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4K video, 28-megapixel and a whopping price: the Samsung NX1 is here

For everyone who thought that Samsung is not doing enough when it comes to cameras, and concentrating much on smartphones these days, Samsung is proving them wrong. Samsung has made some major announcements at Photokina 2014, and as promised, we are bringing you the latest from the show. We at Asian Photography have always been big fans of the NX series right from its earlier days. But Samsung finally seems to have come of age with the launch of their NX1 Smart Camera and high-end 50-150mm F/2.8 lens.

From the looks of it, the camera does seem tiny but it packs a mean punch. But wait till you hear the price. It’s approximately $1499. Yes, you heard that right. A whopping $1499! And what does this buy you? High speed and performance, featuring an all-new 205-point autofocus system, a shooting mode that offers 15fps continuous shooting and 4K video recording. 

The camera cover approximately 90% of the frame, and the phase-detect AF system is also available to use during video recording. If we are to assume correctly then the lens alone costs $1,599. The camera also features a built-in flash, an OLED electronic viewfinder, and a 3-inch Super AMOLED touchscreen. 

What got us going was the NX1’s design. It looks clean, simple and yet powerful. What is really amazing is the LCD display on the mirrorless camera which shows you a lot of information, a first for a camera in that segment, we suppose. The camera uses a new 28-megapixel backside-illuminated CMOS sensor and the touchscreen is as responsive as any other smartphone from Samsung.

Although the availability is still a factor, we don’t yet know when it will come to India, but company representatives mentioned that it should be available in the global markets by the end of October 2014.

Here is the official commercial:


Nikon announces the D750

Nikon India has announced the launch of the new D750, the smallest and lightest FX-format (full-frame) digital SLR camera. The D750 features built-in Wi-Fi, tilting monitor, 24.3 megapixels, 91K-pixel RGB sensor, and high-speed continuous shooting rate of approximately 6.5 frames per second for both FX- and DX-format.
According to Nikon, the D750 is set to challenge the common assumption that the higher a D-SLR’s specifications, the bulkier it becomes. The D750 includes technologies designed to offer a strong, lightweight camera without compromising image quality. Its FX-format (full-frame) CMOS sensor and EXPEED 4 image-processing engine are packed into a monocoque structure, framed by carbon-fiber, reinforced thermoplastics (LFT) and magnesium alloy to provide durability. 
“With the addition of Nikon D750, we aim to strengthen our foothold in the world of photography. As the Indian photography market matures, we are witnessing strong growth for the D-SLR category. With this launch, we are aiming to provide the photographer more choices and we believe this product will strongly appeal to photo enthusiasts and serious hobbyists who are aspiring to escalate their photography experience with a portable FX-format (full-frame) D-SLR,” said Mr. Hiroshi Takashina, Managing Director, Nikon India.
“The revolutionary Nikon D750 is a stunning camera packed with incredible features like 24.3 megapixel FX-format (full-frame) CMOS sensor, built in Wi-Fi complemented with cutting-edge engineering and superior manoeuvrability. The minimal weight and frame of this perfectly crafted FX-format (full-frame) camera allows a close ‘true-to-life’ imaging experience to photographers and offers them everything they need to capture and share incredible images in a single device,” said Mr. Sajjan Kumar, Vice President-Imaging, Nikon India.

Making of the Artistique 2014 exhibition


Well the stage is set and the exhibit has been put up starting today so its time for you also to be part of the visual treat. We have made a video of how the exhibit has been put up to give a sneak preview of what you are missing. So click on this video and check it out.

Shigeki Ishizuka, President of Digital Imaging, Sony Corporation and Kenichiro Hibi, Managing, Director, Sony India talk to Asian Photography about the company’s focus in India

With the company continuing to maintain an unprecedented lead in the photo-imaging market, Sony launched a host of new cameras recently including the Cybershot RX100 Mark III, the Alpha A77 II and the A7S full-frame interchangeable camera among other products. On the occasion we spoke to Mr. Kenichiro Hibi, Managing Director, Sony India and Mr. Shigeki Ishizuka, President, Digital Imaging, Sony Corporation on the company’s focus and plans for the digital imaging category in India.

