date & photographer unknown    
July 29, 2022
Night Vision ~ the dwellings of dj whelan
photo by Styrous® 
Dwelings by dj whelan is showing in the exhibition Night Visions at the Gray Loft Gallery in the Jingletown section of Oakland. The
 show will run until September 3, 2022.           
whelan
 says the wanderings of her parents in the seventies taught her the 
beauty of making somehing out of nothing. She made a home wherever she 
found herself. This is reflected in her series entitled, dwelings, which she started in 1996. She now has her studio in Berkeley, California.    
Other artists in the exhibition: Llane Alexis, Isaac Amala, Abel Soto Díaz, Vita Hewitt, Esther
 Hilsenrad, Mariana Varela and Caleb Yono.        
Gray Loft Gallery 
2889 Ford Street
Third Floor
Oakland CA
94601      
News Flash! December Violets in Night Vision
photo by Styrous® 
December Violets by Tom White has been added to the exhibition Night Visions at the Gray Loft Gallery in the Jingletown section of Oakland. This also is a work from his new series, Drawn & Quartered (link below).          
The
 show will run from July 30 to September 3, 2022, with an opening 
reception on Saturday, July 30, 2022, from 5 to 8 PM.             
Other artists in the exhibition: Llane Alexis, Isaac Amala, Abel Soto Díaz, Vita Hewitt, Esther
 Hilsenrad, Mariana Varela, DJ Whelan and Caleb Yono.        
Gray Loft Gallery 
2889 Ford Street
Third Floor
Oakland CA
94601      
Night Vision articles/mentions
Bryan & Vita Hewitt ~       
dj whelan ~ dwellings          
Tom White ~  
         Llane Alexis  - Mask 
date & photographer unknown
Esther Hilsenrad jewelry in Night Vision @ the Gray Loft Gallery
Esther Hilsenrad will be presenting her jewelry in the exhibition Night Visions at the Gray Loft Gallery in Oakland.           
The
 show will run from July 30 to September 3, 2022, with an opening 
reception on Saturday, July 30, 2022, from 5 to 8 PM.             
photos by Styrous® 
The
 show was curated by Isaac Jasper Amala who will be showing his work as 
well as other artists: Llane Alexis, Abel Soto Díaz, Vita Hewitt, Mariana Varela, DJ Whelan and Caleb Yono.        
Gray Loft Gallery 
2889 Ford Street
Third Floor
Oakland CA
94601      
Viewfinder links:             
 
Net links:       
Rupert Hine articles/mentions
July 27, 2022
Tom White ~ La Sonámbula @ the Gray Loft Gallery
 ~         
 Tom White ~ La Sonámbula 
photo by Styrous® 
Tom White will be presenting La Sonámbula (The Sleepwalker), a work from his new series, Drawn & Quartered (link below), in the exhibition Night Visions at the Gray Loft Gallery in the Jingletown section of Oakland.           
The show will run from July 30 to September 3, 2022, with an opening reception on Saturday, July 30, 2022, from 5 to 8 PM.             
The show was curated by Isaac Jasper Amala who will be showing his work as well as other artists: Llane Alexis, Abel Soto Díaz, Vita Hewitt, Esther Hilsenrad, Mariana Varela, DJ Whelan and Caleb Yono.        
Gray Loft Gallery 
2889 Ford Street
Third Floor
Oakland CA
94601      
Edward R. Murrow articles/mentions
July 15, 2022
Gray Loft Gallery ~ Mid-Summer Soirée
 ~     
This Saturday there will be a special one-day event, a Mid-Summer Soirée, to benefit the Gray Loft Gallery in Jingletown, Oakland. The funds raised from the event will be used to produce future exhibitions at the gallery which promotes Bay Area artists.        
The show will feature paintings by Betty Jo Costanzo, jewelry by
Dorie Meister, photography by Jan Watten, wet plate collodion tintypes by
Jenny Sampson, and collaborative jewelry by Dorie Meister and Jenny Sampson.         
In addition to the artists listed above there will be brush and ink drawings by Wen Chi created during the 1970's.  
Viewfinder links:             
 
Net links:       
July 14, 2022
Leroy E. Burney & Camel Cigarettes ~ A youthful reminiscence
Sixty-five years ago, in July of 1957, The U.S. surgeon general, Leroy E. Burney, reported that there was a direct link between smoking and lung cancer.          
Was anybody listening to him?                
date & photographer unknown  
Ten
 years later, fifty-five years ago, it was about this time of the year I
 did listen to what he had to say and indeed, quit smoking the dreadful cancer sticks.        
I recall as far back to the forties hearing adults who smoked them saying, "These 
cigarettes are going to be the death of me!" A couple of slang terms for them 
was cancer sticks and "coffin nails." So, everybody knew WAY before 1957!       
I
 started to smoke when I was 13. All the cool guys in school smoked; I 
wanted to be cool, so, I lit up with the rest of them.              
Of
 course, I was not old enough to actually buy cigarettes so I stole what
 my father smoked. He smoked unfiltered Camels! When I remember that now
 I think to myself, "Yech!" This iconic style of Camel is the original unfiltered cigarette sold in a
 soft pack, known as "Camel Straights" or Regulars.         
Camel cigarette package front 
Camel cigarette package top & back 
Camel is an American brand of cigarettes, currently owned and manufactured by the R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company in the United States and by Japan Tobacco outside the U.S. Winston-Salem, North Carolina, the city where R. J. Reynolds was founded, is nicknamed "Camel City" because of the brand's popularity.         
The photograph used for the Camel design was taken on September 29, 
1913, by Andrew Jackson Farrell, a Winston-Salem based photographer. 
