International Association of Panoramic Photographers [Newsletter], Volume [16], Number [2], July 1988 Page: 4
8 p. : ill.View a full description of this periodical.
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RLD IS ROUNE
smio,
A uWact
" *****
The World is Round: Beyond Photography
A Traveling Exhibit of Panoramic Art
By Robert J. Lang
"The World is Round: Contemporary
Panoramas” is an exhibition of artworks
currently touring the northeastern United
States. Photographs, sculpture, paintings
and mixed media works reflect the feelings
of 24 artists in panoramic format. Included
are the photographic contributions of Bob
Chaplin, Jan Dibbets, David Hockney,
David Horton, David McGlynn, Richard
McKown, Robert Rauschenberg, Paul Smith
and IAPP member Kenneth Snelson.
The exhibition was organized by The
Hudson River Museum with artist Marcia
Clark as guest curator. The accompanying
catalogue contains reproductions of many
IAPP DUES ARE DUE!
Many of you have not paid up for 1988. If you
would like to continue to receive this newsletter
and enjoy the other benefits of being an IAPP
member, please send in your $20 soon to: LAPP,
Richard Fowler, 1739 Limewood Lane, Orlando,
FL 32818. If you did not receive the Feb. ‘88
newsletter (“Panoramas Revisited” and “Ron
Klein in China”), write to Richard Fowler and
he’ll send you one.
Send newsletter articles, ideas, photos
(with return postage), and ads to: IAPP
Newsletter c/o John Stamets, 403 14th
Ave. E., Seattle, WA 98112. Free classified
ads for IAPP members.
Wanted: 8x20” sheet film (b&w or
color). Anyone interested in a special
order? Contact Bruce Cook, 135 Dore St.,
San Francisco, CA 94103 . 415-553-4178.
works, as well as comments and
observations by the artists. For those
panoramic photographers fortunate enough
to be in the northeastern U.S. during the
tour, a visit will be inspirational. The less
fortunate should certainly consider
obtaining a copy of the catalogue, which
will be available from The Hudson River
Museum ($14.95 plus postage; address
below).
While the exhibit was at the Parrish Art
Museum in Southampton, NY, Robert J.
Lang took the above photograph (about
263°) on 35 mm film using a self-built
360° camera.
The remaining 1988 exhibition schedule is:
July 22 - September 18
Albany Institute of History and Art
Albany, New York
October 9 - November 25
College Art Gallery
State University of New York
New Paltz, New York
December 11 - February 26
The Hudson River Museum
Trevor Park-on-Hudson
511 Warburton Avenue
Yonkers, New York 10701
914-963-4550
Arched Display
for Vertical Pans
Panoramas are normally shot and viewed
horizontally, but a ’’vertical” 360°
panorama -- with the sky overhead and
your feet below -- may be a bit hard to
appreciate when rolled out flat. But
leave it to someone from Down Under to
hit on a good solution for this one.
IAPP member Rudi Untersee (6/24 Calder
Rd., Rydalmere, NSW 2116, Australia)
sent in the accompanying photo of how
he displayed a vertical 360° pan at the
Queensland Museum in Brisbane. The
museum had contracted him to shoot a
vertical panorama for the entrance to an
exhibit: ”The History of Photography.”
4
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International Association of Panoramic Photographers. International Association of Panoramic Photographers [Newsletter], Volume [16], Number [2], July 1988, periodical, July 1998; United States. (https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc2273831/m1/4/: accessed May 24, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, UNT Digital Library, https://digital.library.unt.edu; .