There is no denying the fact that Sony has continually dominated the market in the compact camera segment with over 40% market share even today. But somehow they haven’t been able to translate the same success in the DSLR market. Although their interchangeable lens category cameras, especially in the full-frame category have    received great acclaim, it doesn’t seem to have translated into numbers (at least in India). But Sony hopes to change all that with their recent line-up of products. 

Speaking about the currents trends and opportunities in the industry Hibi-san feels that Sony is well positioned to capitalise on the opportunities despite the decline of the point-and-shoot cameras, due to the invasion of the camera smartphones. He points out that despite the decline in the compact camera segment, interchangeable lens cameras have been sustaining the size of the market and are starting to expand. 

“I think after two years the demand for cameras will be more diverse similar to the shift of the entry-level compact cameras below Rs. 8000 towards camera mobile phones. But we are well positioned in that sphere since we have our mobile phone business. We will be able to capture those customers and their needs and demands,” says Hibi-san. 

But while there is a negative growth in the lower compact camera segment there is also a considerable shift in the demand from the consumers for higher quality, resulting for them to shift to DSLRs and high quality compact cameras. “These segments are continuously growing so it’s difficult to say if the demand for compact point-and-shoot cameras is completely gone,” adds Hibi-san. 

And there are no points for guessing that Sony India features prominently in the global map as Ishizuka-san puts it, “that’s why I am here”. And with the enormous potential that the Indian consumer market brings, he is expecting more from the developing countries than developed countries. However, the demand for interchangeable lens cameras is still considerably small in India. “But I think the future of the interchangeable mirrorless cameras is much bigger than SLR due to its light weight, compact nature and no mechanical shutter and mirror inside the body,” added Ishizuka-san. 

Currently, the camera business contributes approximately 10% to the overall Sony business in India and the company plans to increase the same in the time to come.
Although the company intends to increase its focus on the DSLR category due to its huge market opportunity, they would like to strike a balance between amateurs and professionals considering that the majority of their customers are amateurs. “We are aware that our biggest target audience are not exactly professional photographers. But professional photographers are also very important for us and we can never forget that.”
 
Speaking about the consumer pattern of the Indian customer, Ishizuka-san asserts that despite India being a peculiar market the behavioural pattern as compared to the other markets is quiet similar. “There are some peculiarities that they prefer, like more bulky and bigger cameras. However, the demand for photography is the same.”

Only time will tell how the consumers respond to the company’s strategy and products, but from the look of the things, it’s looking all good for the Japanese giant.
 

An artistic medium – Photography

“For the longest time photography in India has been considered as a ‘profession’ to make ends meet. While the changing times have broadened the viewer’s acceptance of art forms like painting, sculpting, movies among other things, photography seems to have been stuck in a timeless cycle. In a stark contrast, the visual medium of picture-making is considered and perceived as an art form internationally. Then why should India be any different? Hence, we have entered into a journey with our initiative Artistique to push photography as an art form,”
Bhavya Desai, Editor and Group Head, Asian Photography and SAP Magazines 

