High Fashion and the Central Californian Coast: An Interview With Ty Mullen

What inspired you to create your recently published book, 26? Could you explain the importance of having the images formatted as a book?
This project came to me one day while sitting in LA traffic, as so many of us do. I was reflecting on my journey so far as an artist, student, and overall as an individual. I was born on March 26, so this book is also a celebration of my “golden” birthday. Turning the project into a book allowed me to face my fears as an artist and, because it’s something tangible, I can hold it in my hands and say, “I made this”.

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Max Yang’s Rebellious Spirit

 

Self-portrait with the artist’s girlfriend by Max Yang (@yy_ou_0807). This image was selected for our Summer 2021 Gallery.

To celebrate Pride Month, Outreach Ambassador Amanda Villegas talked to classmate and photography student Max Yang about being gay in China and America, and the power of art to make change.


Max, your photos are so intimate, raw, and striking. Can you tell me more about this image (above) featured in our gallery?

I’m obsessed with documenting my life. I like to take pictures that have a strong connection with me, such as the intimate relationship with my girlfriend. I hope I can be an observer of life because that’s what makes good photographs.

That is beautiful and apparent in this series. What do you hope to show people with this body of work and how does it reflect your experience as a lesbian living in China?

From my perspective, the human body has always been the most intriguing subject. The body is magnificent, charming and graceful. I’m just being myself in these pictures; nothing is planned. I want to show work that is casual, immediate, and sincere. In my culture, homosexuality is not approved by the government, and I think most people do not have an open heart or positive attitude about it.

I’ve been in the US for five years and see that homosexuality is more common in American culture. You can see the symbol and presence of homosexuality everywhere, in television shows, films and magazines. It is actually still taboo in China.

Although I am not blaming my country, I want to make some changes in my culture even if it’s small. I want to show the rebellious spirit of my sexuality. There’s nothing to be ashamed of in nudity or homosexuality. Be brave and openhearted.

Wow. Your words and imagery are powerful and carry the ability to enact change. How is the LGBTQ+ community in China dealing with the repression of their sexuality? Are there any movements happening?

I think there are a lot of young people in China that are advocating and supporting the acceptance of homosexuality. Sadly, based on political decisions and traditional thoughts of the past generation, we still cannot mention the term “homo” in front of the public [or in media]. We can hold hands or kiss on the street, but some people will look at you like you’re from another planet. Being gay is not normal to them.

I have a friend who came out to his parents, both of whom are reputable professors in universities, and they think homosexuality is a mental disease. After coming out and facing discrimination from his parents, he thought about dying by suicide.

It may sound like we are doing useless work, but it’s not. Every step is a part of the revolution or movement. There are people, throughout the years, who have chosen to withstand harassment and hatred, and I think it requires a lot of courage to go against the power of culture and society. I want to express my stance against those powers through artwork and photographs.

You can see more of Max’s work on her website: max-yang.com

 

PDN Faces Contest - Amateur Grand Winner - Seung Jong Lee

 
Image by Seung Jong Lee courtesy of pdn

Image by Seung Jong Lee courtesy of pdn

Congratulations Seung Jong Lee, current ArtCenter Photography Student, on being awarded Grand Winner in the Amateur category for pdn’s Faces Portrait Photography Contest 2019.

Lee's personal project captures paradoxes in everyday life. "As every shade of color finds its way to dark corners of the city, the loneliness seeps through the cracks on the sidewalks and the alley," Lee says of the series, as stated on pdnonline.com

 

Call For Entry - 2020 CatchLight Visual Leadership Fellowship

 
Photos courtesy Catchlight. Image From 2019 Fellow Tasneem Alsultan’s series And Then There Were Women.

Photos courtesy Catchlight. Image From 2019 Fellow Tasneem Alsultan’s series And Then There Were Women.

CatchLight is now accepting applications for it’s 2020 $30,000 CatchLight Visual Leadership Fellowship. Now in its fourth year, CatchLight continues to search for innovative visual storytellers and leaders committed to advancing and growing the field of visual storytelling.

The CatchLight Visual Leadership Fellowship serves as an incubator - a place for innovative leaders in the visual storytelling field to receive financial support, unlock individual potential, grow and leverage partnerships. The Fellowship cultivates a vibrant community of creative thought leaders whose work will be enhanced by collaboration, mentorship, and networking.

Entry Deadline: Tuesday, February 4th, 2020 (midnight PST)

 

Call For Entry - LensCulture Portrait Awards 2020

 
Photos courtesy LensCulture

Photos courtesy LensCulture

The LensCulture Portrait Awards are open to photographers at all levels of experience and all interpretations of portraiture. Your work may be made in the studio with professional lighting or snapped on a smart-phone during your travels, what matters is not your method but your ability to move your audience. From quirky self-portraits to candid portrayals of family and friends, from staged and conceptual photographs of public figures to environmental portraits, we want to see your work! Winners will enjoy career-changing opportunities including exhibition in New York in April 2020, extensive media coverage, projection at international photography festivals, cash prizes and more.

