Piece description from the artist
I was shooting a protest in Washington Square Park last summer (23) when I noticed a young dancer, swinging fans with long pieces of blue and white fabric as she danced. She seemed inspired, and so I was inspired to take a picture. I used 3/10 second exposure in order to capture her movement. I feel that my job as photographer is to show the world in ways that step out from the ordinary, in order to make things feel fresh. Hopefully, I did.
Etan Ben-Ami is a semi-retired psychotherapist and full-time lens-based artist. He has crammed several careers into his life.
He began exploring New York's art museums and galleries from his early teen years. In the early 1980s, he became interested in holography and high-resolution computer graphics. He helped holographer Jody Burns with computer software to pre-visualize holographic exposures used in creating holograms designed by Israeli artist Agam.
His interest then turned to the New York poetry scene. He studied with Alice Notley, among others. He co-edited and produced the local 'Cheap Review of Poetry' in part as a challenge to the increasingly stifling professionalism in poetry and the arts.
In his sixties, he has renewed his interest in visual arts, especially abstract and expressionist photography. He is a member of Brooklyn Artists Waterfront Coalition.
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