The word photography comes from two ancient Greek words: photo, for “light,” and graph, for “drawing.” “Drawing with light” is a way of describing photography. When a photograph is made, light or some other form of radiant energy is used to record a picture of an object or scene on a light-sensitive surface. Early photographs were called sun pictures, because sunlight itself was used to create the image.    Mankind has been creating images at least since the cave paintings about 20,000 years ago. With the invention of photography, a realistic image that would have taken a skilled artist hours or even days to draw could be recorded in exact detail within a fraction of a second.
Photography is widely recognised as a fine art. Photographs are displayed in art museums, prized by collectors, discussed by critics, and studied in art history courses. Because of the special nature of photography, however, this was not always the case. Today, photography is one of the strongest means of communication and a mode of visual expression that touches life in many ways. Photography has become popular more than just a means of capturing memories.  Every genre of photography is growing with every moment. However, this is about the rest of the world. In India, the first reaction you get when you tell someone you are a photographer is “So you shoot weddings?” or “So, you meet nice models?” Sorry to disappoint, guys, but photography is not just about these two. There is more. 
Photographs are used extensively by newspapers, magazines, books, and television to convey information and advertise products and services.    Practical applications of photography are found in nearly every human endeavour from astronomy to medical diagnosis to industrial quality control. Photography extends human vision into the realm of objects that are invisible because they are too small or too distant, or events that occur too rapidly for the naked eye to detect. A camera can be used in locations too dangerous for humans. Photographs can also be objects of art that explore the human condition and provide aesthetic pleasure. For millions of people, photography is a satisfying hobby or a rewarding career. 
At this point, we need to pause before we get carried away; we haven’t even answered the really important question here: what is art? Well, it’s a subjectively biased interpretation of something – whether that something is an event, a place, a person, or a thing, is irrelevant. It’s the bias that makes it interesting: Van Gogh’s “Starry Nights” is interesting because he show us his unique interpretation of the scene, according to the impressionists – which is yet another subjective way of looking at the world. Picasso’s works are interesting because they show us his interpretation of the world. In both cases, the interpretations present us with such a unique – unprecedented – result, that we are forced to stop, look, and think. The value here is in the uniqueness of the interpretation: what the artists see is so far beyond the normal realm of comprehension, for most, that it becomes akin to visual magic. It’s also worth remembering that seeing is but half of the puzzle; execution is just as important.
In different ways, the work of all of these artists is about the nature of photography – the making of the images, rather than the taking of a photograph. Here, as with much conceptual art, the process seems to be as important as the end result. How cruelly ironic, then, that we are simultaneously witnessing the sudden death of the process that has defined photography for so long, a procedure that began with the insertion of a roll of film into a mechanical camera and ended, via the contact sheet, the dark room and a tray of chemicals, with the printing of a single image on photographic paper.
In the early history of photography, it was perceived as a medium, in poor relation to the older, established visual arts, such as drawing and painting. The arguments started from the fact that a camera is a mechanical instrument. Because the mechanical procedure of taking a picture is automatic, detractors claimed that photography required no coordination of hand and eye and none of the manual skills essential to drawing and painting. They also argued that photography required no creativity or imagination because the photographic subject was “ready-made” and did not require manipulation or control by the photographer.  
The point to argue here is if photography is really considered as an art-form in India. In a new trend of surrealism and exploration, more and more artists are looking to photorealism as one of their options to vent their creativity. Photography has an interesting history in India. The British brought it with them, and passed it on. Some of the Maharajas became very famous for the photographs they took. Until very recently, there was not much exposure for photography other than its commercial use for weddings and advertisement. Photographers need a platform; they need exposure and guidance to show their work. I think the turn today is about people paying more attention to image making. Photo-artists have always existed, but they have not had much commercial exposure. I have always wanted to do personal work rather than commissioned work (commercial work like advertising, for example). But, until now, one could not sustain oneself just doing personal projects. Most definitely, because photography isn’t only about taking a picture, it’s so much more than that for many people. People who pay attention to detail, composition, and how they develop the film itself, colour or black and white, attention to focus; every photographer is different when it comes to this art form.
In order to propagate photography as an artistic medium in India, Asian Photography started an initiative called “Artistique” in the year 2013. We came up with this idea to not only celebrate World Photography Day, but also to promote the culture of photography, as it’s high time it gets the respect it deserves. The initiative highlights an exhibition of photographic art and a contest on its sidelines. This year, starting World Photography Day, for ten days, we will have two remarkable photographers, Sudhir Shivaraman and Martin Prihoda, exhibiting their work under the category “Beauty”. With them, we will have the winning entries of the contest with each category, and honorary mentions from the Jury, being displayed.
While we were travelling around talking to students from different colleges, promoting Artistique, we asked all of them to tell us “Why should photography be promoted as an art-form”. You have seen most of the quotes from people while reading the article. But here is the most elaborate point answer that we received from Snehi Singh, a second year student from Symbiosis School of Photography, Pune:
“Photography is made up of two words, “photo” and “graphy” which literally means painting. To most people in India, photography is about clicking the button and capturing the moment. This is true. Of Course! We do that that and it is about that. But does it end here? I think not. Like any other respected art form, photography demands a vision, a background, an understanding of your subject, of lights, of colours, the textures and all the other elements of visual art. A photographer is also an artist who controls and decides everything. He evokes emotions and expresses what cannot be expressed through mere words. Thus, it’s high time photography gets its due.”
Show Details:
Artistique- A photography exhibition and contest
Date: 16th August – 26th August
Venue: Piramal Gallery, NCPA

