Ten free weekend classes, offering in-the-field photography instruction for students aged 15-18.
To sign up, please call Summer Workshops Coordinator Colleen Harriss at 612-872-7494x4 or email colleen@franklinartworks.org.
To sign up, students must submit the following:
* Enrollment form (below) > or download HERE
* Parent permission slip (if student is under 18) > download HERE
* One paragraph describing student’s interest in photography
»»»»»»»»»»»
Student name:
Age:
School:
Preferred Course(s): (please number in order of preference)
___Saturday, June 11 Street Photography
___Sunday, June 12 Homes and Neighborhoods
___Saturday, June 18 Making Sense of the Landscape
___Sunday, June 19 Performed Self-Portraiture
___Saturday, June 25 Unleashed: At the Dog Park
___Sunday, June 26 The Unexpected Portrait
___Saturday, July 10 Daybook Photo Journaling
___Sunday, July 11 Photographing the Urban Portrait
___Saturday, July 16 Taking Stories and Telling Pictures
___Sunday, July 17 Walker Art Center Inside and Out
»»»»»»»»»»»
Contact Information:
Address:
Phone:
Email:
Parent/Guardian Name:
Submit all materials via email to: colleen@franklinartworks.org or mail to Franklin Art Works c/o Colleen Harriss 1021 E. Franklin Avenue S. Minneapolis, MN, 55404 by Friday, May 20.

Thank you for your interest in Franklin Art Works’ Summer Photography Workshops!
Franklin Art Works presents the second year of it’s free summer program in digital photography for students ages 15-18. The program offers 10 free photography workshops covering a range of topics, taking place on Saturday and Sunday afternoons between June 11-July 23, 2011.
The Summer Photo Workshops for Teens Program is completely free. Participants are offered the use of a digital camera, choice of two workshops, and admission to summer photography lectures at Franklin Art Works. Selected students must be highly motivated and interested in learning different styles of photography.
The workshops are taught by twelve acclaimed photographers in a variety of locations across the Twin Cities. Each workshop includes a brief introductory lecture, three hours of shooting, and a final critique. At the end of each workshop, students will work with their instructor and fellow students to select one photograph to be printed and presented in an exhibition of student works at Franklin Art Works on Saturday, July 23.
This is a great opportunity to sharpen your skills, meet other young artists, and make connections with talented local photographers!
Program includes:
- Free use of a digital camera
- Free transportation to off-site classes
- Large-scale printing of one photograph per student
- Inclusion in final public exhibition of student works at Franklin Art Works
In order to make this a dynamic hands-on experience for participants, class size is limited to 6 students per workshop – Interested students should sign up now!
If you have questions or would like to reserve a spot in a workshop, please contact Franklin Art Works’ Program Coordinator Colleen Harriss at 612-872-7494 x 4 or email colleen@franklinartworks.org.
————————-
This activity funded, in part, by the Minnesota Arts and Cultural Heritage Fund as appropriated by the Minnesota State Legislature with money from the vote of the people of Minnesota on November 4, 2008.

Photo by Wing Young Huie
Street Photography
Saturday, June 11, 1-5pm
at Wing Young Huie Photography & Gallery
In this workshop, students will work with Wing Young Huie to learn the art of photographing people you don’t know. Meet at Huie’s studio for tips and techniques, followed by an afternoon of shooting photographs on Lake Street using dynamic questions as tools for interaction.
Wing Young Huie is an award-winning photographer who has received international attention for his many projects that document the changing cultural landscape of his home state Minnesota. His best-known work is Lake Street USA, which in the summer and fall of 2000 transformed six miles of a well-known Minneapolis thoroughfare into one of the most remarkable public art projects in recent memory.

Photo by Tom Wik
Homes and Neighborhoods
Sunday, June 12, 1-5pm
Seward Neighborhood, Minneapolis
Homes and neighborhoods can express a lot about the people who live in them. Spend an afternoon with Tom Wik exploring the Seward Neighborhood learning to capture in a photograph what this unique Minneapolis neighborhood has to say.
Tom Wik is a Minneapolis photographer who enjoys documenting the unique personalities of houses - reflecting the conscious decisions of the past or present owners. In 2007, he was the recipient of a McKnight Fellowship in Photography.
Photo by Beth Dow
Making Sense of the Landscape
Saturday, June 18, 1-5pm
Minnehaha Park
Looking out onto the landscape, what do you see? Explore Minnehaha park with Beth Dow to learn how to make photographic sense of your surroundings.
Beth Dow is a photographer who uses historical references and traditional processes to address contemporary issues of land use and our experience of time. Her work has been exhibited around the world and has received many awards, including Grand Prize in the inaugural Photography.Book.Now competition, top-six finalist in the 2007 Critical Mass Book Award, and fellowships from the McKnight Foundation and the Minnesota State Arts Board. She lives in Minneapolis.

