Showing posts with label photography. Show all posts
Showing posts with label photography. Show all posts

6.11.08

20 artistes pour Haiti


Les 15 et 16 novembre 2008 de 11H30 à 20h

Les artistes:
Frantz Absalon - sculpteur • Doris Alb - photographe/plasticienne • Céline Anaya Gautier - photographe • Antoinette et Freddy - créatrices textiles • Ange et Damnation - sculpteurs • Elodie Barthélemy - plasticienne • Alain Blondel - peintre • Charles Carrié - photographe • Christian Courrèges - photographe • Jean-François Fourmond - Photographe • Fred Koenig - photographe • Gary Legrand - peintre • Miguel Marajo - peintre • Natalie Miel - peintre • Ould Mohand - peintre • Christian Nironi - plasticien • Jean-Claude Pattacini - photographe • Chantal Regnault - photographe • Pascal Renaud - peintre/graveur • Christian Sabas - peintre • Lea de Saint Julien - photographe/plasticienne • Roberto Stephenson - Photographe • Clémence Van Lunen - sculpteur

Projections de films en avant-première le 15/11 de 13h30 à 14h30
L'homme bleu de Christian Nironi, 15 min
Atis rezistans: Les sculpteurs de la Grand Rue de Leah Gordon, 34 min, 2008
et Connexion d'Elodie Barthélemy/Fred Koenig, 13 min, 2008

Conte le 15/11 à 17h
par Mimi Barthélémy

Lecture de poèmes le 16/11 à 16h
dits par Stéphane Bataillon, Toussaint Carilien, Jean-René Lemoine et James Noël

Vente d'ouvrages divers...

Les œuvres seront vendues au profit d’actions humanitaires en faveur des sinistrés
affectés par les cyclones d’août et septembre 2008

A l'Usine Springcourt
5 impasse Piver 75011 Paris - métro Goncourt

Retrouvez les artistes et le programme des activités sur www.collectif2004images.org
Contact : info@collectif2004images.org / 01 40 68 03 38

24.6.08

freshfacedandwildeyed08


New Graduates Show
freshfacedandwildeyed08
21 June - 6 July 2008

This show marks the launch of this annual exhibition, presenting the most dynamic new work by visual arts graduates from BA and MA courses across the UK.

Following an online application process, 25 photographers have been chosen. This year our panel of judges were: Melanie Manchot, artist; Sarah Kent, writer and critic; Brett Rogers, Director, The Photographers' Gallery and Marta Weiss, Curator of Photographs, V&A.

The artists in this show are:

Alex Sandwell Kliszynski, Nikki de Grunchy, Philip Ewe, Boris Austin, Rebecca Ayre, Stuart Bailes, Ben Bailey, Murray Ballard, Simon Carruthers, Nikki de Gruchy, Simon Dixon, Philip Ewe, Gavin Fernandes, Paul Greenleaf, Sam Holden, Michal Honkeys, Jesus Jimenez, Neil Montier, Theo Niderost, Akira Rachi, Alex Sandwell Kliszynski, Steve Schofield, Mariah Skellorn, Jan Stradtmann, Rebekka Unrau, Iveta Vaivode, Zoltan Varga and Sally Verrall.

As well as being exhibited at the Gallery, the work is available to view in an Online Gallery.

Mitra Tabrizian: This is that Place


This is the first major UK exhibition of work by Mitra Tabrizian, an Iranian-British photographer and film director whose work combines documentary and film techniques to make elaborate photographic tableaux.

Bringing together a selection of works from the last eight years, the exhibition focuses on the rise of corporate culture, themes of nomadism and migration, and notions of homeland.

The exhibition includes Tehran 2006, a panoramic photograph showing a modern but run-down residential area, populated by a disparate group of people. While it is a constructed photograph, all the characters 'play' themselves: the crowd is a mixture of people who are struggling and those who are living on the edge.

Free entry, until 10 August at Tate Britain.

+ more

21.6.08

Open Submission Photography Exhibition at Phoenix Gallery

Brighton Photo Biennial in association with Brighton Photo Fringe announces

Open Submission Photography Exhibition at Phoenix Gallery
October - December 2008

Selection panel
A distinguished panel of specialists in the field will include David Chandler, Director of Photoworks, Brighton; David Campany, writer and critic; Clare Grafik, The Photographers’ Gallery, London and Val Williams, Curator and Writer.

Details
One person photographic exhibition of recent work at Phoenix Gallery as a featured element of the Brighton Photo Fringe festival and linked to Brighton Photo Biennial.

Eligibility
Mid career photographic artists currently based or working in the UK. Applicants should have a strong background of exhibiting and undertaking related projects on a national/international scale.

