Deadline Looming for December X-Rite Photo Contest, Theme Announced

Entering a themed photography contest each monthThe December theme for X-Rite’s Color Perfectionists Unite Photo Contest is Celebrating Family. Photographers and anyone passionate about perfecting color are invited to submit original photos based on the Celebrating Family theme from today through Dec. 15. Voting will take place Dec. 16-31 and the winner will be selected from the top 20 finalists determined by the number of votes for each photo.

Since the summer of 2011, monthly winners in the 2011 Color Perfectionists Unite Photo Contest series have been selected by a top professional photographer specializing in the area of photography related to each monthly theme.

Each monthly winner has also been featured on the X-Rite Photo blog and has received one of X-Rite’s new display solutions – either a ColorMunki Display or an i1Display Pro – and a ColorChecker Passport, providing each winner with the ideal tools to get accurate color from their cameras and displays. The top 20 finalists each month are featured in a monthly gallery at X-Rite Photo on Facebook and the Color Perfectionists Group on Flickr.

“Through the Color Perfectionists Unite photography contest, X-Rite has searched for and found fellow Color Perfectionists from around the world willing to brilliantly show us how much color means to them,” said Mark Rezzonico, vice president X-Rite Photo Marketing. “And with themes that have changed every month bringing us to the final theme just in time for the holidays – Celebrating Family – we are really pleased with the quality of images that have been submitted through the last five months and we’re sure December’s entries will bring us more of the same.”

To enter the contest:

  1. Submit an image that represents the theme for that particular month. There is no limit to the number of entries. Enter using Contest at X-Rite Photo on Facebook or visit www.xritephoto.com/photocontest .
  2. Follow @xritephoto on Twitter and Like X-Rite Photo on Facebook (contestants need to do both to be eligible to win).
  3. Contestants should invite friends and family to vote for their image. The top 20 photos with the most votes each month will be entered in the final round. The finalist images will be featured in a monthly gallery on Facebook and added to the Color Perfectionists Group on Flickr.

An X-Rite Coloratti will judge the 20 finalists to determine the winner of the best photograph that illustrates the theme of the month.

Distorted Perceptions that Reveal Reality: A Gallery Preview

Creating multiple=

John Reiff Williams’ work from three signature photographic series – the La Jolla Beach Project, The Edge of Collapse Series from Mexico City and the Hollywood Boulevard Series – will be printed and on display at Thomas Paul Fine Art in Los Angeles in February.

Printing photography for an exhibitionAn exact date and time for the exhibit has not yet been announced, but you can find updates on it at tpaulfineart.com as the time for the exhibit comes closer. Williams has already started printing the exhibition on Hahnemuhle Photo Rag 308g from LexJet on his Epson 3800 inkjet printer, also procured through LexJet. “Almost everything I have – my monitor, color management devices, printer and paper – is from LexJet,” he says.

The images will be printed at 13″ x 19″, though the image size will be a bit smaller since Williams sticks to the one-inch archival rule of leaving at least an inch of margin on two sides, or all four sides, depending on the image.

Printing his work helps bring its full effect to life, as printing provides added depth, color and emotion that can get lost in the pixels of a monitor. “There’s so much subtlety that disappears when you display them on the Web; you’re not getting all the juice,” he says.

The dynamic visuals Williams created in the three series that will be featured at the Thomas Paul exhibition require the “juice” of pigments. They look fantastic and require a second look (at least) even when displayed on-screen, as they are here, but the exhibition will show the true depth of the compositions.

Shooting multiple=The style of the featured work is difficult to describe in a single word or phrase. They allude to movement and interaction that reach beyond time, place and circumstance. Perhaps the best technical term would be multiple exposure, which is certainly true of the earlier series while he was a graduate student, the La Jolla Beach Project, that Williams created in-camera with multiple exposures on film.

The Edge of Collapse and the Hollywood Boulevard Series are his most recent “multiple-exposure” works, with the multiplying done in Photoshop. The concept, however, remains largely the same: the interplay of movement between the photographer and his subjects.

“I’m using several images taken during the course of a day. Then, I see how they work together as layers. I don’t work in a formulaic way in Photoshop to do that; I just go from feel,” Williams explains. “I started off doing window reflections where I was looking for natural elements that would obfuscate, distort and transform images to bring out the otherness of the objects I was photographing. I’ve gotten more toward the idea that everything is a reflection anyway; that’s the nature of photography. I don’t need windows because everything is a window. If I accept that as an idea, I can start to play with that and layer images that happen either sequentially or randomly.”

The body of work Williams will display at the exhibition breaks the barriers between photography, fine art and perception. The concept is bigger than the medium used.

“There are over 50,000 photos uploaded to Flickr every hour, and when you consider the volume being generated, it’s becoming difficult to find that new animal under a rock that hasn’t been photographed before. So I’ve turned more to the imagination in my photography and the relationships that develop over time at a certain place,” says Williams. “Then the camera becomes a recorder of something you’ve already set into orbit.”

For a preview of what will be displayed at the exhibit at Thomas Paul Fine Art, as well as an entertaining and illuminating explanation of his work, click here. We’ll follow up with photos and a re-cap from the exhibit after it opens.