Vikram Bawa becomes the first Indian to be nominated to International Fashion Film Awards

Vikram Bawa’s fashion film ‘The Long Show’ has been nominated for the International Fashion Film Awards (IFFA) 2014 to be held in Los Angeles, USA, from July 24th to July 26th, 2014.

The film has been nominated in two categories – Best Art Direction and Best Music Nomination. This is the first time an Indian photographer/film maker has been invited and nominated at these prestigious awards.

‘The Long Show’, made for his friends, renowned fashion designers Falguni & Shane Peacock is being screened at the ongoing La Jolla Fashion Film Festival, USA, with the presentation of the IFFA in the 500 seat theatre at the Museum of Contemporary Art in La Jolla, California.

Speaking about the nomination, Bawa said, “It’s an honour to be nominated amongst other prestigious nominations along with some of the biggest photographers, film makers and artists like David Zimmerman, Ellen Von Unwerth, Nadav Kander.”

He added, “It is the world’s largest gathering of fashion filmmakers with Hollywood insiders, fashion media, bloggers from around the world, Industry Networking, Panel Discussions & Seminars, Red Carpet and press receptions, Awards and After Parties and is known as the Cannes of fashion films. Only the top 1% of fashion films around the world are shown at the Festival. I hope to make India proud.”

AFP launches World Cup 2014 photo exhibition in Indonesia

Agence France-Presse (AFP) and its longtime Indonesian partner, the Antara news agency, have launched a photo exhibition in Jakarta on the history and highlights of the football World Cup in time for the 2014 championship in Brazil.
The exhibition, featuring 83 pictures from the 1930 World Cup in Uruguay to the 2010 edition in South Africa, is being staged from June 9 to July 15 at the Antara Photojournalism Gallery located in the historic Pasar Baru quarter of the Indonesian capital.
In a festive ceremony featuring live samba music, Brazil’s Ambassador to Indonesia Paulo Soares shared the pride of his countrymen in hosting the 2014 World Cup as well as the 2016 Olympics in Rio.
Mervin Nambiar, AFP’s sales and marketing director in the Asia-Pacific region, said the agency is sending some 180 staff – comprising reporters and photographers as well as video and multimedia journalists — to cover Rio 2014.
“Our team will report all the events in Brazil for football fans worldwide. In Indonesia, all this content will be available to our newspaper, broadcast and new media clients through Antara,” Nambiar said.
Antara’s commercial director, Hempi Prajudi, opened the exhibition together with Soares and Nambiar in the presence of local and international media, Jakarta cultural figures, photojournalists and football fans.
The photo collection shown in the exhibition is contained in a special 108-page catalogue explaining the story behind each picture.
“France and Indonesia are both great football-loving nations and we hope this exhibition will delight visitors to this historic museum and gallery during the current championships in Brazil,” Gilles Campion, AFP’s Asia-Pacific regional director, said in a preface to the booklet.
 One of the highlights of the evening was the showing of a video on the making of an AFP-backed special project on the central role of football in the daily life of Rio de Janeiro’s notorious “favelas” or slums.
Christophe Simon, AFP’s head of photography in Brazil, taught basic photography techniques to a group of 18 adolescents from the so-called “Cidade de Deus” (City of God), with amazing results.
Together, they photographed the favela residents’ passion for football, and the result was a collection of 70 pictures distributed globally by AFP to leading media clients.