Exhibition content
Present an existing body of work which has not been previously exhibited. Work can be in any lens-based medium and should be appropriate to the exhibition space.

Selected artist will receive a fee and budget for presentation of work and related expenses.

Phoenix Gallery is part of a large independent visual arts organisation based in central Brighton. It runs a contemporary exhibition space, artists’ studios and educational activities.

Brighton Photo Fringe is the largest event of its kind in the UK. It offers artists from Brighton, the UK and abroad an opportunity to exhibit their work alongside Brighton Photo Biennial.

To Apply
Please send the following materials on cd or dvd:

1. 20 images in the following format: jpegs, 72 dpi to a maximum of 30 x 25 cm (no powerpoint), or moving image on dvd
2. List of work with titles, dates, formats and duration for moving image
3. Statement up to 500 words about your work and how it might be presented in the gallery space
4. Any specific printing, framing or equipment requirements
5. CV including email and postal address
6. Self addressed stamped envelope if you want your materials to be returned

Send to
Photo Fringe 08
Phoenix Gallery
10 - 14 Waterloo Place
Brighton BN2 9NB
Deadline
8 July 2008

Applicants will be notified at the end of July. Site visits will take place in early August.

For further information about Phoenix Gallery, including updates on this exhibition, and to view a floor plan of the gallery spaces, please visit www.phoenixarts.org.

17.6.08

Taylor Wessing Photographic Portrait Prize 2008

A bit late with this one... but still time to submit an entry. This used to be the Schweppes Prize once, it is now sponsored by Taylor Wessing - a bit easier to spell!

Submissions are now being invited for this prestigious international photographic portrait competition, which celebrates and promotes the very best in contemporary portrait photography. Entry is open to photographers from around the world, aged 18 and over.

The Photographic Portrait Prize at the National Portrait Gallery has established a reputation for its diversity of photographic styles, encompassing editorial, reportage and fine art images submitted by a range of photographers, from gifted amateurs and photography students to professionals.

In the Prize's search for excellence, photographers are encouraged to interpret 'portrait' in its widest sense of 'photography' concerned with portraying people with an emphasis on their identity as individuals.'

This year, the winner of the Taylor Wessing Photographic Portrait Prize 2008 will receive £12,000. In addition the judges, at their discretion, will award one or more cash prizes to the shortlisted photographers.

The Prize will also include the special Godfrey Argent Award, presented for the best portrait taken by a photographer aged 18 and 25.

To enter Online, visit www.npg.org.uk/photoprize between 1 May and 20 July 2008 to register online. You will receive an email confirming your registration number. Photographs must be delivered to London College of Communication either in person or by post/courier between 21 and 25 July 2008. Online registration will ensure a quicker, more efficient, check-in when delivering photographs.

FORMAT International Photography Festival

!call for EXPOSURE exhibitions now open!

Artists working with photography or moving image are invited to submit proposals for new or existing works for display in the FORMAT EXPOSURE exhibitions in non gallery spaces as part of the FORMAT Festival 2009 6th March - 5th April 2009.

These exhibition opportunities are open to any artist/photographer based in the UK or internationally. Selected artists will be included in the FORMAT09 brochure, catalogue, website and will be profiled as part of the festival.

The EXPOSURE exhibitions curated for FORMAT09 will be held in 30 venues throughout Derby city centre ranging from temporary gallery and non-gallery spaces including bars and cafes, university campuses, museums, civic and other public access buildings.

The selection panel includes:

* Louise Clements - Senior Curator FORMAT & QUAD
* Mike Brown - Arts Projects Co-ordinator FORMAT & Derby City Council
* Clare Grafik - Curator The Photographers Gallery
* David Campany - Writer/Curator/Teacher
* Huw Davies - Dean of Arts Design & Technology, University of Derby

The theme for FORMAT09 - PHOTOCINEMA is deliberately broad inviting practitioners to respond in a number of ways;

We are interested in seeing any work that ranges from 'film still' to 'still film'. The theme for FORMAT09 is positioned in the half-light between these two narrative and technical sensibilities, colliding - fact with fiction, historicism with fantasy.

The festival will contain a broad variety of work from artists who can relate to the cinematic through referencing or have the look of films, single images that are so brimming with narrative as if they were a film in one shot, the use of sequencing, directed or documentary photography and moving image from single still to feature film. Works may be derived from/inspired by film, be highly composed and directed, or can be documentary or street photography, in essence regardless of definition the exhibitions included in the festival will need to subscribe to a notion of the cinematic.