Farrell and Mr. R. C. Haberkern of the R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company went to 
the Barnum & Bailey Circus to photograph a camel and a dromedary to 
use in the design for a "brand of Turkish Cigrettes which we [Reynolds 
Tobacco] are about to put on the market."
 "The label's background of temples, minarets, an oasis, and pyramids 
was much like it is today, but the camel in the foreground was a 
pathetic, one-humped beast with short, pointed ears, two-pronged hoofs 
and a drooping neck.                      
Its popularity peaked 
through the brand's use by famous personalities such as news broadcaster
 Edward R. Murrow, whose usage of them was so heavy and so public that the smoking of a Camel no-filter became his trademark. But there were many other celebrities who promoted the brand . . . 
American professional baseball players . . .   
 . . . movie stars . . . 
. . . singers . . .  
 . . . and even DOCTORS! 
In
 1946, Camel advertised their cigarettes as being the favorite choice 
among doctors "from every branch of medicine", making smokers believe it
 was safe to smoke them. The slogan "More doctors smoke Camels than any 
other cigarette" became the mainstay of Camel advertising until 
1952.       
Ads featuring the slogan were seen in a range of media, including medical journals such as the Journal of the American Medical Association, television commercials, popular radio programs such as Abbott and Costello and magazines such as Life and Time. The slogan was claimed to be based on surveys by "three leading independent research organizations"; however, these surveys were conducted by RJ Reynolds's advertising agency, the William Esty Company, and included free cigarettes for the doctors who were interviewed.
Ads featuring the slogan were seen in a range of media, including medical journals such as the Journal of the American Medical Association, television commercials, popular radio programs such as Abbott and Costello and magazines such as Life and Time. The slogan was claimed to be based on surveys by "three leading independent research organizations"; however, these surveys were conducted by RJ Reynolds's advertising agency, the William Esty Company, and included free cigarettes for the doctors who were interviewed.
In late 1987, RJ Reynolds created "Joe Camel", a totally sleazy character, as a brand mascot to attract a younger generation as the current one was
 dying off. "Joe Camel always had a sexy woman in the ad some where.    
The New York Times reported: 
Joe Camel was actually born in Europe. The caricatured camel was created in 1974 by a British artist, Nicholas Price, for a French advertising campaign that subsequently ran in other countries in the 1970s. Indeed, [advertising executive John E.] O'Toole recalled a visit to France many years ago during which he glimpsed Joe Camel wearing a Foreign Legion cap. The inspiration behind Mr. Price's cartoon was the camel, named Old Joe, that has appeared on all Camel packages since the brand's initial appearance in 1913.
But
 RJ Reynolds didn't ignore the ladies; the company used men in sensual 
and erotic situations in their ads to lure the fair creatures with the 
come-on, "One of a kind."     
In 1991, the 
American Medical Association published a report stating that 5- and 
6-year-olds could more easily recognize Joe Camel than Mickey Mouse, 
Fred Flintstone, Bugs Bunny, or even Barbie. This led the 
association to ask RJR to terminate the Joe Camel campaign. RJR 
declined, but further appeals followed in 1993 and 1994. On July 10, 
1997, the Joe Camel campaign was retired and replaced with a more adult 
campaign which appealed to the desires of its mid-20s target market. 
Camel paid millions of dollars to settle lawsuits accusing them of using
 Joe Camel to market smoking to children.               
Camel facts
In 1913, Richard Joshua "R. J." Reynolds, founder of the company,
 innovated packaged cigarettes.
 Prior cigarette smokers rolled their own, this tended to obscure 
the potential for a national market for a pre-packaged product. Reynolds
 worked to develop a more appealing flavor, creating the Camel 
cigarette, which he so named because it used Turkish tobacco in imitation of then-fashionable Egyptian cigarettes. Reynolds priced them below competitors, and within a year, he had sold 425 million packs.               
Camel cigarettes contain a blend of Turkish tobacco and Virginia tobacco
  to have a milder taste than established brands. They were 
advance-promoted by a careful advertising campaign that included 
"teasers" simply stating "the Camels are coming", a play on the old 
Scottish folk song The Campbells Are Coming.
 Another promotion was "Old Joe", a circus camel driven through towns to
 attract attention and distribute free cigarettes. The brand's slogan, 
used for decades, was "I'd walk a mile for a Camel!"         
The Reynolds marketing gave the impression all was homey, safe and sound when smoking cigarettes.    
Natasha Lyonne, of Orange Is the New Black and Russian Doll fame, and Chloe Fineman did a great send up about the dying art of smoking cigarettes on  Saturday Night Live earlier this year (link below).               
According
 to Harry Berkowitz of the Seattle Times, in the early nineties Nicolas Price, the British 
artist who created the tremendously successful Joe Camel caricature says
 he is "mortified" that the advertising campaign appears to have enticed
 youths into smoking, and he would stop the ad campaign if he could. "On
 one level it's flattering that the character has been effective," Price
 said. "But on a more personal level, because of the way it was used, I 
am mortified." (link below)           
All aspects of life and the working condition were utilized for the ad promotions. 
And there were urban legends that grew from the brand; such as the ones about the image of Mae West, a lion or a naked man sporting an erection that was supposedly secretly embedded in the image of the camel on the pack.    
Viewfinder links:          
Maureen O'Sullivan         
Net links:          
The Easter Egg Archive ~ Camel Cigarette Packs Easter Egg       
Seattle Times ~ Use Of Joe Camel Ads In U.S. `Mortifies' Figure's Creator    
The Straight Dope ~ Camel cigarettes and the subliminal naked man    
Smoking Room ~ Hidden Message Behind Camel Cigarette Logo         
YouTube links:          
SNL ~ Cigarette Show
 I know because I've done it thousands of times."  
Styrous® ~ Thursday, July 14, 2022        
~
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