Art & Culture

Adventures in Photography: Rick Lew

Jul. 1, 2012

There's a lot of random photo snapping going on these days thanks to iphones and other digital devices. You see it on blogs all the time, and I guess for the sake of simply showing what is in a room, it works, but it doesn't capture the imagination or start you dreaming about interiors. There's a reason for this. Everybody in the design business knows what a trick it is to truly capture the beauty of great interiors in two dimensions. Ask any shelter magazine editor.

First, it's someone's home, so you have to get permision to lug tons of lighting and photo equipment all over the premises (albeit in protective booties) and re-style everything from the sofa cushions to the contents of the bookshelves. And you have to do all of this and pack up and get out before the freight elevator closes or the kids come home from school or before you lose the light. Second, you have to find a photographer who understands lighting, composition and the particular point of view of designer or homeoowner for the room itself, and who is patient and exacting enough to shoot something that's precisely lit for the various elements within the frame - the view out the window, the subject of the shot, some detail that's otherwise in shadow - even if it means shooting from the exact same angle several times and layering the variously lit shots together, or creating lighting in a windowless space that makes it appear to be bathed in natural light. It can take forever to get one shot, but when it works, it is a truly rewarding moment.

We just completed shooting our Fall ad campaign for Carini Lang, and we're super-excited about the shots we got. We'll save the surprise for Fall issues of W, World of Interiors and ELLE Decor, but we wanted to say a word or two about our photographer, the astonishingly talented and super-chill Rick Lew. We got lucky that Rick was even in town to shoot with us, because most of the time he is off trotting the globe. Rick’s versatility, flexibility and expertise with light and composition make him a sought–after talent. In his early twenties, Rick wanted nothing more than to be a filmmaker, but an impromptu trip to Southeast Aisa with a borrowed camera changed all of that. Now Rick shoots interiors, still-life and portraits and travels globally on assignment as a Contributing Photographer of destinations and luxury hotels for Condé Nast Traveler, for whom he shot this spread:

All of the images in this post are by Rick, whose work you may have seen in prestigious periodicals from Hamptons Cottages & Gardens to Martha Stewart Living and highbrow newspapers from The Wall Streeet Journal to the London Times. His crisp lighting and thoughtful approach yield architectural and interiors shots like these:

He's won awards for his travel photos, shots like these:

Rick's current passion is a body of long-exposure cityscapes he’s creating for future publication, and we hear he may soon be dabbling in television. For more of his exploits, you can follow Rick's blog. Whatever's down the road for Rick, we can't wait to see it!

Acria Unframed: Enjoy the View

Jun. 7, 2012

On Tuesday night, I answered an irresistable invitation from Architectural Digest Editor-in-Chief Margaret Russell to attend an event called "Acria Unframed", and today you, too can attend this fun art event online for a great cause. Now in its second year, "Unframed" is an annual art sale to support ACRIA (AIDS Community Research Initiaive of America). Each year participating artists create pieces specifically for the event with all proceeds going directly to ACRIA. The sale, with a collection of this year's and the previous year's pieces, has gone up online at American Express's new private sale site Vente Privee. Shop now, though, because things like the conceptual artist Geoff Hargadon's CFYW Higher Prices 12" x 18" limited edition (30) screen print on corrugated plastic, below, are going fast! 

The late Herb Ritts also has a piece in the sale, Duo VII, in the "Special Works" section. It is a 25" x 20" Platinum Palladium print edition 19/25 with three artist proofs, and in spite of the event's name, this item comes framed. 

Margaret Russel for the twenty-something year's I've known her has been a committed, diligent supporter of AIDS nonprofits, and also the charming hostess of very classy parties in very classy places that make me glad to be alive and well in the greatest city in the world. A crowd of happy art collectors, editors, interior designers ( I spied, among others Amy Lau, Vicente Wolf and David Kleinberg) and design industry elite  got to wander around two Penthouse apartments in the new Setai Residences in midtown Manhattan, delighting in both the art and the breathtaking views from the 60th floor as the sun set over our town. Nobody, including me, was too shy to snap a few Instagram's out the windows. Can you blame us? Shop ACRIA Unframed through Sunday, June 10.

 Art Photos courtesy of Vente Privee.

The ART Issue: A New Spin in New York Spaces

Sep. 22, 2011

One of our favorite people in the industry is the esteemed editor Jason Kontos of New York Spaces.

Collaborations: Artist Karl Klingbiel rolls in with Tractor Trailor

Apr. 29, 2011

Carini Lang co-founder and Creative Director Joseph Carini has collaborated with the noted contemporary artist Karl Klingbiel on the first in a series of carpets based on Klingbiel’s work.

Get ready for Big Gay Sing 3-D!

Feb. 16, 2011

These guys can sing. The NYC Gay Men’s Chorus has appeared at Carnegie Hall and Lincoln Center and has performed alongside such boldface talents as LizaMinelli, Stephen Sondheim, Eartha Kitt, Carol Channing and Joel Grey. If you haven’t heard them before, we highly recommend you get yourself and your friends to the Big Gay Sing 3D! Thanks to one of our clients who sings in the NYC Gay Men’s Chorus, we’ve recently become proud supporters – see our ad below and the brassy-in-a-good-way cover of the program for the last big performance, entitled, um, Sing Your Brass Off. Anyway, get your tickets here. If you can’t make it to the show, you can follow @nycgaychorus on twitter and get the music.

The clever program cover and our ad. Go rainbow!

The clever program cover and our ad. Go rainbow!

 

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