FORMAT09 will include the diversity of techniques within photography from darkroom to digital, printed, projected and moving image. Including works that fall within these categories:

* Screen based
* Projected
* Wall mounted
* Web based

Download the application form and more information:
www.formatfestival.com

FORMAT is an International Photography Festival that takes place in the city of Derby, UK, which celebrates the diversity of photographic practice from darkroom to digital. Established international practitioners exhibit alongside the best emerging talent from the UK and beyond.

17.4.08

Gregory Crewdson at White Cube


White Cube Mason's Yard
23 April - 24 May 2008
Preview Tuesday 22 April 2008, 6-8pm


White Cube Mason's Yard is pleased to announce an exhibition of new photographs by Gregory Crewdson. In this latest body of work, shot over the past three years, the artist continues to explore the lush and ragged edges of small-town America. While much of his earlier work focused on character and drama, Crewdson now shows a greater awareness of atmosphere and setting.

Gregory Crewdson shot these photographs in and around the same town in upstate Massachusetts, but the scenery varies widely, from leafy summer landscapes to stark, ghostly interiors and - a first for the artist - austere winter scenes. The surroundings and minor details - the light of a distant interior, the glow from a TV set, a highlight on a patch of muddy snow - are essential elements in the picture's composition, as forceful and significant as any figure. The stillness depicted in each photograph suggests a suspension of everyday life, and yet any hint of narrative or action is deferred by a mood of mystery and incompletion. A man pauses on a wet road in the hazy light of dawn and looks at a modest house; the shopping cart he pushes and the objects it holds are probably his only possessions. A semi-naked couple rest, in post-coital lassitude, surrounded by luxuriant green, with mist rising from the river running in the background. The atmosphere is tactile and moist, the light a substance that seems to cling to the leaves and bodies that occupy the space. The summer photographs bring to mind American realists such as Edward Hopper and Walker Evans, filtered through the damp, saturated colours in the work of eighteenth-century French painters such as Jean-Honoré Fragonard and Jean-Antoine Watteau. The importance of David Lynch and Alfred Hitchcock are evident in the interiors, which have an otherworldly intensity, and paralysis haunts the winter scenes. Overall, Crewdson's vision of everyday America is one of disconnection and belatedness.

This new body of photographs concludes Crewdson's 'Beneath the Roses' series. The full series will be published in a book by Abrams, with an essay by Russell Banks, in conjunction with the exhibition.

Gregory Crewdson was born in 1962 in New York, where he continues to live and work. Solo exhibitions include Palazzo delle Esposizioni, Rome (2007), Hasselblad Center, Sweden (2007), Fotomuseum Winterthur, Switzerland (2006), Kunstverein Hannover, Germany (2005) and SITE Santa Fe, USA (2001). Group exhibitions include Walker Art Center, Minneapolis (2008), V&A Museum, London (2006), Mori Art Museum, Tokyo (2005), Guggenheim Museum, New York (2004) and Museum of Modern Art, New York (2000).

White Cube is open Tuesday to Saturday, 10am to 6pm. For further information, please contact Honey Luard or Sara Macdonald on +44 (0)20 7930 5373.

Relocating Absence


Group exhibition showcasing the work of thirteen internationally emerging artists. Through a variety of media, including sculpture, installation, video, photography and drawing, the exhibition offers a series of artistic interpretations of the theme, often playing with the constants of space and time. Absence, in fact, is essentially temporal – it is located where something was: it lies between the realms of Being (object) and Knowledge (perception, creation of a mental image).

18 April – 4 May 2008
PRIVATE VIEW Thursday, 17 April, 6.30 - 10 pm
Exhibition Talk with the artists, curators and writer on Tuesday, 22 April, 6.30 pm. Free.
Opening hours: Thursday - Sunday 12 am - 5 pm

Elevator Gallery,Mother Studios, Queens Yard, White Post Lane,
Hackney Wick, London E9 5EN

Absence can be intended as a state of being, as a period of time, as a lack, or even desire, or as the inattention to present surroundings or occurrences. All these connotations are encountered in the exhibition, which, in fact, proposes an open-ended investigation of the concepts of belonging, displacement, repetition, visual and literary narrative, emotional and physical distance, as well as archive, memory and diary keeping.
The artists have created presence from absence, erased the pre-existent iconography of presence, drawn the viewers’ gaze to details that would otherwise have remained long unnoticed. These acts of relocating, of replacing, collecting or remembering what was there continue absence into the future: new tangible objects now substitute or relocate a previous absence, soon to leave room to new absences, in the viewer’s mind.

Brada Barassi presents Sei sempre appena andata via (You Have Always Just Gone Away), a video installation exploring the relationship between being, memory and distance through a series of photographs, combined with sound. The images were taken across two countries (UK and Italy) in the space of three years, and the narration is bilingual. The piece questions one’s connection to the idea of belonging through a feeling of displacement, and the interplay of the constants of time and space.

