They look like 1970's prog rock album covers.
They look like 1970's prog rock album covers.
Hope you looked at the linked videos. Wu has indeed done significant work for musicians.
Me, I never heard of "prog rock" in San Francisco...maybe that's a regional thing.
Why not contribute a thread about a photographer who (like Wu) also photographed musicians?
In the 70s my taste ran to Miles Davis and Ringo.
Started watching a video that ran like a infomercial, so I switched it off. I was at a large regional art gallery on the weekend and a photographer was showing her version of something similar, Probably a lot more lofi as she didnt have access to such wonderful products and a high polished production, but said the same thing. Really the only time I have ever seen light stick photography of any interest was from a house wife who joined our film photo group for a meet up at one time and brought along a bunch of tiny pictures she took with a Fuji instax mini, she used sparklers and steel wool for her light show and hand stitched her tiny photos together and the stitching became part of the picture. I think art is at its best without ego or bravado.Hope you looked at the linked videos. Wu has indeed done significant work for musicians.
Me, I never heard of "prog rock" in San Francisco...maybe that's a regional thing.
Why not contribute a thread about a photographer who (like Wu) also photographed musicians?
In the 70s my taste ran to Miles Davis and Ringo.
Good God.!I turned into a pimply teenager in the late seventies and was very much into Punk, passionately hated prog and pop and would not of heard of Miles. .
Not only that, I didn't know who John Lennon was when he died.Good God.!
Not only that, I didn't know who John Lennon was when he died.
Palms getting sweaty.Not only that, I didn't know who John Lennon was when he died.
He may have discovered common decency (i mean Ringo) after John died.You ought to know that Ringo was the head of the gang ...
.....The camera-work was entirely digital and managed on remote locations, but the prints are inkjet. The question I asked myself, and the gallery director, was "why was this work printed instead of being displayed on mega-sized flat screen monitors?
It's a good question. How did the gallery director respond?
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