Photography in the 2000s and beyond!

Fast food, slow art! Tune in to episode 20 and find out what’s cooking (or rotting) at @phatbrandt studio

Fast food, slow art! Tune in to episode 20 and find out what’s cooking (or rotting) at @phatbrandt studio

Fast food, slow art! Tune in to episode 20 and find out what’s cooking (or rotting) at @phatbrandt studio

C’mon now, episode 20!! Let’s celebrate by hopping in the way back machine with Matt Brandt. I still remember what initially thrilled me about his work, bees made of bees!

C’mon now, episode 20!! Let’s celebrate by hopping in the way back machine with Matt Brandt. I still remember what initially thrilled me about his work, bees made of bees!

C’mon now, episode 20!! Let’s celebrate by hopping in the way back machine with Matt Brandt. I still remember what initially thrilled me about his work, bees made of bees!

C’mon now, episode 20!! Let’s celebrate by hopping in the way back machine with Matt Brandt. I still remember what initially thrilled me about his work, bees made of bees!

C’mon now, episode 20!! Let’s celebrate by hopping in the way back machine with Matt Brandt. I still remember what initially thrilled me about his work, bees made of bees!

Last day to see Islands in the Net at @rectangle.room , which includes The Bow by @roeethridge. It’s a seminal photograph, from ’01/02, an allegory for Ethridge’s practice—ideas and subjects return, folding back on themselves, and are packaged in bright kitsch and modern experience. Arguably one of a handful of pictures that kicked off the fraught aughts!

Past guests @robertsonmariah @weistwiley and @saraspar discuss the future of photography at last nights Colloquium on Contemporary Photography and Related Feelings.

Welcome to the first installment of Aught Thoughts, or the first iteration of the Ongoing Colloquium on Contemporary Photography and Related Feelings (presented by Aught Fraught)!
This is a once in a lifetime opportunity to see these three titans of Contemporary Photography together in one room, hashing out the future of the medium in one final, definitive panel. @weistwiley @briandroitcour @saraspar
When: Thursday, April 16th, 6pm
Where: Rectangle Room at Primary Photographic, 113 Eldridge St, NYC

Last week to come see this piece, titled SWIM, part of the Islands in the Net exhibition at @rectangle.room. Joshua Citarella made this almost 10 years ago, but it’s just as prescient now as it was then. Objects in the picture are photographed, rendered, appropriated, even drawn—it’s a showcase of the digital tools available (at the time) for manifesting an idea as a still image. Use it all, including the brush tool. Also, another reason to see it in person is that even at scale, he’s completely removed any sign of grain from the image. Grain is an artifact of the past, one of the last links between the image-making tools of the present, and the analogue materials of photography’s bygone era.

-
Aught Fraught Presents :
Islands In The Net
organized by Matthew Porter
Tanyth Berkeley
Phil Chang
Joshua Citarella
Roe Ethridge
Daniel Gordon
Miranda Lichtenstein
Eileen Quinlan
Sara Greenberger Rafferty
Mariah Robertson
Hannah Whitaker
March 19th - April 18th
Rectangle Room
at Primary Photographic
113 Eldridge St.
NY NY 10002
Open Monday - Friday, 9:30-6:30, Saturday, 10-6
Aught Fraught @aughtfraught is an interview series podcast hosted by Matthew Porter about photography in the early 2000s (the aughts), an era that marked a high point in photography’s cultural visibility and market influence. For many practitioners and enthusiasts, the aughts remain a notably fraught, energetic, and formative decade for the medium. Every month it seemed there was another panel, another essay, another exhibition or catalogue that sought to find meaning and hope in what was largely considered to be photography’s moment of “crisis.”
Islands in the Net brings together a selection of Aught Fraught subjects, showcasing works that use myriad material strategies but focus on representation, particularly photography’s ability to frame ideas through various styles of depiction. The keystone work is Joshua Citarella’s large four panel banner, depicting a dystopian future, and showing the medium’s ability to merge image-generating software, digital appropriation, and lens-based pictures.
Matthew Porter @__matthewporter__ is a photographer living in Brooklyn.
Rectangle Room @rectangle.room is a bookstore and exhibition space offering books, print editions, artworks & ephemera run by Tim Barber @timobarber
Primary Photographic @primaryphotographic is a full-service film lab offering processing, scanning, retouching, printing, and darkroom services.