Craig Cooper exhibits a series of roadwork signs, where the informative panels have been removed and substituted with sheets of glass. Devoid of their visual lexicon, they become abstract objects characterized by their own aesthetics, on the boundary between sculptural and painterly. A similar abstraction is shown in Cooper’s maps, where the erasure of text leaves room to a sequence of new grids and thick black lines, denying the initial function of the map as a navigation tool.

Amelia Crouch’s Looking- Capture- Reproduction, a fragmentary narrative in scenes, consists of a series of eight short texts printed on paper and pasted to the wall. Each text is highly evocative of an absent visual image, that the viewer is invited to relocate in his own mind, drawing on his personal visual archive.

Hondartza Fraga exhibits a site specific installation, Incandescent, where the contrast between a series of light bulbs and their skillfully drawn shadows recalls the dichotomy of absence and presence. The perfect miniature scenarios depicted in the shadows become promises that can never be fulfilled, pointing out the isolation and imperfection of the reality they evoke.

Zbigniew Tomasz Kotkiewicz’s The Swimmer is suggestive of an invisible narrative, through the image’s compositional elements as well as the irony of the title. The absence of a figure contrasts starkly with the traces of a human presence, triggering the viewer’s curiosity and visual memory.

Anastasia Loginova’s black and white photographs depict an enchanted girl wrapped in a clear plastic bag, her facial expression frozen. A delicate, almost ethereal narrative frames the suspended gestures of the subject, making them timeless, almost lost.

Michelle Lord exhibits Future Ruins, a series of photographs inspired by J. G. Ballard’s apocalyptic literary fiction, which Lord relocates in Birmingham, using hand made models and rear screen projections. The inhabitants of the city are absent, and familiar, concrete urban structures become occupied by strange assemblages, built from the technological detritus of abandoned television sets, computers and domestic appliances. The images aim to highlight the temporality of landscape, reflecting on lost or ephemeral urban architectures.

Erin Newell’s A Map of the Ocean between my Sister & Me is an unusual record for emotional and physical distance through a personal journey. A collection of water samples from the ocean, this highly intimate archive is presented in a display case - each sample labeled - establishing a connection between a traditional museum display and the exposure of personal memories.

Ellakajsa Nordström exhibits Window View, a multimedia installation documenting one year of performative recordings of the view from her studio’s window, facing the backyard of a row of houses. A collection of detailed diary writings, photographs, video and sound recordings - as well as documentation of performances as a means to explore the view and the artist’s relationship to it - the piece explores the dualism between absence and presence, and questions the realms of narrative, time, space and diary keeping.

Anahita Razmi’s Fall is a participatory installation entailing the viewer to become a sculptural form, crawling into a sleeping bag where a video of a “downfall” in a tube slide is shown. This upside down continuous fall generates in the viewer a strong feeling of displacement, as if he was falling upwards.

Erica Scourti’s Spectrum is a projection of digitally manipulated photographs of world-wide protests and marches, from which the artist has erased all text on banners. Instead of carrying meaning and proclaiming the bearers’ beliefs, the banners turn into colourful, sculptural and painterly objects. Furthermore, being archived according to colour, they become totally abstracted from any political credo.

Mikio Saito and Youngho Lee collaborate as an artists’ duo. Alternating their drawing act, while brainstorming and discussing inspired by the exhibition’s title, they have created a large drawing installation especially for Relocating Absence. They introduce the viewer to a new visionary landscape, populated by a magical cast of characters: a skillfully directed doodling, devoid of narrative, yet suggestive of a million microcosms.

Elisa Tosoni, 2008

Filmobile


FILMOBILE is a network project developed at the University of Westminster bringing together the mobile phone industry, filmmakers and artists working with mobile devices. In April and May 2008 FILMOBILE is organising a major international event consisting of a gallery exhibition, cinema screenings and an international conference. This event will explore the cultural and economic impact brought about by new mobile technologies and initiate debates between artists, the media and the new mobile industry.

The FILMOBILE EXHIBITION at London Gallery West will feature mobile art works by Mark Amerika, Camille Baker, Bebe Beard, Melissa Bliss, Elly Clarke, Romain Forquy, Steve Hawley, Brian House, Brooke A. Knight, Simon Longo, Anne Massoni, Kasia Molga, Sylvie Prasad, Michele Pred, Henry Reichhold, Max Schleser and Jo Thomas.

