Photojournalism: Honorable Mention 2014 (professional)
ENTRY DESCRIPTION
Cowboy Pickup was photographed using a Fujifilm FinePix S2 Pro SLR during my years in the center of rodeo arenas where I documented the cowboy lifestyle at rodeos from the famous Pendleton Round-up to the infamous Angola Prison Rodeo at the Louisiana State Penitentiary. This image is included in my Rodeo Portfolio and was selected by Pendleton Woolen Mills to be woven on an antique Jacquard loom in Pendleton, Oregon, into 68 x 48 and 44 x 34 inch wool tapestries. The finished tapestries can be viewed on my website under the "Tapestries" tab at www.frankbarnettphotography.com. In addition, Pendleton Woolen Mills also wove tapestries featuring six of my other fine art images in editions of fewer than ten. In 2012 I purchased Pendleton's entire inventory and today my tapestries are available only through my studio. This image first appeared in "Bulls Ain't Supposed to be Rode" in the Contemporary Sportsman Magazine. It was also exhibited at Bonnie Kahn's Wild West Gallery in Portland in 2005.
AUTHOR
Trained as a Cultural Anthropologist at the University of California at Berkeley and Los Angeles during the tumultuous 60s, author and award-winning commercial and fine art photographer Frank Barnett has had a rich, multi-faceted career. From heading marketing and public relations for the University of California Press to founding a carriage-trade bookstore and three fine art galleries, he also owned an advertising and public relations firm for 25 years. His specialty, photojournalism, has taken him from the center of the arena at the famous Pendleton Round-up to the infamous Louisiana State Penitentiary, home of the Angola Prison Rodeo.
For the past 50 years, he has sought access to edgy, outsider subjects from the Berlin Wall to the bedside of his terminally-ill wife, aging nursing home residents, and prison inmates for whom life beyond confinement would never be realized.
His fine art photography includes masterfully executed photomontages. In 1988 Frank co-authored Working Together: Entrepreneurial Couples, published by Ten Speed Press and cemented his reputation as a thought leader in the family entrepreneurial arena. At 80, he is still active as a fine art and commercial photographer. He resides in Salem, Oregon, with his wife and creative collaborator, Martha Solomon. Together, the couple serves museums, corporations, and individuals with award-winning photography, publications, and curated installations. Their next exhibit, "The All American Toy Company – An Oregon Original," is scheduled to open at the Oregon Historical Society Museum in Portland, Oregon, in September, 2019.
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