-
Aught Fraught Presents :
Islands In The Net
organized by Matthew Porter
Tanyth Berkeley
Phil Chang
Joshua Citarella
Roe Ethridge
Daniel Gordon
Miranda Lichtenstein
Eileen Quinlan
Sara Greenberger Rafferty
Mariah Robertson
Hannah Whitaker
March 19th - April 18th
Rectangle Room
at Primary Photographic
113 Eldridge St.
NY NY 10002
Open Monday - Friday, 9:30-6:30, Saturday, 10-6
Aught Fraught @aughtfraught is an interview series podcast hosted by Matthew Porter about photography in the early 2000s (the aughts), an era that marked a high point in photography’s cultural visibility and market influence. For many practitioners and enthusiasts, the aughts remain a notably fraught, energetic, and formative decade for the medium. Every month it seemed there was another panel, another essay, another exhibition or catalogue that sought to find meaning and hope in what was largely considered to be photography’s moment of “crisis.”
Islands in the Net brings together a selection of Aught Fraught subjects, showcasing works that use myriad material strategies but focus on representation, particularly photography’s ability to frame ideas through various styles of depiction. The keystone work is Joshua Citarella’s large four panel banner, depicting a dystopian future, and showing the medium’s ability to merge image-generating software, digital appropriation, and lens-based pictures.
Matthew Porter @__matthewporter__ is a photographer living in Brooklyn.
Rectangle Room @rectangle.room is a bookstore and exhibition space offering books, print editions, artworks & ephemera run by Tim Barber @timobarber
Primary Photographic @primaryphotographic is a full-service film lab offering processing, scanning, retouching, printing, and darkroom services.

-
Aught Fraught Presents :
Islands In The Net
organized by Matthew Porter
Tanyth Berkeley
Phil Chang
Joshua Citarella
Roe Ethridge
Daniel Gordon
Miranda Lichtenstein
Eileen Quinlan
Sara Greenberger Rafferty
Mariah Robertson
Hannah Whitaker
March 19th - April 18th
Rectangle Room
at Primary Photographic
113 Eldridge St.
NY NY 10002
Open Monday - Friday, 9:30-6:30, Saturday, 10-6
Aught Fraught @aughtfraught is an interview series podcast hosted by Matthew Porter about photography in the early 2000s (the aughts), an era that marked a high point in photography’s cultural visibility and market influence. For many practitioners and enthusiasts, the aughts remain a notably fraught, energetic, and formative decade for the medium. Every month it seemed there was another panel, another essay, another exhibition or catalogue that sought to find meaning and hope in what was largely considered to be photography’s moment of “crisis.”
Islands in the Net brings together a selection of Aught Fraught subjects, showcasing works that use myriad material strategies but focus on representation, particularly photography’s ability to frame ideas through various styles of depiction. The keystone work is Joshua Citarella’s large four panel banner, depicting a dystopian future, and showing the medium’s ability to merge image-generating software, digital appropriation, and lens-based pictures.
Matthew Porter @__matthewporter__ is a photographer living in Brooklyn.
Rectangle Room @rectangle.room is a bookstore and exhibition space offering books, print editions, artworks & ephemera run by Tim Barber @timobarber
Primary Photographic @primaryphotographic is a full-service film lab offering processing, scanning, retouching, printing, and darkroom services.

