Paddle8 Benefit Auction

Paddle8 Benefit Auction Ending Soon!

BIDDING CLOSES ON TUESDAY, APRIL 23 at 9PM EST

Down to the last few days of bidding on some amazing images hosted at this Paddle8 Boyd’s Station Benefit Print Auction supporting the Boyd’s Station Project 306.36 Documentary program and the Reinke Grant for Visual Storytelling and the Mary Withers Rural Writing Fellowship. If you are a fan of what Boyd's Station has been working to make happen for student journalists and artists, please SHARE this link to this benefit print auction benefiting Boyd's Station hosted by our friends over at Paddle8.

Check out the Boyd’s Station Benefit Auction at Paddle8 here: https://pdl8.co/2Ka2Q5R

Take a look and bid at the Paddle8 auction here: https://pdl8.co/2Ib0ocQ

The more you SHARE, the more the word gets out about this benefit making this a big success for Boyd's Station.

This is the second time the arts and visual documentary nonprofit Boyd's Station has partnered with Paddle8 for a benefit auction hosting a collection of some amazing and not usually seen works by dozens of photojournalists available for bidding!

Dozens of photojournalists offered up work for this benefit, actually, more work was graciously offered than we could accommodate in this benefit! It is great to have so many friends of Boyd's Station program offering to help out! We can't thank all of you enough as well as our great friends at Madison Photo Works in Covington, Kentucky who have graciously provided all of the printing services for this benefit auction.

PLACE+SPACE Welcomes NYC Artists Ryan Bock and Axel Cajas

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Boyd's Station is kicking off the PLACE+SPACE residence program welcoming New York City artists Ryan Bock and Axel Cajas arriving in Harrison County and Boyd's Station.

Both Ryan and Axel will be working out of the Boyd’s Station Shop Studio Space all of April creating work from found local items and materials.

The Clifford Craig Heritage Farm is supporting this first official Boyd's Station PLACE+SPACE residency by opening up a 100-plus year-old home on the property and welcoming the two artists to choose stored and forgotten furniture to be used in their created work while in Boyd as well as other welcoming the artists to explore and find other elements from the Boyd farm and the woods on the farm's property.

Boyd's Station and the Ki Smith Gallery are partnering to support these artists. Ryan's work created in Harrison County will be exhibited at the Ki Smith Gallery in New York City in October 2019.

https://www.boydsstation.org/about-place-plus-space

FORTY AWARD-WINNING PHOTOJOURNALISTS WORK BENEFITTING THE NONPROFIT BOYD’S STATION

KI SMITH GALLERY BENEFIT AUCTION FOR BOYD’S STATION

Witness: Beauty in the Truth

 FORTY AWARD-WINNING PHOTOJOURNALISTS WORK BENEFITTING NONPROFIT BOYD’S STATION

Captured by some of today’s most acclaimed photojournalists, this impressive collection of photographs depicts some of the most famous moments in recent history. These iconic images have circulated the globe in internationally-respected publications, but are rarely available to the public as authenticated, museum quality prints. 

 The Ki Smith Gallery Benefit Print Auction for Boyd’s Station opens with a public reception on Thursday, March 7, 2019 at 6PM-10PM showcasing over 70 large prints displayed and made available for this special silent auction benefit.

OPENING NIGHT RECEPTION

Thursday, March 7, 2019 – 6-10PM

Ki Smith Gallery, 712 W 125th St, New York, NY 10027

Special Guest Photographer Presentations and Talks at Ki Smith Gallery

Friday, March 8 and Saturday, March 9 

Friday, March 8, 2019

  • Michael E. Keating, Hoosier Hardwood Documentary Project at 6PM

  • Gary Hershorn, Chasing the Moon NYC at 8PM

Saturday, March 9, 2019

  • Astrid Riecken, Reportage and Collage at 6PM

  • Jeff Swensen, American Reportage at 8PM

https://www.instagram.com/garyhershorn/?hl=en

https://jeffswensen.photoshelter.com/index

https://astridriecken.photoshelter.com/portfolio

https://www.hhphotoproject.com/

This Ki Smith Gallery benefit will support the Boyd’s Station Project 306.36 and the mentoring and training of tomorrow’s documentary photographers and journalists through the innovative Boyd’s Station Reinke Grants for Visual Storytelling and the Mary Withers Rural Writing Fellowship located in the beautiful Bluegrass Region of Harrison County, Kentucky.

