it looks to be a great opportunity for me!

LPP ∇ A gallery in Paris interested in your work and a possible solo show, thats awesome! Seeing as you have over 30 years of experience what advice would you give to up-and-coming light painters trying to get there work into galleries or a place to have a show. What has worked for you in the past. Do the galleries find you or do you generally reach out to them?

VD ∇ It is a combination of both. I actively seek group shows to participate in, introduce myself to gallerists whenever possible, attend openings, network at art fairs, show anyone who will look at my work on my phone, network with artists online & off, enter competitions, contact publications, etc etc. The typical work of an artist is all of this. And it never ends! I also did Fountain Art Fair last year in NYC and will do it again in 2014. That was a great fair for me in terms of connections and sales

LPP ∇ I know you have some serious light painting equipment in your arsenal how did you get your light painting gear from the US to Paris? Did you travel with those 8 foot bulbs?

VD ∇ We shipped a tube of three 8 foot fluorescent lamps to Paris via FedEx as they do not
make 8 footers in Europe. The largest is 6 feet. They arrived unbroken! We shipped them to Antonio’s brother where they will stay until our next trip to Paris.

LPP ∇ You met up with another incredible light painter with while you were there right?

YES!!!! I was so excited to FINALLY meet Marko93 after talking to him and following his work online for years! 🙂 I had a great feeling we would be friends and the vibe would be cool, and it was even better than I had hoped for!

LPP ∇ Did you create any images with Marko?

VD ∇ Yes, We only had one night to shoot together so we met at the Tour Paris13 and did some spontaneous photos in his installation room there. It was great to just jam together casually! Just gaining access to see the installations inside was incredible and only possible through his connection! Artists were inside touching up their work as Google Street was coming the next day to document the entire show. As I said, the show was a HUGE success and I imagine more buildings slated for demolition will become temporary graffiti meccas as this one was! I hope to do more collab work with Marko in the future and I hope he comes to NYC to make work too!!


It was a highly productive work trip overall and also great to see family, old friends and meet new friends too, especially Marko! J’ADORE PARIS!

Filed Under: Light Painting Photography

Two Million Thanks, Air France by Jadikan

November 4, 2013 by Jason D. Page

Jadikan-Light-Painting-Air-France
Light painting photographer Jadikan was recently commissioned to create a short light painting video celebrating Air France’s two million fans on their Facebook page. Check it out.

Vidéos réalisé en septembre 2013 pour le 2 000 000ème fan Facebook.
Réalisation : Air france / Jean Noël Lepoint
Lightpainting : Jadikan

Filed Under: Light Painting Photography, Light Painting Video

Mark O’Neill, Winner of the 1st International Light Painting Awards Interview.

October 29, 2013 by Jason D. Page

ILPA-Winner

Mark O’Neill created the above simply perfect light painting to win the 1st International Light Painting Awards! I caught up with Mark after the win and though he was in a bit of shock and speechless he managed to pull it together long enough to answer some questions, including who he would have voted for…

LPP ∇ Mark first of all Congratulations on winning the 1st International Light Painting Awards, your winning image is a light painting masterpiece, simply perfect!
MO ∇ Thank you very much! I can’t even begin to tell you how proud I am to have been awarded first place in this great competition.

LPP ∇ Tell me a little about the image how long was the exposure time, what f-stop, etc…
MO ∇ My image was created using an exposure time of 60 seconds, ISO 500 at f6.3 This choice was a considered balance for all the elements of my image, so I could smooth the reflection, fill the chamber with enough light, and keep the scene sharp.

LPP ∇ What light tools did you use to create the image, anything custom?
MO ∇ Using minimal lighting in my image to keep things as simple as possible. I concentrated the lighting on a backlit silhouette of myself using a combination of three LED video lights, mounted on an extra tripod via an old flash bracket and some duct tape. This was positioned directly behind the figure as there weren’t enough human hands to do the job. With barn doors on the lights I was able to funnel the light far down the length of the tunnel. We experimented with a variety of compositions and lighting combinations but in the end I settled for the simplest of them. Remotely triggered speed lights would have been a better choice, to keep the silhouette sharp but that wasn’t an option at the time.

LPP ∇ Did you use any post production at all, crop, stamp, adjustments or is the image SOOC?
MO ∇ As with all my images I like to judge the final product in a controlled environment, on a large screen to make small adjustments. Working in raw, I applied some basic tonal adjustments to decrease contrast and even out the lighting across the frame. This was followed by a curve to add impact and then localised adjustments, mainly to pull up the detail in the corners and control highlights. White balance was already set to tungsten from the previous escapade and I felt the cool tones added to this image so I avoided warming it up too much. Thankfully, there were no flares or spots to hide but a slight crop was necessary to straighten the image perfectly.

LPP ∇ The location is EPIC! Where and what is this place? How did you find it?
MO ∇ ‘Megatron’ is definitely epic! All you have to do is shine a light inside to make it look amazing. A wide culvert section over the River Sheaf, it is on the bucket list of many urban explorers and photographers; recognised as one of those ‘must do’ locations by much of the UK scene. This is one part of a large culvert system underneath Sheffield, in a beautiful display of Victorian engineering which extends for more than a mile.
I’ve always been keen to get in there and wade underneath the city of Sheffield myself, after seeing images from people such as Robbie Shone. I finally got the chance to cast my own light on it recently whilst showing my favourite light painting partner, Xiao Yang (Inhiu) around the country for a week.