-
Aught Fraught Presents :
Islands In The Net
organized by Matthew Porter
Tanyth Berkeley
Phil Chang
Joshua Citarella
Roe Ethridge
Daniel Gordon
Miranda Lichtenstein
Eileen Quinlan
Sara Greenberger Rafferty
Mariah Robertson
Hannah Whitaker
March 19th - April 18th
Rectangle Room
at Primary Photographic
113 Eldridge St.
NY NY 10002
Open Monday - Friday, 9:30-6:30, Saturday, 10-6
Aught Fraught @aughtfraught is an interview series podcast hosted by Matthew Porter about photography in the early 2000s (the aughts), an era that marked a high point in photography’s cultural visibility and market influence. For many practitioners and enthusiasts, the aughts remain a notably fraught, energetic, and formative decade for the medium. Every month it seemed there was another panel, another essay, another exhibition or catalogue that sought to find meaning and hope in what was largely considered to be photography’s moment of “crisis.”
Islands in the Net brings together a selection of Aught Fraught subjects, showcasing works that use myriad material strategies but focus on representation, particularly photography’s ability to frame ideas through various styles of depiction. The keystone work is Joshua Citarella’s large four panel banner, depicting a dystopian future, and showing the medium’s ability to merge image-generating software, digital appropriation, and lens-based pictures.
Matthew Porter @__matthewporter__ is a photographer living in Brooklyn.
Rectangle Room @rectangle.room is a bookstore and exhibition space offering books, print editions, artworks & ephemera run by Tim Barber @timobarber
Primary Photographic @primaryphotographic is a full-service film lab offering processing, scanning, retouching, printing, and darkroom services.

-
Aught Fraught Presents :
Islands In The Net
organized by Matthew Porter
Tanyth Berkeley
Phil Chang
Joshua Citarella
Roe Ethridge
Daniel Gordon
Miranda Lichtenstein
Eileen Quinlan
Sara Greenberger Rafferty
Mariah Robertson
Hannah Whitaker
March 19th - April 18th
Rectangle Room
at Primary Photographic
113 Eldridge St.
NY NY 10002
Open Monday - Friday, 9:30-6:30, Saturday, 10-6
Aught Fraught @aughtfraught is an interview series podcast hosted by Matthew Porter about photography in the early 2000s (the aughts), an era that marked a high point in photography’s cultural visibility and market influence. For many practitioners and enthusiasts, the aughts remain a notably fraught, energetic, and formative decade for the medium. Every month it seemed there was another panel, another essay, another exhibition or catalogue that sought to find meaning and hope in what was largely considered to be photography’s moment of “crisis.”
Islands in the Net brings together a selection of Aught Fraught subjects, showcasing works that use myriad material strategies but focus on representation, particularly photography’s ability to frame ideas through various styles of depiction. The keystone work is Joshua Citarella’s large four panel banner, depicting a dystopian future, and showing the medium’s ability to merge image-generating software, digital appropriation, and lens-based pictures.
Matthew Porter @__matthewporter__ is a photographer living in Brooklyn.
Rectangle Room @rectangle.room is a bookstore and exhibition space offering books, print editions, artworks & ephemera run by Tim Barber @timobarber
Primary Photographic @primaryphotographic is a full-service film lab offering processing, scanning, retouching, printing, and darkroom services.

-
Aught Fraught Presents :
Islands In The Net
organized by Matthew Porter
Tanyth Berkeley
Phil Chang
Joshua Citarella
Roe Ethridge
Daniel Gordon
Miranda Lichtenstein
Eileen Quinlan
Sara Greenberger Rafferty
Mariah Robertson
Hannah Whitaker
March 19th - April 18th
Rectangle Room
at Primary Photographic
113 Eldridge St.
NY NY 10002
Open Monday - Friday, 9:30-6:30, Saturday, 10-6
Aught Fraught @aughtfraught is an interview series podcast hosted by Matthew Porter about photography in the early 2000s (the aughts), an era that marked a high point in photography’s cultural visibility and market influence. For many practitioners and enthusiasts, the aughts remain a notably fraught, energetic, and formative decade for the medium. Every month it seemed there was another panel, another essay, another exhibition or catalogue that sought to find meaning and hope in what was largely considered to be photography’s moment of “crisis.”
Islands in the Net brings together a selection of Aught Fraught subjects, showcasing works that use myriad material strategies but focus on representation, particularly photography’s ability to frame ideas through various styles of depiction. The keystone work is Joshua Citarella’s large four panel banner, depicting a dystopian future, and showing the medium’s ability to merge image-generating software, digital appropriation, and lens-based pictures.
Matthew Porter @__matthewporter__ is a photographer living in Brooklyn.
Rectangle Room @rectangle.room is a bookstore and exhibition space offering books, print editions, artworks & ephemera run by Tim Barber @timobarber
Primary Photographic @primaryphotographic is a full-service film lab offering processing, scanning, retouching, printing, and darkroom services.

