too much chocolate: photo blog

I was introduced to this photo blog today. There are a few different sections here but Rotating Gallery is an interesting idea. There are numbers of good images and interesting conversations. I liked the interview series by Shawn Records. He interviewed Richard Renaldi, Alec Soth and Jason Fulford about book publishing.

"too much chocolate is an online photo exhibition/dialogue space run by photographer Jake Stangel. This site aims to serve and connect editorial, fine art, and commercial photographers all over the internet by focusing on dialogue, support, and exposure within the online photo community. I hope it transfers into real world relationships and photographic growth for its readers.

This space also (attempts) to function like a co-op in form: readers are encouraged to contribute site by authoring their own interviews and features of their own design/content. If interested, I encourage you to get in touch with me via the contact form above with your idea or proposal.

You can follow too much chocolate on TWITTER and/or FACEBOOK.

Sitemap:

  • Rotating Gallery: The rotating gallery features the work of an emerging photographer, as well as an interview with him or her. It changes every Wednesday. The gallery is based off of ‘collective curatorship’, where the photographer from the preview week selects and interviews a photographer for the upcoming week, then that person chooses/interviews someone for the next week, etc.
  • Interviews: A section full of conversations with established photographers, photo editors, art buyers, curators, etc. that explore issues in photography.
  • Sunday Showcase: Shows a collection of work from one photographer- from a startup to an established shooter- each Sunday. Ideally, it will be a nice place to visit, with coffee in hand on Sunday mornings, possibly as you nurse a hangover.
  • Forum: A place to have living conversations between photographers about anything on your mind. In a nice environment of inclusion, resource-sharing, and philosophical dialogue." (copied from the site:http://toomuchchocolate.org/)