LPP ∇ Is it a difficult place to access? Any strange stories about working in this location?
MO ∇ Haha, yes! A wrong step near the culvert’s entrance led to some torn ligaments in my knee and a quick swim. My waders weren’t designed for swimming but luckily my dry bag was so the camera gear survived. It would have been a soggy, miserable disaster had anything important got wet.
A long, wet limp back through the town centre to our hotel, and a while later we were warm, dry and laughing as we returned to spend the rest of the night underground with the bats and the fish.
Access is not particularly difficult to anyone but me it seems, however, as with all culverts and drains you have to have respect for your surroundings and this visit was a good example of why you shouldn’t let your guard down when you’re somewhere like this. I’m still limping, three weeks later.
Carrying plenty of expensive equipment, the stakes are high so you have to be careful and it’s a good idea to double check everything you do before you do it. Visits during wet weather should be avoided for obvious reasons, a culvert wouldn’t be a nice place to meet your maker.

LPP ∇ Good advice… How long have you been light painting, and how did you make your discovery of the art form?
MO ∇ Night photography has always fascinated me, I’ve actively been light painting since I bought my first DSLR and started running around lighting up the local fields up with a friend in 2006 while he told me about a derelict hospital nearby. We were able to capture things that interested us in a different way. Coupled with my interest in the night sky, the hobby kind of took over, spreading from my back garden to places I could never imagine; sometimes for fun, sometimes as a form of escape.
It’s a great experience spending time in these locations, especially when you are under a dark, clear sky. The darkness provides a blank canvas, on which you can add your image, as you want it. A cheap torch from the supermarket becomes a tool of creation, capable of results you would usually expect of bulky, expensive lighting. Light painting gives a photographer a way of deeply engaging themselves in an image, and another way of looking at the world. That has me hooked.

LPP ∇ Where were you when you got word that you were the big winner?
MO ∇ Returning from seeing my brand new niece for the first time. I got a message from a friend congratulating me and I confusedly spent the next half hour trying to get enough signal on my phone to find out for myself. It was a tense time!

LPP ∇ What did you do when you found out you won?
MO ∇ Stared into the distance with my jaw wide open in disbelief, let out some yelps of excitement, then ate a considerable amount of good curry!

LPP ∇ How are you going to celebrate?
MO ∇ By spending much more time in dark places.

LPP ∇ Now the most difficult question, who would you have voted for to be the winner and you have to pick someone specific no politically correct answers…
MO ∇ You’re right, this is difficult. Every nominated image is capable of winning this competition, which makes me feel quite overwhelmed. I’ve stared at them all for quite a while now, but the one I keep going back to, and wish I’d taken myself, is Dana Maltby’s shot in third place. The composition and low key, high contrast lighting is spot on. The shapes and colour contrast make a great impact, and the flip would have taken a lot of brain power and time to perfect. It is a powerful idea, executed with perfection.

LPP ∇ Anything else you would like to add?
MO ∇ My grandfather passed away two days before I created my image. I wanted to go out and do something he would be proud of, and I’m pretty sure he would be pleased. I need to thank Jan Leonardo Wöllert and everyone involved in the competition. Also my family, friends, and my awesome photo buddy, Xiao Yang, who played a key part in creating this image.

LPP ∇ I am sure your grandfather has a huge smile on his face, your work is something to be proud of. Congratulations!
MO ∇ Thank you!

Below are a few more of Mark’s incredible images and for even more check out his website http://digitalnoisephotography.co.uk



Filed Under: Light Painting Photography

2013 International Light Painting Award Winners

October 27, 2013 by Jason D. Page

And the winners of the 2013 International Light Painting Awards are…

1st Place Mark O’Neill of The United Kingdom
ILPA-Winner
2nd Place Denis Smith of Australia
Light-Painting-Award-Winner-2013-2nd-Place
3rd Place Dana Maltby of The United States
Light-Painting-Award-Winner-2013-3rd-Place
4th Place Jürgen Gnass of Germany
Light-Painting-Award-Winner-2013-4th-Place
5th Place Dennis Calvert of The United states
Light-Painting-Award-Winner-2013-5th-Place
6th Place Brian Matthew Hart of The United States
Light-Painting-Award-Winner-2013-6th-Place

Filed Under: Light Painting Photography

Troy Paiva, My Flickr Moment

October 26, 2013 by Jason D. Page

Troy-Paiva-Flickr-Moment
Light Painting Photographer and urban explorer Troy Paiva has inspired numerous light painters and photographers around the globe and he is about to inspire a few more! Troy’s beautiful light painting work of abandoned locations was featured on the Flickr blog today, exposure that could get a few million people to see his work for the first time. Congratulations to Troy on the well deserved exposure! Check out Mr. Paiva’s Flickr Moment…

Filed Under: Light Painting Photography, Light Painting Video

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