-
Aught Fraught Presents :
Islands In The Net
organized by Matthew Porter
Tanyth Berkeley
Phil Chang
Joshua Citarella
Roe Ethridge
Daniel Gordon
Miranda Lichtenstein
Eileen Quinlan
Sara Greenberger Rafferty
Mariah Robertson
Hannah Whitaker
March 19th - April 18th
Rectangle Room
at Primary Photographic
113 Eldridge St.
NY NY 10002
Open Monday - Friday, 9:30-6:30, Saturday, 10-6
Aught Fraught @aughtfraught is an interview series podcast hosted by Matthew Porter about photography in the early 2000s (the aughts), an era that marked a high point in photography’s cultural visibility and market influence. For many practitioners and enthusiasts, the aughts remain a notably fraught, energetic, and formative decade for the medium. Every month it seemed there was another panel, another essay, another exhibition or catalogue that sought to find meaning and hope in what was largely considered to be photography’s moment of “crisis.”
Islands in the Net brings together a selection of Aught Fraught subjects, showcasing works that use myriad material strategies but focus on representation, particularly photography’s ability to frame ideas through various styles of depiction. The keystone work is Joshua Citarella’s large four panel banner, depicting a dystopian future, and showing the medium’s ability to merge image-generating software, digital appropriation, and lens-based pictures.
Matthew Porter @__matthewporter__ is a photographer living in Brooklyn.
Rectangle Room @rectangle.room is a bookstore and exhibition space offering books, print editions, artworks & ephemera run by Tim Barber @timobarber
Primary Photographic @primaryphotographic is a full-service film lab offering processing, scanning, retouching, printing, and darkroom services.

-
Aught Fraught Presents :
Islands In The Net
organized by Matthew Porter
Tanyth Berkeley
Phil Chang
Joshua Citarella
Roe Ethridge
Daniel Gordon
Miranda Lichtenstein
Eileen Quinlan
Sara Greenberger Rafferty
Mariah Robertson
Hannah Whitaker
March 19th - April 18th
Rectangle Room
at Primary Photographic
113 Eldridge St.
NY NY 10002
Open Monday - Friday, 9:30-6:30, Saturday, 10-6
Aught Fraught @aughtfraught is an interview series podcast hosted by Matthew Porter about photography in the early 2000s (the aughts), an era that marked a high point in photography’s cultural visibility and market influence. For many practitioners and enthusiasts, the aughts remain a notably fraught, energetic, and formative decade for the medium. Every month it seemed there was another panel, another essay, another exhibition or catalogue that sought to find meaning and hope in what was largely considered to be photography’s moment of “crisis.”
Islands in the Net brings together a selection of Aught Fraught subjects, showcasing works that use myriad material strategies but focus on representation, particularly photography’s ability to frame ideas through various styles of depiction. The keystone work is Joshua Citarella’s large four panel banner, depicting a dystopian future, and showing the medium’s ability to merge image-generating software, digital appropriation, and lens-based pictures.
Matthew Porter @__matthewporter__ is a photographer living in Brooklyn.
Rectangle Room @rectangle.room is a bookstore and exhibition space offering books, print editions, artworks & ephemera run by Tim Barber @timobarber
Primary Photographic @primaryphotographic is a full-service film lab offering processing, scanning, retouching, printing, and darkroom services.