Sandisk announces USB designed in partnership with Romero Britto now available across India

SanDisk Corporation today announced its special edition Cruzer Pop USB flash drive, designed by Romero Britto, is now available in India on Snapdeal.com. 
“Entering into this partnership with SanDisk is very important to me and I am very happy with this USB release and with our collaboration, which I’m certain will be a great success,” said Britto. “I was interested in making a colourful product that truly reflected Brazilian culture, as was SanDisk. It was important to design a product that would be something consumers would like to look at, and would get inspiration from.”
“Working with an international artist whose ability to bring USB drives to life with his designs is a great way for SanDisk to recognize vibrant cultures and give our customers fun and unique-looking products,” said Rajesh Gupta, Country Manager India, SanDisk Corporation. “Romero Britto edition of Cruzer Pop USB flash drive will be available in India on Snapdeal.com,” he added.  
Known for his colourful and cheerful works of art, Britto developed a unique design using soccer as an inspiration. It will be featured on the 8GB1Cruzer Pop USB flash drive. The drive also includes SanDisk SecureAccess Software, which provides secure file encryption and password protection for private files, while leaving the rest of the drive available for worry-free sharing.
Aiming to strengthen its presence across growing e-commerce platform in India, SanDisk has introduced this special edition Cruzer Pop USB flash drive in partnership with Snapdeal.com at a suggested retail price of INR 499. Customers can place an online order for the SanDisk USB flash drive.

Konica Minolta appoints Yuji Nakata as the new MD

Yuji Nakata has been appointed as the new Managing Director of Konica Minolta India. Nakata has been associated with Konica Minolta for over 25 years and previously was serving as company’s Chief Representative in Thailand.
Commenting on the appointment, V. Balakrishnan, Executive General Manager, Konica Minolta India, said, “Mr. Yuji Nakata has played a significant part through strategic and operational areas of Konica Minolta for many years now and has done an exemplary job as Chief Representative, Minolta Beijing Office (China). His visionary approach first as Managing Director, Konica Minolta Hong Kong and later as Managing Director, Konica Minolta Shenzhen, China, helped in consolidating the brand’s dominance in those markets.”
 Stating further he remarked, “As we move towards taking Konica Minolta to the next level of growth, we are privileged that a person of his calibre is there to guide us through. He is one of the original members of Konica Minolta management team and has been instrumental in driving the fastest growing areas of the company’s business.”
 Mr. Yuji Nakata has replaced Mr. Tadahiko Sumitani who has been promoted and has assumed a new role as the Global Sales Head in Japan HQ.
 Konica Minolta also launched its most promising production printer bizhub PRESS C1070 and bizhub PRESS C1060. The new series runs at 71 and 61 ppm respectively in A4, and the 4th Generation Simitri HDE toner.
 “The printer is for the customers who are looking for the ability to scale, perform and deliver On-demand across diverse needs with a faster turnaround time while maintaining superior colour reproduction. The new intuitive and intelligent bizhub PRESS C1070 / C1060 offers the perfect solution,” said Mr. Yuji Nakata, Managing Director , Konica Minolta Business Solutions India Pvt Ltd .
Speaking at the launch Mr. Kuldeep Malhotra Executive General Manager Konica Minolta India said “We are the market leader in Production Printer segment and the latest series will further strengthen our position in this segment. Konica Minolta has always provided innovative and technologically advanced products and our latest series will not only stand out in the crowd but will take the production printing market a step further.”

