#stlouisphotographer

Two CB Adams Color Photographs Juried Into Framation's Beyond the Lens XVIII

CB Adams answered the call for entry for Framations Gallery’s XVIII “Beyond the Lens” all-subject, juried exhibit of photographic works in all disciplines. The juror for this year’s exhibition is Michael C. Daft, who believes “Good images should speak for themselves in their own language.” This is the fourth time Adams has works juried into the annual “Beyond the Lens” exhibition.

Adams works primarily in film-based black and white photography, but his art practice includes a consistent amount of color photography, in both film and digital formats.

Such is the case with the two photographs that Daft chose for this exhibition — “Cottontail,” a 20x020 print made with a 1972 Nikon F2 Photomic, 21mm Nikkkor lens and Cinestill 400D film, and “Barn In Landscape,” a 16x20 print made with a Leica M8 and Summicron 50mm lens.

“Cottontail” by CB Adams. Archival photograph from film negative.

Adams often works with the F2, a camera he acquired used from Creve Coeur Camera while he was in high school. It took him close to a year working in the lumber department of Central Hardware to purchase the used body and a new 85mm Nikkor portrait lens, which he still has as well. “Cottontail” was taken during the 2023 Gay Easter Parade in New Orleans, one of Adams’s top-three favorite cities.

“Barn In Landscape” by CB Adams.

The M8 was Leica’s first digital camera, released in 2006. Adams works with the M8 because its sensor and software were designed to yield a Kodachrome-like image. “Barn In Landscape” is a dreamy, Todd Hido-like image of a Missouri barn on a story day.

Reactive Art

Two CB Adams Photographs Featured in ‘This Moment’ Exhibition at Art Saint Louis

by John Bent, Riverback Communications

Two works by St. Louis-area writer and photographer CB Adams were selected by juror Robin Hirsch-Steinhoff for inclusion Art Saint Louis’ latest exhibition, “This Moment.” Adams’ two black-and-white silver gelatin prints were taken this spring on the same day near each other along Union Avenue in St. louis. But beyond these similarities, the two images were rendered by two distinctively different cameras, according to Adams.

“Get Malcolmized” by CB Adams, a gelatin silver print available for sale through the Art Saint Louis “This Moment” onlien

“Get Malcolmized” by CB Adams, a gelatin silver print available for sale through the Art Saint Louis “This Moment” onlien

“I usually explore an area with a variety of cameras because I use the unique signatures of different cameras and lenses the same way a painter chooses brushes. I was toward the end of a day of shooting near the Central West End and on my way home. I knew my classic Rolleiflex and my plastic Holga toy camera had some unshot film in them. I shot ‘Get Malcolmized’ with the Rolleiflex because I had shot the scene before with a toy camera and didn’t like how they turned out. I finished off that roll and looked for a scene that I thought was ‘Holga perfect.’ That yielded the scene in ‘Chain of Fools.’”

According to the show’s announcement, “’This Moment’ is a virtual and online juried exhibit featuring works by 42 St. Louis regional artists. This multi-media exhibit features 48 original artworks created in 2020 that reflect upon or are otherwise inspired by the impact, significance, complexity, profundity and meaning of This Moment in our lives as individuals, as a community, as a nation.”

Adams, who has a toy camera image in Art Saint Louis’ current in-galley exhibition, “Storytellers,” was drawn to the theme of “This Moment.” Reviewing the work he had been capturing during 2020, he noticed that much of the imagery was a reaction to current events and challenges.

“The car wash sign with Malcolm X has been on the side of a pawn shop for years, but in relation to recent events, its message takes on a new urgency. The sign itself hasn’t changed, but my reaction to it certainly has,” he says. “I also like the juxtaposition of the car wash words and the words of Malcolm X. That’s why I named it ‘Get Malcolmized,’ to play off the old ‘Simoniz Your Car’ car wax advertisements.”

“Chain of Fools” is a gelatin silver print made from a negative rendered by a Holga toy camera. It is for sale through the Art Saint Louis “This Moment” online and vitual exhibit.

“Chain of Fools” is a gelatin silver print made from a negative rendered by a Holga toy camera. It is for sale through the Art Saint Louis “This Moment” online and vitual exhibit.

The toy camera shot, “Chain of Fools,” offers more than one interpretation, according to Adams. “I’m reminded of something the filmmaker Andrei Tarkovsky said, ‘A book read by a thousand different people is a thousand different books.’ So ‘Chain of Fools’ has an ambiguity that lends itself to multiple interpretations. For instance, I think during the pandemic, we all feel chained in place and restrained, unable to run as freely as before. On a different level, many people in our society, feel chained by their skin color, sexual orientation, economic status and other constraints,” he says.

The idea of Tarkovsky’s ‘thousand different books’ is applicable to all the art in “This Moment.” After reviewing the work of the other 41 artists, Adams found that most of them were open to interpretation.