-
Aught Fraught Presents :
Islands In The Net
organized by Matthew Porter
Tanyth Berkeley
Phil Chang
Joshua Citarella
Roe Ethridge
Daniel Gordon
Miranda Lichtenstein
Eileen Quinlan
Sara Greenberger Rafferty
Mariah Robertson
Hannah Whitaker
March 19th - April 18th
Rectangle Room
at Primary Photographic
113 Eldridge St.
NY NY 10002
Open Monday - Friday, 9:30-6:30, Saturday, 10-6
Aught Fraught @aughtfraught is an interview series podcast hosted by Matthew Porter about photography in the early 2000s (the aughts), an era that marked a high point in photography’s cultural visibility and market influence. For many practitioners and enthusiasts, the aughts remain a notably fraught, energetic, and formative decade for the medium. Every month it seemed there was another panel, another essay, another exhibition or catalogue that sought to find meaning and hope in what was largely considered to be photography’s moment of “crisis.”
Islands in the Net brings together a selection of Aught Fraught subjects, showcasing works that use myriad material strategies but focus on representation, particularly photography’s ability to frame ideas through various styles of depiction. The keystone work is Joshua Citarella’s large four panel banner, depicting a dystopian future, and showing the medium’s ability to merge image-generating software, digital appropriation, and lens-based pictures.
Matthew Porter @__matthewporter__ is a photographer living in Brooklyn.
Rectangle Room @rectangle.room is a bookstore and exhibition space offering books, print editions, artworks & ephemera run by Tim Barber @timobarber
Primary Photographic @primaryphotographic is a full-service film lab offering processing, scanning, retouching, printing, and darkroom services.

Many, many thanks to @walshy_ny at @primaryphotographic for providing the space for last night’s show at @rectangle.room—he painted the walls, provided the lights, printed some of the work, bought the drinks, and opened the doors so that a lot of my favorite people could stand around and have a good time. Go to Primary Photographic for all your photo needs!

New Sally Mann shirts available at @rectangle.room. Logo on the front and sleeves, Mann telling it straight on the back. Long sleeve, but there are a few ss.

New Sally Mann shirts available at @rectangle.room. Logo on the front and sleeves, Mann telling it straight on the back. Long sleeve, but there are a few ss.

Aught Fraught Presents : Islands In The Net
organized by Matthew Porter
Tanyth Berkeley
Phil Chang
Joshua Citarella
Roe Ethridge
Daniel Gordon
Miranda Lichtenstein
Eileen Quinlan
Sara Greenberger Rafferty
Mariah Robertson
Hannah Whitaker
March 19th - April 18th
Opening Reception
Thursday March 19th, 6-9pm
Rectangle Room
at Primary Photographic
113 Eldridge St.
NY NY 10002
Open Monday - Friday, 9:30-6:30, Saturday, 10-6
Aught Fraught @aughtfraught is an interview series podcast hosted by Matthew Porter about photography in the early 2000s (the aughts), an era that marked a high point in photography’s cultural visibility and market influence. For many practitioners and enthusiasts, the aughts remain a notably fraught, energetic, and formative decade for the medium. Every month it seemed there was another panel, another essay, another exhibition or catalogue that sought to find meaning and hope in what was largely considered to be photography’s moment of “crisis.”
Islands in the Net brings together a selection of Aught Fraught subjects, showcasing works that use myriad material strategies but focus on representation, particularly photography’s ability to frame ideas through various styles of depiction. The keystone work is Joshua Citarella’s large four panel banner, depicting a dystopian future, and showing the medium’s ability to merge image-generating software, digital appropriation, and lens-based pictures.
Matthew Porter @__matthewporter__ is a photographer living in Brooklyn.

Episode 19! John Houck. He wrote the code that produced it, he photographed it, he painted it. These seem like disparate practices, yet the parts form a whole. The works over his career share color, materials, and the subject of one continues in the next. The process iterates, makes the jump, then iterates again. The result is a fluid transition from binary code to painted canvases. Somewhere in the middle is photography.

Episode 19! John Houck. He wrote the code that produced it, he photographed it, he painted it. These seem like disparate practices, yet the parts form a whole. The works over his career share color, materials, and the subject of one continues in the next. The process iterates, makes the jump, then iterates again. The result is a fluid transition from binary code to painted canvases. Somewhere in the middle is photography.

Episode 19! John Houck. He wrote the code that produced it, he photographed it, he painted it. These seem like disparate practices, yet the parts form a whole. The works over his career share color, materials, and the subject of one continues in the next. The process iterates, makes the jump, then iterates again. The result is a fluid transition from binary code to painted canvases. Somewhere in the middle is photography.

Episode 19! John Houck. He wrote the code that produced it, he photographed it, he painted it. These seem like disparate practices, yet the parts form a whole. The works over his career share color, materials, and the subject of one continues in the next. The process iterates, makes the jump, then iterates again. The result is a fluid transition from binary code to painted canvases. Somewhere in the middle is photography.

