When the photographer Garry Winogrand died in 1984 he left behind hundreds of thousands of unpublished negatives and undeveloped rolls of film\xa0and a few out of print books that are still treasured by connoisseurs and photo book collectors today. It\u2019s always bothered Leo Rubinfien that\xa0his friend Garry\u2019s legacy is bound up with these hard to find books, for leo a much better way to appreciate the genius of Garry Winogrand is through his slideshows. Recently\xa0Leo Rubinfien\xa0got an opportunity to show the world the Garry Winogrand he knew and loved,\xa0 SFMOMA \xa0invited him to guest curate a Winogrand show. The exhibit \xa0took years\xa0to put together, and at the outset SFMOMA\u2019s\xa0assistant curator of photography Erin O\u2019toole was nervous, but she tells us why she is now in the cult of Winogrand too. \xa0While your host was in Australia this summer he met up with one of his new favorite artists, the cartoonist Simon Hanselmann. Simon is one of the most compelling voices of his generation, but while\xa0his characters are all sex, drugs, and rock and roll Simon just works. Also we reminisce about the early days of the web with ToE regular Peter Choyce who believes he had one of the first ten blogs. Three reminders\xa0that being\xa0an artist will always be hard.
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