“Some of the artwork is very pointed and on-the-nose, yet I can see how different people would react to those strong statements differently. Other work is more abstract, which by its nature allows an even broader range of interpretations. Collectively, I think this show is tremendously cohesive and relevant. And in a crazy sort of way, it’s enhanced by being available only online. I say this because perhaps more people will check it out because they don’t have to leave home to do it,” Adams says.

“This Moment” will be available online through September 15 at the Exhibbit.com platform.

'Joy' In the Time of Pandemic - Analog Forever Exhibition Features Portrait by CB Adams

Analog Forever Magazine, an online and print publisher of contemporary analog photography, included Lauren in Autumn by CB Adams in its current exhibition, Joy. The online exhibition showcases 42 images curated by Niniane Kelley, who is a fine art photographer, alternative processes educator, and Analog Forever writer and curator Niniane Kelley.

Lauren In Autumn is a large format portrait made by CB Adams at Qwerky Studio’s Snob Hill location in Greater St. Louis.

Lauren In Autumn is a large format portrait made by CB Adams at Qwerky Studio’s Snob Hill location in Greater St. Louis.

According to Analog Forever’s website, “These photographs explore the thing many of us are lacking in today’s world: inspired happiness. The images selected interpret this theme in both traditional and unconventional ways that show you joy is alive and well in the world, despite what the news may tell you. Analog Forever Magazine Writer and Curator,

Analog Forever’s call for entry sparked something in me, “ says CB Adams, a St. Louis-based writer and fine art photographer. “I was just scrolling through social media when I saw this call for the theme of ‘joy’ and I immediately stopped and thought, ‘I could submit to that!’ I had more than twenty images that I thought fit the theme. You could submit only two, so I finally chose one image made with a Holga toy cameras and one made with a Toyo 45CF large format camera, which is the one Ms. Kelley ultimately chose.”

Analog Forever’s mission is to “…provide a global audience to photographers who use analog processes and techniques for their photographic work by giving them a voice via a biannual print photography journal, online features and interviews, monthly online exhibitions, and a community calendar. Our goal is to highlight the best of the best from the analog industry including artists, projects, galleries, and curators.”

Midwest Review Publishes 'Négatif Endommagé' by CB Adams

Midwest Review 8, a publication of the University of Wisconsin-Madison, has published ‘'Négatif Endommagé” by St. Louis-based writer-photographer CB Adams. The French title translates to “damaged negative” because the camera Adams used was experiencing a shutter malfunction.

Negative Endommage, image by CB Adams created with a Diana+ toy camera on medium format film.

Negative Endommage, image by CB Adams created with a Diana+ toy camera on medium format film.

“I was surprised when I developed that roll of film,” Adams says. “I was using a Diana+ toy camera, which by itself can product erratic, unpredictable images, and I could tell by the sound of the shutter that something wasn’t right. I’m still not completely sure what happened, but the negatives were significantly overexposed and have a double exposure quality about them. Out of the 12 exposures on that roll, I am pleased with three or four of them, which is a pretty high success rate.”

Midwest Review is an annual literary magazine that features work by writers, photographers, and artists who live in, have lived in, or have spent time in the Midwest—that diverse region of the north-central United States that includes the Great Lakes area and the upper Mississippi River valley, and the states of Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Michigan, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Iowa, Nebraska, North Dakota, South Dakota, Kansas and Missouri. The annual publication seeks to publish well-crafted, thoughtful and thought-provoking writing and visual art that examines, interprets and redefines the full spectrum of life, past and present, in the Midwest.

“I am a Missouri artist who spends a great deal of time documenting the City of St. Louis. I am proud to be a St. Louisan, but my work often captures the grittier parts of the greater metropolitan area. I consider much of my work to be a sort of reverse-boosterism because the work depicts aspects of the city that could be — should be — better,” Adams says.

Adams shoots with a variety of cameras, from 35mm to medium- and large format, to capture these scenes. I regularly also use the lo-fi toy cameras like the Diana+, the original 60s-era Diana, and the Holga, as well as a hand-built camera made from components of multiple toy cameras.

“My approach is to match the fidelity of a particular camera with the way it will best render a subject, Sometimes, the aesthetic result that I want can only be — best be — made with a toy camera,” Adams says. "I was pleased to see 'Négatif Endommagé' on the same spread as the poem ‘Winter, Thirty-Seven Years Before His Death’ by Anemone Beaulier because tone — stark and cold — matches the tone of my photograph, even though it is a summer scene.”

Adams is preparing to create a limited number of matted gelatin silver prints, ~8x8 inches, of “Négatif Endommagé.” Contact him through his website for pricing information, www. qwerkyphotography.com/about.