Episode 19! John Houck. He wrote the code that produced it, he photographed it, he painted it. These seem like disparate practices, yet the parts form a whole. The works over his career share color, materials, and the subject of one continues in the next. The process iterates, makes the jump, then iterates again. The result is a fluid transition from binary code to painted canvases. Somewhere in the middle is photography.
Le visionneur d’histoires Instagram est un outil simple qui vous permet de regarder et de sauvegarder secrètement les histoires Instagram, vidéos, photos ou IGTV. Avec ce service, vous pouvez télécharger du contenu et l’apprécier hors ligne quand vous voulez. Si vous trouvez quelque chose d’intéressant sur Instagram que vous souhaitez vérifier plus tard ou si vous voulez voir des histoires tout en restant anonyme, notre Visionneur est parfait pour vous. Anonstories offre une excellente solution pour garder votre identité cachée. Instagram a lancé la fonctionnalité Stories en août 2023, rapidement adoptée par d’autres plateformes en raison de son format engageant et temporaire. Les histoires permettent aux utilisateurs de partager des mises à jour rapides, qu’il s’agisse de photos, vidéos ou selfies, agrémentés de texte, emojis ou filtres, visibles pendant 24 heures seulement. Cette fenêtre de temps limitée crée un fort engagement par rapport aux publications régulières. Aujourd’hui, les histoires sont l’un des moyens les plus populaires de se connecter et de communiquer sur les réseaux sociaux. Cependant, lorsque vous regardez une histoire, le créateur peut voir votre nom dans leur liste de visionneurs, ce qui peut poser un problème de confidentialité. Et si vous souhaitez naviguer dans les histoires sans être repéré ? C’est là qu’Anonstories devient utile. Il vous permet de regarder du contenu public sur Instagram sans révéler votre identité. Il vous suffit d’entrer le nom d’utilisateur du profil qui vous intéresse, et l’outil affichera ses dernières histoires. Fonctionnalités du visionneur Anonstories : - Navigation anonyme : Regardez des histoires sans apparaître dans la liste des visionneurs. - Aucun compte requis : Regardez du contenu public sans vous inscrire à un compte Instagram. - Téléchargement de contenu : Sauvegardez directement du contenu d’histoires sur votre appareil pour une utilisation hors ligne. - Voir les highlights : Accédez aux Highlights Instagram, même après la période de 24 heures. - Suivi des reposts : Suivez les reposts ou l’engagement sur les histoires des profils personnels. Limitations : - Cet outil fonctionne uniquement avec les comptes publics ; les comptes privés restent inaccessibles. Avantages : - Respect de la vie privée : Regardez n’importe quel contenu Instagram sans être repéré. - Simple et facile : Aucune installation d’application ni inscription requise. - Outils exclusifs : Téléchargez et gérez du contenu de manière que Instagram ne permet pas.
Suivez les mises à jour Instagram en toute discrétion tout en protégeant votre vie privée et en restant anonyme.
Consultez les profils et photos anonymement avec aisance grâce au visionneur de profil privé.
Ce service gratuit vous permet de voir les histoires Instagram anonymement, garantissant que votre activité reste cachée de l’uploader.
Anonstories permet aux utilisateurs de voir les histoires Instagram sans alerter le créateur.
Fonctionne parfaitement sur iOS, Android, Windows, macOS et les navigateurs modernes comme Chrome et Safari.
Privilégie la navigation sécurisée et anonyme sans nécessiter de coordonnées de connexion.
Les utilisateurs peuvent voir des histoires publiques en entrant simplement un nom d’utilisateur — sans compte requis.
Télécharge les photos (JPEG) et les vidéos (MP4) facilement.
Le service est gratuit.
Le contenu des comptes privés n’est accessible qu’aux abonnés.
Les fichiers sont destinés à un usage personnel ou éducatif uniquement et doivent respecter les règles de droit d’auteur.
Entrez un nom d’utilisateur public pour voir ou télécharger des histoires. Le service génère des liens directs pour sauvegarder le contenu localement.