ALL PROCEEDS from each print auctioned during this event will FULLY BENEFIT the visual documentary programs sponsored by the arts and journalism nonprofit Boyd’s Station.

These beautiful prints have been printed courtesy of Madison Photo Works in Covington, Kentucky exclusively for this benefit auction.

All horizontal prints are Digital C-Prints printed on 24” x 20” Kodak Endura photographic paper with 2” white borders on top and sides. All vertical prints are Digital C-Prints printed on 24”x 16” Kodak Endura photographic paper with 2” white borders on top and sides. Each print is signed by the photographer on front (recto) at bottom right of each image with archival black signing pen.

If you cannot attend the events at the Ki Smith Gallery in NYC, you can view the entire collection and bid on these benefit images here.   www.boydsstation.org/nyc

2019 Reinke Grants for Visual Storytelling and Mary Withers Rural Writing Fellowship Announced

Boyd’s Station is honored to announce three 2019 Reinke Grant for Visual Storytelling recipients and proudly awards the first Mary Withers Rural Writing Fellowship.

The 2019 Reinke Grant recipients are Ohio University’s Michael Johnson, Ball State University’s Stephanie Amador and Kent State University’s Nathaniel Bailey.

The first Mary Withers Rural Writing Fellowship is awarded to Ohio University’s Margaret Heltzel.

An impressive and competitive field of student visual documentary photographers and journalists from 21 university programs applied for these grants and fellowship. The grants and fellowship provide recipients an intense 12-week opportunity to document the people and places of the nearly 300 square miles of Harrison County, Kentucky as part of Boyd's Station’s 306.36 Visual & Writing Documentary Project.

Submitted applications and portfolios were evaluated by a selection committee including Nikki Kahn, formerly of the Washington Post, Stephen Crowley, formerly of the New York Times, Michael Keating, formerly of the Cincinnati Enquirer, Jeff Swensen of American Reportage, Andrew P. Scott from USA TODAY, Cara Owsley of the Cincinnati Enquirer, Carrie Cochran of the E.W. Scripps Company, Amy Kinsella Gruber, Brad Mangin, Lisa Bardin and Neil Rush.

The Reinke Grant is named in honor of Ed Reinke, an award-winning Associated Press photographer and mentor to countless photojournalists. Ed died in 2011 following an injury he suffered while covering an Indy Car race at Kentucky Speedway in Sparta, Kentucky.

The Mary Withers Rural Writing Fellowship is awarded in the memory of Mary Elizabeth Withers who passed away on Sunday, March 11, 2018 at her home in Boyd, Kentucky. A life-long Harrison County resident, Mary was instrumental in the founding of Boyd’s Station serving as one of the founding board of directors. Mary was a passionate supporter of the historic Boyd Methodist Church, the arts, education and Harrison County, Kentucky. She is truly missed.

2019 REINKE GRANT FOR VISUAL STORYTELLING RECIPIENTS

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Michael Johnson, Ohio University

“I try to seek out the quiet moments to better understand people. I feel determined when someone includes me in a part of their everyday life. Catching someone in an instance of quiet can tell more about the person than they could with their own words.”

Stephanie Amador, Ball State University

“I'm curious about how people affect their community. Just like myself, there's an identity that needs to be explained. I listen and empathize to people's story because their life reflects on their community.”

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Nathaniel Bailey, Kent State University

“Documentary photojournalism allows others to see people they would likely never meet and it allows them to view places they would normally never be. By doing so, excellent storytelling can broaden our understanding of what each of us as humans share.”

2019 MARY WITHERS RURAL WRITING FELLOWSHIP RECIPIENT

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Margaret Heltzel, Ohio University

“I know a little about a lot. Conversations come easily that way. I have been a livestock handler at Mount Vernon Estate since I was 14 years old. There, I learned how to drive horses and oxen, cultivate fields using an 18th-century plow, assist ewes in lambing, sheer sheep, and curate history. The job requires teamwork, calmness, and a certain meticulousness. As a journalist, I have to be a decent writer. I can research, interview subjects, and put sentences together to create a story. In a way, journalism is like farming. Both require patience, observation, and cultivation. Truth drives success. Hardships inspire innovation.”