Carl `Djinn` Lewis` exhibits JazzIcons at the Jazz School

Released on = April 21, 2007, 6:29 pm

Press Release Author = ImajinnWEST

Industry = Entertainment

Press Release Summary = Rare photography laserizes Jazz Legends

Press Release Body = for immediate release






Carl "Djinn" Lewis\' exhibits JazzIcons at the Jazz School



Rare photography laserizes Jazz Legends




Carl Lewis, a pioneer in photographing in-concert laser imagery, merges
his rare captured laser illusions with photographs of jazz legends at
the premiere exhibition of the JazzIcons, Saturday, May 19 at the Jazz
School 2087Addison Street in Berkeley, CA.
A practicing visual artist for almost thirty years working in a variety
of visual media from photography to jewelry, Lewis primarily uses
photography to create abstract and allegorical images. One of his main
concerns is not to lose sight of old techniques while incorporating new
technologies. To this end he studied with Master furniture designer and
sculptor Jose Marmol learning the old world surface treatments used in
the JazzIcons. A blend of two facets work, Mugfiles of jazz artists in
performance, and the captured light laser images of Lumiere Capturee
Carl adds the 'human touch' to the resultant giclee prints through old
world finishes such as gold leaf or eggshell.
The exhibition includes "Byrd-Man" of trumpeter Donald Byrd; "Mingus-inspired" a
bass-formed multihued laser image; and "El Corazon en Clave," featuring Bay Area
percussionist Pete Escovedo.

The JazzIcons project began as a 2004 dialogue between Lewis, ex-Basie trombonist
Nelson Harrison and North Bay saxophonist Marcia Migét as a way to educate young
people to Classical American music (Jazz) and its impact on the world. The 2006
splash of MeeJ, a flute-nosed, keyboard-chested, sax-winged creature paired with her
signature sound on Migét\'s site was followed by the 2007 IAJE Convention birth of
Harrison's Betto. Developing characters like these are part of Carl's animated
education concept.
"I see Jazz as incorporating the same concept of using classical elements to make
modern imagery.", Lewis says "As we evolve from a creative to a merchandising
vehicle for jazz musicians, we can capture an audience that responds to visual media
and needs more intellectual stimulation as well as information. We're currently
working on a series of Blues and Latin icons to tap other markets."

Lewis\' imagery is in the collections of such institutions as Texas Instruments, the
Brooklyn Museum, the Schomburg Collection for Research into Black Culture, the
Houston Museum of Fine Arts, the Amon Carter Museum and the Smithsonian.

In 1993 he was selected to be one of ten artists included in the Smithsonian
Institution\'s African American Museum Project, co-author of Lumiere Captureé
(Captured Light), an overview of the history of laser imagery as art Lewis is listed
in a number of publications, such as African American Lives by Henry Louis Gates and
Evelyn Brooks Higginbotham, Black Photographers 1940-1988 a bio-bibliography and
Deborah Wills\' Reflections in Black; Black Photographers 1940 to the Present.



Select images from Lewis\' work are on www.imajinnation.com, AllAbout Jazz.com,
CharlesMingus3.com and available on demand through the New Lab in San Francisco.

Founded in 1997, the JazzSchool preserves and promotes jazz and related music styles
through a comprehensive program combining study and performance with world class
music educators and musicians. Hailed as one of the most comprehensive jazz schools
in the country, the Jazz School offers instrumentalists and vocalists of all ages
and levels a broad spectrum of performance and lecture classes, short-term workshops
and private instruction.

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Web Site = http://www.imajinnation.com

Contact Details = Contact: Joe Scribe

imajinnWESTinworld

415.258.8122

info@imajinnation.com

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