FILMOBILE EXHIBITION at London Gallery West, Watford Road, Harrow HA1 3TP (tube Northwick Park)
Exhibition Private View:
Thursday 3 April, 5pm – 8pm at London Gallery West
Featuring a live performance by Jo Thomas and Visual Rhythms
Exhibition Opening Times:
4 April to 4 May, 2008. 9 am to 5pm daily

23.3.07

Interruptions in Time - London Gallery West



You are invited to the opening of INTERRUPTIONS IN TIME
Friday 23 March 17.00 - 20.00
10 Year Anniversary of the MA photographic Studies Course
Exhibition continues 24 March - 6 May 2007

>> London Gallery West, University of Westminster
Watford Rd, Harrow, Middlesex, HA1 3TP
Tube: Northwick Park, Metropolitan Line

1.3.07

Photography Ban to reach England

The government is seemingly due to pass a bill to restrain photography in public places. If the bill went through only people with a special ID would be able to take photographs. This is an attack on our civil rights and freedom of expression, especially for us photographers and artists. Yet it involves a lot more than the professionals and amateurs of photography... so many people like to take pictures in public spaces. There are so many digital cameras and cameraphones operating at present, this bill would be a nightmare to enforce. Let's avoid going through the trouble and keep our right to photograph. If the government is so hot on privacy why not get rid of a couple CCTV cameras which saturate the streets of England?

A petition against these measures was submitted by Simon Taylor of Phooto.co.uk on the government's official petition website (http://petitions.pm.gov.uk). Simon states concerning the Bill that "these moves have developed from paranoia and only promote suspicion towards genuine people following their hobby or profession."
The deadline to sign the petition is the 14th of August 2007. The aim is to get 750000 signatures to block the Bill. Only 44000 people have signed the petition so far, so if you read this post, click here for a direct link to the petition. Sign it and spread the word!

8.9.05

"asking for it" - ATLANTIS BRIDGE GALLERY

PRESS RELEASE

ATLANTIS BRIDGE GALLERY
TRUMAN BREWERY
BRICK LANE
LONDON E1 6QL

PRIVATE VIEW 8TH SEPTEMBER 6-10 PM
Exhibition dates 9 - 11 September 2005, 10am-7pm daily.

An international group exhibition, the concerns of which include the individual and the community, landscapes of the environment and landscapes of the mind.

The artist photographers, from Europe, America and the Middle East explore subjects ranging from the city under threat, relationships to both loved ones and strangers, the psychology of the house, physical manifestations of anxiety, and the emotions of melancholy, longing and pleasure. Informed by classical painting, fairy tales and film stills the images variously employ and subvert the forms of portrait, landscape, still life and tableau.
Creating an intercultural dialogue, the works bridge different social, political, cultural and economic contexts. The captured social structures, simple interventions and documentation create debate and narrative which considers the modern urban experience; a series of photographic projects presenting real and illusory places, fictive and actual events, and improbable and plausible memories.
The resulting works present an original exhibition celebrating the creative talents of each person’s individual approach to photography.

Using himself as a principal character Arnis Balcus draws on the aesthetics of cinema to look at sexuality and gender issues in a series of B-movie style stills.
Anne Bourgeois-Vignon employs the imagery of fairy tales to explore landscapes that relate to identity, femininity and the loss of childhood innocence.
The series ‘Outwards’ by Ingerid Jordal explores the issue of self-harm. By focusing on individuals rather than their wounds, the work is concerned with causes as well as symptoms and with the inner self in relation to society.
In ‘Remembrance’ Karen Thordur Nielsen considers how memories carry the heavy burden of our experiences and longings, forming us as the individuals we become.
Dana Katzir’s ‘Talking to Strangers’ is a series of random meetings with strangers on the street. We are confronted with our prejudices and stereotypical views of those we see around us but do not know.
Stuart Leeser’s book follows a journey to investigate the fantasy of his own father. Having not seen him for many years Leeser traces him to Spain, but must confront the reality of his absence.
In his current Untitled series, Kendall Koppe borrows gestures from Baroque and Rococo paintings to be re-used and re-analyzed creating a complex dialogue between representation and production.
Outsiders are the newly ostracized smokers who must smoke outside their workplaces. Through John Nabney’s series of photographs we see them frozen in moments of stolen pleasure and contemplation.
Displaying a series of large scale colour photographs of household refuse, Paul Whittering’s work Compositions oscillates between being both repellent and seductive as we witness the flow of rubbish through time.
Jonathan Chater photographs the urban environment in an attempt to draw a new structure from the disorder of city life. By bringing our attention to the clutter of suburban living, discarded furniture, rubbish dumps and industrial waste, the work questions our aesthetic preference for order over chaos.
Nadja Wehling’s ‘A Family Portrait’ uses the form of Hans Holbein the Younger to tell her family’s story of the generations dominated by her matriarchal grandmother.
‘The Final Frontier’ by Victor Luengo showcases a series of images of the city at night that create an ominous air of the city under siege, with unknown powers bearing down on its isolated and vulnerable inhabitants.
Sharon Tobutt presents ‘Time Ladies & Gentlemen Please’ - an affectionate documentary slide show on traditional London pub culture and its social values.
Toby de Silva’s work explores psychological resonances in landscapes significant for historical events, notorious murders and movie locations. Here de Silva focuses on the houses that featured in iconic horror movies of the 1970s and 80s.
Using humour and irony to confront traditional roles in the home Erin Ganey has created a series of staged still life photographs of domestic labour.
Wayne McDermott calls into question the imminent terrorist threat in London post-9/11 and suddenly and tragically now post-7/7. Setting his work in the family home he has created images that at first seem familiar and secure but which are disrupted by the characters who inhabit each room. Freedom and terrorism are called into question in the ordinariness of these familiar settings.