Spread from Midwest Review 8 featuring the work of CB Adams, photographer, and Aneomone Beaulier, poet. Beaulier lives in Fargo, ND, and her poetry has appeared in The Briar Cliff Review, Cimarron Review, Jabberwock Review, The Pinch, Poetry Daily, …

Spread from Midwest Review 8 featuring the work of CB Adams, photographer, and Aneomone Beaulier, poet. Beaulier lives in Fargo, ND, and her poetry has appeared in The Briar Cliff Review, Cimarron Review, Jabberwock Review, The Pinch, Poetry Daily, Prairie Schooner, The Southern Review and elsewhere.

Freaks and Beeks Blog – Announcing ‘Hive Minded’ Project by CB Adams

Missouri Beekeepers deserve some attention and respect. I finally found a way to combine three of my loves: writing, photography, and beekeeping. I am announcing “Hive Minded,” my new fine art photography exhibit and book project focused on the work, dedication and activities of Missouri Beekeepers. This is a long-term photography project inspired as much by Missouri Beekeepers as it is by author James Joyce’s statement, “In the particular is contained the universal.”

Bee.jpg

For Hive Minded, the particular will be Missouri Beekeepers and how they practice the art, science, and husbandry of apiculture. The work that Missouri “Beeks” perform is the same throughout the world. I’m reminded of the three hives on the roof of the sacristy of the Cathedral of Notre Dame in Paris. They survived the devastating fire last year.

 I’m reminded, too, of 2019 Academy Award documentary nominee Honeyland about the work of Hatidze, a rural beekeeper in the mountains of Macedonia. She practices a near-forgotten type of beekeeping that includes foraging in nearby forests, mountains, and even crevices in abandoned buildings in her village. Her bee yard consists of skeps rather than the wooden box hives used by the rest of us.  

But the basics of her beekeeping are identical to those found throughout Missouri and the rest of the world. She understands the lifecycle of bees, the influence of the local environment, and the importance of maintaining a healthy ecosystem.

Hive Minded will be a photographic documentary of the way we Missourians “do” beekeeping. I am currently actively seeking Missouri Beekeepers to photograph for this project. I want to meet and photograph ALL Missouri Beekeepers, regardless of gender, age, location or skill level. There is no such thing as an “average” beekeeper, so I am open to working with practically anyone, anywhere in the state. If you’ve got a unique story about your beekeeping, even better.

The first step in the project is photographing beekeepers as they work with their bees. There are no costs involved for participants. In fact, participants will receive a print made by me in my traditional darkroom and be allowed access to use the images I make for their own purposes, whether private or commercial (with credit, of course)

When I have built up the portfolio of images, I will create an exhibition that will be available to galleries, museums, and other venues. Concurrently, I will be creating the Hive Minded book with curated and select images for publication.

This is a labor of love. I am pursuing this project and funding it initially by myself. It is not a “for profit” endeavor. I will make the photographs primarily using traditional analogue equipment on silver gelatin film. During each session, I will employ a variety of cameras in multiple formats: 35mm, 120, and 4x5 large format. I will use a mix of black and white and color film.  

For reference, when I shoot color 4x5 negatives, each shot costs several dollars, plus another $20 to process and scan. I’m willing to make this sort of investment because I want to promote importance of beekeeping – more important today than ever. I will initially pay for the costs associated with Hive Minded, including travel, film, equipment, processing, etc. out of my own pocket. I hope to solicit additional support from artistic grants and other type of funding, including a Kickstarter-type fundraiser for the book.

If you are a Missouri beekeeper and would like me to visit you and your hives, please contact me at 314.973.0239 or email me at cbadams@qwerkyphotography.com. I will keep information updated on this blog, Freaks and Beeks, on my website: www.qwerkyphotography under the “Language” section. If you know of someone, please refer them to me.

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I built my first Warre’ hives several years ago with my father.

I built my first Warre’ hives several years ago with my father.

CB Adams, MFA, is a writer and fine art photographer living in the St. Louis region. He received two of the Missouri Arts Council’s highest writing awards, the Missouri Writers’ Biennial Award in 1995 and the Missouri Writing! Award in 1985.

Adams’s photographs have been exhibited more than 30 shows, including most recently: A Smith Gallery, Johnson City, TX, Soho Photo Gallery in New York City, Yeiser Art Center in Paducah, KY, Lightbox Gallery, Astoria OR, Foundry Art Centre, St. Charles, MO, Art Saint Louis, St. Louis Arists Guild, and Columbia (MO) Art League.

The independent weekly newspaper St. Louis Riverfront Times named Adams “St. Louis’ Most Under-Appreciated Writer.” His short fiction has been published in more than a dozen literary journals, Zoetrope All-Story Extra, River Styx (twice), Elder Mountain: A Journal of Ozarks Studies, Thoughtful Dog, bluntly, The Distillery, Artistic Spirits of the South, and elsewhere. He has published more than 2,000 nonfiction articles in local, regional and national publications. He is a former reporter for the St. Louis Globe-Democrat.