M.Ganges by Yoshihiko Ueda

“Occasionally I began to sense myself not gazing at somebody in the photo, but seeing myself in the photo I’d taken. In my line of sight: my memories, or rather, in fact, memories from a distant past that for some reason did not seem to be my own. Spying an old dog I discern the sorrowful scent of death, and at the same time, that dog could almost be me;sometimes it feels like the landscape that looks dim and hazy as she totters along is no longer hers, that she may be seeing far distant memories. Perhaps one can see distant memories by sniffing the stench of death; the hazy light and shadow, color and form being all that remain, an unfathomable feeling of nostalgia suffuses my heart with stunning intensity, a sudden fit of weeping assailing me. Lamentation and delight and uncertain memories become light and color without contour, embracing me. The memories of dogs, of birds, of trees, of rivers, of mountains: my chest tightens with a wistful pang at the memories of each and every thing in this world. Photographs are memories of gazes, of faraway places, of people and times that have passed,” said Yoshihiko Ueda.

M.Ganges is a collection of images taken by Japanese photographer Yoshihiko Ueda along the River Ganges. Out of focus, vivid and visceral, these visions of people don colors and play with the light. Shimmering water reflects souls, puzzling the onlooker. Ueda lingered in distant memories, dreaming colored dreams. From forest to river, sea to people… M.Ganges, the latest in his ‘M’ series tracing primeval memories, offers an irresistible variety of sixty-one carefully chosen images. Other works – M.River, M.Venus and M.Sea – depict very personal impressions of Japan and elsewhere, offering a similar experience throughout with a deep interest in tracing landscape through large-scale photography. Gallery 916 on the edge of Tokyo Bay offers it’s a unique experience. A converted factory, its vastness provides the rare opportunity of seeing photography in surroundings rarely available in the city. Gallery 916-small, as the name suggests, provides a more immediate chance to feature work by up-and-coming photographers, no-less important in subject matter or quality. On the edge of Tokyo Bay, the Gallery, like the photography within, gives a rare glimpse of a world away and beyond.

Born 1957, among Yoshihiko Ueda’s most noted series/monographs are Quinault (Kyoto Shoin, 1993), a brooding meditation on the eponymous sacred Native American rainforest; Amagatsu (Korinsha, 1995), a backstage study of Sankai Juku dancer-choreographer Ushio Amagatsu; Portrait (Littlemore, 2003), singular impressions of 39 leading Japanese figures the likes of Takaaki Yoshimoto and Shotaro Yasuoka; At Home (Littlemore, 2006), intimate snapshots of the artist’s family; Yume (Seigensha, 2010), timeless, dreamlike images from a Buddhist monastery in Mandalay; and Frank Lloyd Wright (X-Knowledge, 2003), a portfolio of the architect’s buildings documented with a Leica. Since 2008, Ueda’s work has been exhibited at Paris Photo, among other art fairs. His “QUINAULT” photographs were featured in solo exhibitions at Michael Hoppen Gallery (London) and TAI Gallery (Santa Fe) in 2010 and his “Materia” photographs of primeval forest taken on the island of Yakushima at Gallery 916 in 2012. He released his “M.River” series of out-offocus images of ancient streams in the mountains of Yakushima in March 2013, and in May, his “M.Sea” series of digital photographs taken with a single-lens reflex camera of the Sea of Japan from the Tojinbo cliffs of Fukui Prefecture, and in November, his solo exhibition were featured at Galerie taménaga France. His works are in the collections of the Kemper Museum of Contemporary Art (Kansas City), New Mexico Arts (Santa Fe), Hermés International (Paris), Stichting Art & Theatre (Amsterdam), and Bibliothèque nationale de France.

M.Ganges by Yoshihiko Ueda at Gallery 916 (Tokyo, Japan) runs until June 21