This is the eleventh annual exhibition of the University of Westminster´s MA in Photographic Studies (MAPS), which reveals the innovative works of 16 international artists.

ASKING FOR IT will coincide with the launch of the Free Range MA showcase at the Truman Brewery.

Notes for editors:
For further information and press images please contact Anne Bourgeois-Vignon on 07903 502 323 or e-mail info@askingforit.co.uk

MAPS is the foremost course in the world for the critical theory and practice of photography. It represents a 120 year tradition of the institution, which was the first to teach photography as an academic subject. Students are drawn to the course united in their desire to master the communicative power of photography to reflect on, challenge and offer alternative views to crucial issues in contemporary culture. Here photography transcends mere illustration and simple aesthetic pleasure to question the certainties assumed in ideas of the home, the family, the coherence of identity and society.

For further information about MA in Photographic Studies at University of Westminster contact:
Andy Golding (A.Golding@wmin.ac.uk)
Head of Photography and Digital Media
School of Media Arts and Design
University of Westminster
Harrow Campus
Harrow HA1 3TP

Alex Hartley @ Victoria Miro



"Don't want to be part of your world is a series of large-format landscape photographs Alex Hartley has taken in remote locations around the world. To these idyllic, desolate vistas he has inserted detailed architectural models meticulously built in relief on the surfaces: deserted geo-domes nestle amongst the rocks of the Mojave Desert, a Bond villain glass-walled retreat sits unassailable on a high Arctic ridge, a crumbling Case Study house sits abandoned on a plain, slowly returning to the California desert. Within the esoteric narratives that the works establish lies a subtle sense of failure, a dystopian vision of architecture and attempts to inhabit the uninhabitable. This exhibition marks a departure from the encased photographs of architectural spaces for which Hartley is well known, and denotes a shift in Hartley’s focus from a formal concern with the representation of space to an interest in how we imagine ourselves within it.

These works reference the collage and photomontage techniques of such architectural visionaries as Superstudio, Archigram and Cedric Price. From the mid-to late-1960s, these and other architects used collage and photomontage to bring to life unrealizable projects – whether idealized and utopian, or impossible to build due to scale and ambition. Hartley’s imagined structures sample the architecture of Buckminster Fuller, John Lautner, and Richard Neutra, and also incorporate portable or temporary dwellings, matching the invented building to the landscape of the photograph. Within the esoteric narratives that the works establish lies a subtle sense of failure, a dystopian vision of architecture and our attempts to inhabit the uninhabitable.

In the project gallery, Hartley presents photographs of an arctic village built for Swiss and Scandinavian scientists conducting research during the International Geophysical Year of 1957 and deserted only months later. The images reveal a slowing of the effects of time, with no signs of decay evident in the shuttered buildings. Zero humidity at the 80th parallel has prevented any physical deterioration of the shelters on the remote ice cap, leaving each preserved exactly as it was left."

16.6.05

photomeetings luxembourg 2005

workshops lectures exhibitions
1st edition at the Centre Culturel de Rencontre Abbaye de Neumünster (CCRN)
Director: Marita Ruiter
Organized by Galerie Clairefontaine
from 27 June to 2 July 2005
Registration until 24 June

photomeetings luxembourg
Tel. +352 47 23 24
info@photomeetings.lu
www.photomeetings.lu

photomeetings luxembourg 2005, Luxembourg's first photo-festival, organized by Marita Ruiter of gallery Clairefontaine, offers a wide spectrum of workshops, lectures and exhibitions:

The Workshops cover techniques from the invention of photography like alternative processing to the digital techniques of today. The workshops are held by:
James Nachtwey, "Images of War and War of Images"
Franco Fontana, "Creativity"
Rodrigo Braga, "Re-signifying photography"
Pierre Gonnord, "Portrait"
Marie Taillefer, "Fashion photography"
Sandra Maria Petrillo, "Prussian Blue. History and practice of the cyanotype"
Michel Medinger, "The argyrotype: A creative choice in contemporary photography"


The Exhibitions will take place at the Centre Culturel de Rencontre Abbaye de Neumünster and the Galerie Clairefontaine, Espace 1 and 2. Works of the following artists will be shown:
James Nachtwey l Franco Fontana l Rodrigo Braga l Pierre Gonnord l Michel Medinger l Roland Fischer l Aitor Ortiz l Stéphane Couturier


The Lectures are:
Erwin Wurm, "About a new idea of sculpture in conceptual photography"
Stéphane Couturier, "Urban archaeology"
Manuel Santos, "The Registrar Crisis, A review of this classic function in Contemporary Documentary Photography"
Christian Caujolle, "Digital Issues"
Klaus Honnef, "Paradox par excellence. Fashion and photography, a multi-faceted relationship"
Peter Weibel, "The democratic promise of photography"
Rolf Sachsse, "The grapes behind the curtain. From the image of the world to the original in photography"
Pierre Stiwer, "The perception of Edward Steichen in Luxembourg in relation to contemporary photography"
Paul di Felice, "The perception of Edward Steichen in Luxembourg in relation to contemporary photography"

9.6.05

Jyrki Parantainen (FIN)

"Orientation"


"57 Optional Spots to Crack the Bone" 2004, 63x80 cm, c-print on aluminium

D-Berlin
Reception with the Artist: Friday, June 10, 7pm

Introduction:
Dr. Andreas Vowinckel

Exhibition:
until July 22, 2005

"The viewer is lead along a radical path through new works by Jyrki Parantainen. The Finnish artist (1962) delves into the depths of the soul and excites it. Violence is the central theme; how we are confronted by it physically and psychologically. Parantainen utilizes the production, combination, and revision of the individual photo as his stylistic means. He thus creates subjective works that intrude deep into the psyche of society.

Parantainen's first solo show at sphn introduces two groups of works. The series entitled "Mystery of Satisfaction" reveals haunting and colour-rich diptychs. The artist attempts to find an answer as to how someone in today's post-religious consumer society may find everlasting gratification. Divergent symbols and pictures collide with one another and thus open a new sensuous space.

In his newest series "Orientation", Parantainen analyses human vulnerability. Pre-existing photographic works are altered. Pins mark the weak points of the body and soul. Taut red strings relegate an unknown, dominating power. These implicit visualizations of taboos and studies about the horrid and the beautiful creep under one's skin."

28.5.05

PHOTOESPAÑA2005 - "Ciudad /City"

VIII Festival Internacional de Fotografía y Artes Visuales


52 exhibitions of more than 100 artists from 20 countries
Bernd and Hilla Becher
William Klein
Stan Douglas
Stephen Shore
Martin Parr
Bertien van Manen
Juan Ugalde
Bill Owens
Keith Haring
Montserrat Soto
Stephen Gill
...
www.phedigital.com

PHE05 comprises 52 exhibitions of the work of more than a hundred photographers and visual artists from 20 countries. Among the great names in this edition are Bernd and Hilla Becher, William Klein, Stan Douglas and Stephen Shore. PHotoEspaña presents new projects produced specifically for the Festival by Martin Parr, Bertien van Manen, Miguel Trillo and Juan Ugalde.

PHE Campus organises workshops in Aranjuez with René Burri, Alberto García-Alix, Donna Ferrato and Massimo Vitali, among others. Oliviero Toscani will give a master class. Encuentros PHE addresses the Festival theme with the participation of architects and urban planners. PHotoEspaña leaves Madrid for the first time. Toledo will host two Official Section exhibitions. IVAM and the Instituto Cervantes join the Festival.

The eighth edition of the International Festival of Photography and the Visual Arts, PHotoEspaña 2005, begins in Madrid on June 1st. Once again, the city's major museums, art centres, exhibition halls and galleries host more than 50 exhibitions with recent projects by outstanding visual artists and images by the great masters of international photography.

PHotoEspaña is photography's fiesta: exhibitions, activities, professional encounters, a portfolio review, workshops and master classes with photographers are all ingredients of a festival that for a month and a half turns Madrid into the world capital of photography.