Entry Deadline: Wednesday, February 19, 2020

 

Student Brett Childs selected to exhibit work for 'Make' in South Korea

 
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Brett Childs (BFA ‘20) and Photo faculty Ken Marchionno will represent ArtCenter College of Design in an exhibition hosted by Chung-Ang University. The exhibition titled Make will take place in October in Seoul, South Korea.

Make is an exhibition displaying the result of a collaborative project between a group of established artists, who also work as art educators at five leading international art educational institutions, and distinguished students from the institutions where they teach.

Colleges and universities across the globe were invited to form faculty-student teams to collaborate in producing an artwork as an experimental education model.

Over the summer/fall break, Brett and Ken worked together to produce a photography and video installation focused on attacks on privacy in contemporary culture. The piece Mary Bradbury (images above) is ostensibly a highly conceptualized fashion shoot about surveillance, but is heavily layered with criticality, unearthing issues of power, class, race, and gender, and confronts audience complicity in looking.

Essays about the experiment and images from the projects will be gathered in an anthology to be published later this year.

Other participating schools include: Baptist University, HKBU, Hong Kong; Chung-Ang University, Seoul; Parsons, New York; Zurich University of the Arts, Zurich.

The show opens Tuesday, October 1st and will run until Saturday October 12th at Platform-L Contemporary Art Center in Seoul.

 

Become an Orientation Leader for the Fall 2019 Term

 
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Interested in a paid leadership position on campus over break? 
Apply here:  https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/ORTLeader_FA19  

Applications are DUE via survey monkey by 12pm on June 21
(Friday WK 6)

Decisions will be emailed to all applicants by Monday, July 1.

IMPORTANT TO NOTE:

Each term, the number of open positions for Orientation Leaders is reliant on the perspective incoming class (size and admitting departments). Positions for FA19 Orientation are available for ALL undergraduate students in ALL departments. We will hire 60 undergraduate student leaders!

 

Important Dates:

  • Paperwork Pick-up/ Headshots: WK10 @ 9am-4pm (at your convenience) in the CSE, Hillside       

  • Training: Break Week 2, Thursday 8/29/19 @ 9am-4pm in Faculty Dining Room, Hillside  

  • Orientation: Break Week 3, Tuesday 9/3/19-Friday 9/6/19, varied shifts/varied locations

Requirements:

  • 2.5 minimum CUM GPA

  • Availability for all Important Dates

  • Understanding of job requirements outlined in application

If you have any questions please contact the CSE at 626.396.2323 or via email at cse@artcenter.edu

 

International Seminar and Exhibition

 

The Photography and Imaging Department is participating in an international seminar on art education. As part of the seminar, teachers and students at schools around the world will collaborate to produce projects and share their experiences through a seminar and exhibition in Seoul, South Korea.

Participating schools include ArtCenter College of Design, Pasadena; Zurich University of the Arts, Zurich; Parsons, NY; Chung-Ang University, Seoul; Baptist University, Hong Kong.

  • Please provide a <500-word essay on the ideas and capabilities you bring to a collaboration and how they might integrate into a collaborative environment. 

  • Please submit 10-15 images that exhibit your creative point of view.

  • Images should be in .jpg format and 2000px on the longest side.

  • Additionally, one piece of motion content is permitted, please submit in HD, .mp4 format

  • Still and motion content should be uploaded to an ftp site like DropBox. 

The written essay and a link to the files should be emailed to Kellie.Walker@Artcenter.edu by June 3rd, 2019. 

All work produced for this project will be extracurricular.

 

 

Urim Ray Hong Receives Grand Prize for PDN's 2019 Annual Student Photo Contest

 
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Congratulations to ArtCenter 8th term student Urim Ray Hong. Hong received the 2019 Grand Prize for PDN’s Annual Student Photo Contest in the Documentary / Photojournalism category for his series “City Soleil: Eager to learn”. His series captures the children in City Soleil, Haiti, who are thriving and learning despite the town’s impoverished conditions. Hong will receive a Nikon DSLR camera, $150 to B&H Photo and a portfolio review.

The PDNedu Student Photo Contest is open to students of undergraduate, graduate and certificate programs, and also includes a category for high school students. Winners and honorable mentions will be recognized in the Spring 2019 issue of PDNedu, which has a circulation of 50,000 copies to students and educators nationwide. Featured photographers will also be promoted to PDN's online audience of more than 500,000 followers.