Black Shutter Podcast Live: Ruddy Roye

Visit the ICP library as photographer Roddy Roye joins host Idris Talib Solomon for a live taping of Black Shutter Podcast during Late Night ICP. Listen to Roye discuss his decades-spanning documentary practice within Black communities, the collaborative nature of his portraits, and passing on photography to new generations.

About Black Shutter Podcast

The Black Shutter Podcast is a series of conversations with Black photographers filmmakers, editors, and creative business folks. You will hear about their work, their challenges, and their inspirations revolving around photography.

Black Shutter podcast can be listened to directly on the Black Shutter Podcast website. It is also available on Apple Podcasts, Google Play, Spotify or Stitcher. The episode taped at ICP will be released at a later date, to be announced via ICP and Black Shutter Podcast’s social media and digital channels.

Idris Talib Solomon is an award-winning photojournalist and art director. Mr. Solomon has a versatile background in graphic design, photography, video, and art direction. He has several years of experience in advertising and is currently on contract at HBO as an art director.

He has photographed for The New York Times, Amazon Prime TV, HBO, ESPN, Reuters and The Drone Racing League.

He is the host and Creative Director of The Black Shutter Podcast.

Radcliffe Roye is a Brooklyn based documentary photographer specializing in editorial and environmental portraits and photo-journalism photography. A photographer with over twelve years of experience, Radcliffe is inspired by the raw and gritty lives of grass-roots people, especially those of his homeland of Jamaica. Radcliffe strives to tell the stories of their victories and ills by bringing their voices to matte fibre paper. Recently, Radcliffe began experimenting with interpretative photography, preferring to allow the abstract content within the frame to dictate the voice and purpose of the image. His Elements series focuses on the bold, austere, graphic and emotionally raw imagery, that is trapped behind a diffused lens. With painterly abilities, Radcliffe uses this diffused methodology to subtly awake the subconscious and expose the isolated figure or vision painted within a rhetorical frame.











When: Thu., Feb. 22, 2024 at 6:30 pm - 7:45 pm
Where: International Center of Photography (ICP)
79 Essex St.
212-857-0000
Price: Free
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Visit the ICP library as photographer Roddy Roye joins host Idris Talib Solomon for a live taping of Black Shutter Podcast during Late Night ICP. Listen to Roye discuss his decades-spanning documentary practice within Black communities, the collaborative nature of his portraits, and passing on photography to new generations.

About Black Shutter Podcast

The Black Shutter Podcast is a series of conversations with Black photographers filmmakers, editors, and creative business folks. You will hear about their work, their challenges, and their inspirations revolving around photography.

Black Shutter podcast can be listened to directly on the Black Shutter Podcast website. It is also available on Apple Podcasts, Google Play, Spotify or Stitcher. The episode taped at ICP will be released at a later date, to be announced via ICP and Black Shutter Podcast’s social media and digital channels.

Idris Talib Solomon is an award-winning photojournalist and art director. Mr. Solomon has a versatile background in graphic design, photography, video, and art direction. He has several years of experience in advertising and is currently on contract at HBO as an art director.

He has photographed for The New York Times, Amazon Prime TV, HBO, ESPN, Reuters and The Drone Racing League.

He is the host and Creative Director of The Black Shutter Podcast.

Radcliffe Roye is a Brooklyn based documentary photographer specializing in editorial and environmental portraits and photo-journalism photography. A photographer with over twelve years of experience, Radcliffe is inspired by the raw and gritty lives of grass-roots people, especially those of his homeland of Jamaica. Radcliffe strives to tell the stories of their victories and ills by bringing their voices to matte fibre paper. Recently, Radcliffe began experimenting with interpretative photography, preferring to allow the abstract content within the frame to dictate the voice and purpose of the image. His Elements series focuses on the bold, austere, graphic and emotionally raw imagery, that is trapped behind a diffused lens. With painterly abilities, Radcliffe uses this diffused methodology to subtly awake the subconscious and expose the isolated figure or vision painted within a rhetorical frame.

Buy tickets/get more info now