The title of PHE05 is Ciudad (The City). The 26 exhibitions in the Official Section are characterised by the use of documentary languages and the proximity of artistic work to common experience. Ciudad speaks of current urban reality by taking a journey into our daily existence in the single global city. Ciudad is a route that tests the capacity of visual arts to give form in the richest and most critical way possible to the complex and confusing urban life of our time. It is a proposal committed to the present that describes the global city in which we live and simultaneously inspires in spectators possible interpretations of the future.

In this edition, PHotoEspaña increases the number of exhibitions produced specifically for the Festival. Eleven artists show new projects commissioned by PHotoEspaña.

Twenty-one art galleries and five guest halls participate in the Off Festival.

Communications Manager
Alvaro Matías
Tel. +34 91 360 13 24
E amatias@phedigital.com
www.phedigital.com

International Press
Catherine Philippot
Tel. +331 40 47 63 42
E cathphilippot@photographie.com

© 27.05.2005 Photography-now
www.photography-now.com

23.5.05

The Destruction of Lower Manhattan, 1967

In the future, when people will look back at Sept 11, 2001, they might well say, it was the high point of the American Empire.

New York City has been for many years the center of the New Rome, and we are the Romans. Ironies abound of course, as New York City is perhaps the most democratic city in the Republic and one of the most democratic cities the world has ever known. Never the less, as the Romans before us, there are plenty of people who despise our power, and plenty of people that will never be, nor do they ever want to be, citizens.

Thirty four years ago Bleak Beauty's photographer recorded the demolition of mostly 19th century buildings located below Chambers street in Lower Manhattan. On the east side of the island, near the fish market, room was being made for a new ramp onto the Brooklyn Bridge and for the expansion of Pace College. On the west side, over 12 blocks of buildings were brought down to make way for the future World Trade Center. In 1967, the year these pictures were made, sixty acres of buildings in these two areas were demolished. The photographs were published as a book, sadly called, "The Destruction of Lower Manhattan." [...] more



174 Chambers at Bishops Lane - copyright Danny Lyon



Lower Manhattan viewed from helicopter, 1967 - copyright Danny Lyon

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22.5.05

PHOTO-LONDON

This month is an important one for photography in London. Many events are organised through photo-london, such as exhibitions, book signings by photographers and artist talks. I won't list in this post the events programmed, but do go and check photo-london for more information. There are tons of stuff to see!

18.5.05

2005 Schweppes Photographic Portrait Prize

Call for Entries
Entry forms for the 2005 Schweppes Photographic Portrait Prize are now available:

Call for Entries

Entry Form

For more info check out: http://www.npg.org.uk/live/schweppes.asp

n.b.: All photographs submitted must be delivered at the London College of Communication between Monday 18 and Friday 22 July 2005 (9.00-17.00 only). There is a £12 levy per photograph submitted and a limit of six photographs per application.

Ian Parry Scholarship 2005

The Ian Parry Scholarship 2005 deadline will be Tuesday 21st June. Applications are available by download only from www.ianparry.org

Ian Parry was a photojournalist who died whilst on assignment for the Sunday Times during the Romanian revolution in 1989. He was just 24 years old. The Scholarship was set up by his friends and family in order to build something positive from such a tragic death.

Each year we hold a competition for photographers who are either attending a full-time recognised photography course or who are under the age of 24. Entrants must submit a portfolio of their work and a brief synopsis of a project they would undertake if they won the award. Currently the prize is £1,500 of Nikon camera equipment, and a further £2,500 towards their assignment. Metro Imaging also offer £500 worth of vouchers to the winner and £250 to those awarded highly commended and commended.

As you can imagine this is a significant prize for a photographer and coupled with the continued support of The Sunday Times Magazine, which publishes the winner's work, the scholarship provides an excellent launch into a professional photography career. Year after year, the award has highlighted the work of some of the industry¹s finest emerging talent, all of whom have progressed into professional careers and still support the award. Last year¹s winner, David Hogsholt, has since won a World Press Award for his photographs of Mia, a young drug addict in Denmark.

We are delighted to announce that World Press Photo have agreed to automatically accept the winner onto their final list of nominees for the Joop Swart Masterclass in Amsterdam, as a result of so many of our previous winners having attended this prestigious event in recent years.

Once again, our extremely popular and well-attended print exhibition will take place at the Tom Blau Gallery in London, showing all of the winning entries and an edited selection of images chosen by the judges from work entered into the award. The exhibition will run from 24th August for two weeks.

David Hogsholt

Our key sponsors are: The Sunday Times, Getty Images, Nikon UK

Our thanks to Metro Imaging, British Journal of Photography and the Tom Blau Gallery for their generous support.

Rebecca McClelland , Deputy Director The Ian Parry Scholarship & Sunday Times Magazine becky@ianparry.org 0207 7827391 www.ianparry.org