FotoFest visionaries Fred Baldwin and Wendy Watriss honored by Center forPhotography at Woodstock
Taking a break from preparations for the 2012 FotoFest International Biennial, Fred Baldwin and Wendy Watriss recently traveled to New York State to receive the prestigious Vision Award from the Center for Photography at Woodstock (CPW).
“Fred and Wendy are heavyweights within the photographic arts community,” says FotoFest press coordinator Vinod Hopson. “The award is given in recognition of their 30 years of service to the field of art photography.”
“Fred and Wendy are heavyweights within the photographic arts community,” says FotoFest press coordinator Vinod Hopson. “The award is given in recognition of their 30 years of service to the field of art photography.”
In 1983, Watriss and Baldwin travelled to the south of France to attend the Rencontres Photographiques d’Arles – Europe’s first photography festival. Founded in the late 1960s, the event featured a series of portfolio reviews, where artists could meet directly with curators and gallerists to discuss their work.
When the couple returned to Houston, where Baldwin taught a photojournalism class at the University of Houston, he and Watriss decided to launch a comparable stateside event that could serve as an platform for photographic ideas in the United States.
Hoping to raise the awareness of art photography within the city’s art galleries and institutions, they invited a string of notable photographers – including Helmut Newton – to shoot the 1984 Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo. Watriss and Baldwin generated enough excitement to raise the capital for the 1986 inaugural FotoFest International Biennial.
Much like the Rencontres Photographiques d’Arles, the couple’s event featured a portfolio review component. But while the Arles reviews were extremely casual, with artists and curators meeting in local cafes, FotoFest took a more systematic approach, offering a new model for photographers seeking feedback from the art establishment.
“FotoFest has had a huge impact on other photography festivals,” Hopson said. “Their model for the review process is used throughout the world. Its influence is one of the main reasons for this weekend’s Vision Award.”
“Some of the biggest names in art photography have come through FotoFest,” Hopson continued. Famed Guatemalan photographer Luis Gonzalez Palma recently donated a piece to the organization, saying that “he owed his career” to FotoFest.
“When Luis Gonzalez Palma first showed with us, his pieces sold at auction in the hundreds,” Hopson said. “Now his work typically sells over $100,000.”
The duo recently returned from Moscow, where they organized the FotoFest international portfolio review, in which nearly 200 photographers from Russia, the Ukraine and Belarus had their portolios by 50 experts from 18 nations.
Now they are hard at work on the 14th annual FotoFest Biennial, which will open in Houston on March 16, 2012 and will run for six-weeks with a focus on Contemporary Russian Photography.