Photo by Peter Haakon Thompson
Performed Self-Portraiture
Sunday, June 19, 1-5pm
Portland Avenue, Minneapolis
Break out of your shell and strike a pose! Learn from Peter Haakon Thompson how to capture yourself in front of the camera using tripods and feedback from fellow students.
Peter Haakon Thompson is an artist whose primary mediums are participation, interaction and conversation. He believes in expanding the idea of what art can be through the blurring of art and life. Some of his works include: The A Project, an effort to create solidarity among artists in their neighborhoods with the use of window signs with a large red ‘A’ indicating a household of artists/artist supporters. In 2004, he co-founded a participatory, temporary community called The Art Shanty Projects, existing every winter for five weeks on frozen Medicine Lake in suburban Minneapolis. In his spare time Thompson ties knots, sails and plays table tennis.

Photo by Peter Latner
Unleashed: At the Dog Park
Saturday, June 25, 1-5pm
at Franklin Art Works
Since the earliest days of photography, the relationship between people and animals has been a great theme for photographers. In this workshop, participants will be visiting a local dog park as a way to explore that connection for themselves. Students will first meet Peter Latner at Franklin Art Works to look at photographs by Elliott Erwitt, Jacques Lartigue (whose greatest pictures were done during his teenage years), William Eggleston, and Garry Winogrand (whose groundbreaking book The Animals changed the way we look at zoos) and then spend the afternoon capturing dogs and their owners in action.
Peter Latner is a photographer whose most recent pictures, made on the Great Plains, stem from long-standing interests in American history, geography, landscape and sense of place. Previous projects include community celebrations; the changing look of Main Street; the upper Mississippi River valley; suburban landscapes; and Civil War battlefields and re-enactors.

Photo by Ellen Skoro
The Unexpected Portrait
Sunday, June 26, 1-5pm
Ellen Skoro’s Studio, Northeast Minneapolis
This workshop is geared towards thinking past the ordinary, functional portrait and making images that reveal deeper layers of the subject and challenge the photographer to be inventive. Ellen Skoro will guide students to discover that the portrait can be dreamlike, surreal, documentary, or theatrical.
Ellen Skoro is an artist who works primarily in color photography, and is interested in making portraits of people. Currently, she is using her love of “people watching” as a way to make intimate and revealing portraits of a group of women that are very close to her.
Photo by Terry Gydesen
Daybook Photo Journaling
Saturday, July 9, 1-5pm
Terry Gydesen’s Studio, Northeast Minneapolis
*NEW* This class about looking. One need go no further than their own neighborhood in search of that ray of light, textures, patterns, person or a decisive moment to keep a photo journal of everyday life. The class will meet at Terry Gydesen’s studio located in the heart of the NE Minneapolis Arts district. After meeting in the studio students will have time to photograph in the neighborhood and return to Terry’s studio to edit and speak about everyone’s favorite images. This will exercise everyday shooting ideas and techniques.
Terry Gydesen has photographed numerous political campaigns, both local and national, since 1988, when she was invited onto Jesse Jackson’s presidential campaign as a staff photographer. In 1995, she was commissioned by Prince to document his European tour. Her work has appeared in the New York Times, Newsweek, and Ms. Magazine. Gydesen has also received several fellowships, including the McKnight Foundation Fellowship and fellowships from the Minnesota State Arts Board.

Photo by Kristine Heykants
Photographing the Urban Portrait
Sunday, July 10, 1-5pm
Minneapolis Warehouse District
Using the streets, alleys, and buildings of the Minneapolis Warehouse District as a backdrop, students will work with Kristine Heykants to examine the art of urban portraiture through a specially-designed “portrait scavenger hunt”.
Kristine Heykants mines our cultural landscape for visual artifacts to manipulate into pictures. Taking influence from the worlds of cinema, painting, and Pop Art, her work seeks to raise questions and provoke thoughts about modern times through the creation of dramatic situations and personas.

Photo by Carrie Thompson
Go, Dog, Go: Talking Stories and Telling Pictures
Saturday, July 16, 1-5pm
Minneapolis Warehouse District
Carrie Thompson and Brad Zellar lead this visual excursion filled with dogs, airplanes, and other wonders of the natural and unnatural worlds. Students will spend the day looking for photos, talking about the stories photos tell, and discussing how best to tell them. Bring a collection of photos and writing materials!
Carrie Elizabeth Thompson is an award-winning photographer who lives and works in the Twin Cities. She has been the recipient of grants from the Minnesota State Arts Board and the McKnight Foundation, and her work has been shown in the Midwest and West Coast. A graduate of Collage of Visual Arts, Carrie is also the is the studio manager for internationally acclaimed photographer Alec Soth.
Brad Zellar has been a writer and editor for City Pages, The Rake, and Utne Reader. His work has appeared in dozens of local and national newspapers, magazines, and journals. He likes dogs and taking pictures.

Photo by 2010 Summer Photo Workshops student Danielle Schlender
Walker Art Center Inside and Out
Sunday, July 17, 1-5pm
Walker Art Center
Back by popular demand! Learn the essentials of photographing interior and exterior architecture in this workshop at the Walker Art Center, exploring parts of the museum that are seldom seen by ordinary visitors. Brett Kallusky and Anthony Marchetti will give tips on capturing the building’s unique lines, lighting, visitors, and artworks.
PLEASE REMEMBER, SPACE IS LIMITED! SIGN UP TODAY: Call Colleen Harriss at 612-872-7494x4 or email colleen@franklinartworks.org.
Loading posts...