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ANTONE DOLEZALGhost Town  Traveling through the High Plains of...

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ANTONE DOLEZAL
Ghost Town 


Traveling through the High Plains of Oklahoma instills an immediate sense of loneliness. The very nature of this landscape cannot hide the abandoned homes and dying communities that have long plagued this part of the country. Flea markets are in abundance, offering a clear sign of the future for towns located in what is geographically referred to as No Man’s Land.

Ravaged during the Dust Bowl, the panhandle of Oklahoma was the epicenter of one of the worst man-made disasters in American history. With great pride, the affected communities bounced back, becoming stronger and rebuilding sustainable farmland. But as the generations have passed, the reasons to stay have become fewer, causing many of these towns to once again find a communion with the dust.

The photographs in this series explore the myth of No Man’s Land. A land that during certain years was an unsustainable environment — spurring the violent uprooting of whole families and small towns — while in other years has produced record crop yields. It is a place that holds the heavy weight of history and tall tales. Legendary cowboys and outlaws have roamed through the High Plains of Oklahoma — the ghosts of the past becoming more intriguing than the realities of the present. And while the old tales and rough exterior may tell one side of the story, another can be found in the rare glimpse of ephemeral beauty that exists in this complicated land.

Antone Dolezal is a New Mexico based photographer and writer. He is a member of the new media collective Finite Foto, and his writing has appeared in various photographic publications including photo-eye Magazine and Fraction. Antone received a Bachelor of Fine Arts from Santa Fe University of Art and Design in 2006.


WUD: Four Walks in the Fictional WoodsPublished by Tangerine...

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WUD: Four Walks in the Fictional Woods
Published by Tangerine Press

Inspired by Russell Hoban’s classic novel Riddley Walker. Four photographers, four sections in four limited editions. Featuring new and original work by Alexander Binder, Ellie Davies, Grant Willing and Jonathan Illingworth.

160 pages. 68 images (38 colour and 30 b&w), printed facing page only on 135gsm White Fedrigoni Symbol Tatami paper. Very large format, approx. 9”/225mm wide x 13”/325mm tall. Handbound at the Tangerine Press workshop, using acid-free papers and boards, conservation glue, hemp cord; distinctive Tangerine logo stamped onto the front cover; 3-colour title page. A unique, never to be reprinted, very large format deluxe photography book, available in 4 ultra-limited editions. All editions are signed by all contributors.

ALEXANDER BINDER
German born Binder’s photos have been exhibited internationally, most notably at festivals likeVoices-Off/Les Rencontres d’Arles and PhotoIreland. His work has appeared in Vice, Twin, GUP, Juke, Photografia, Suddeutsche Magazin, New Yorker and DazedDigital. His publications with Morel Books, Allerseelen and Infestation, are out-of-print and very collectable. 

GRANT WILLING
US photographer Willing lives and works in New York City. His photos have been featured in a number of print and online publications including Hijacked, A Field Guide to the North American Family, and NY Arts Magazine (interview).

ELLIE DAVIES
Davies’ work has been exhibited widely both in the UK and abroad, including six solo shows, the most recent at the Richard Young Gallery in London. She has been featured in many publications including Silvershotz, Urbanautica, Lens Culture, Art Ukraine, F-Stop Magazine, Photo+Magazine, Entitle Magazine, Fuzion Magazine, Le Monde Magazine. Davies’ work has been exhibited widely both in the UK and abroad, including six solo shows, the most recent at the Richard Young Gallery in London. She has been featured in many publications including Silvershotz, Urbanautica, Lens Culture, Art Ukraine, F-Stop Magazine, Photo+Magazine, Entitle Magazine, Fuzion Magazine, Le Monde Magazine. 

JONATHAN ILLINGWORTH
Yorkshire born Illingworth currently lives in South East London with a partner and three children. He has had three exhibitions with Viewfinder Gallery, London.


© Tangerine 

JON RAFMAN‘9 Eyes’ MAMA: Showroom, Rotterdam19.01.2013 -...

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JON RAFMAN
‘9 Eyes’

MAMA: Showroom, Rotterdam
19.01.2013 - 17.02.2013

MAMA’s first exhibition of 2013 is by Jon Rafman. Rafman’s 9 Eyes project is made up of a collection of screenshots taken from Google Street View. 9 Eyes is probably the best representation of the contemporary ‘connected’ world. Like a modern-day flaneur, Rafman wanders through Street View searching for the most bizarre, eerie, and beautiful images and places. 9 Eyes currently consists of hundreds of images and is a work in progress.

Rafman began exploring Street View in 2008, the year of its launch as part of Google Maps. One of his tactics is to follow the Google car’s latest routes so he can visit cities and regions that have been documented only recently. This means there’s less chance that Google has already changed or blurred the strangest and most unexpected images. Rafman’s work has a large online following, “I’m famous with Tumblr kids, they’re my demographic.”

© MAMA 

THE SALT YARD, THE NEW PLACE FOR PHOTOGRAPHY IN HONG KONG Hereby...

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THE SALT YARD, THE NEW PLACE FOR PHOTOGRAPHY IN HONG KONG

Hereby few images from our recent exhibition at The Salt Yard, Hong Kong. The new gallery is pretty amaizing and is run by Dustin Shum, Lit Ma and Gary Ng. The new vision promoted by this formidable trio distinguishes the management of this space, which was once an industrial building, now converted into a gallery, reading room and studio. The Salt Yard is proposed as an alternative space in Hong Kong, creating an independent curatorial project closer to the social rather than commercial.

With a magnificent corner for reading magazines and photography books selected with great care, The Salt Yard is also proposed as a space for learning, discussion and dialogue for photography enthusiasts. Far from the cold and empty of contemporary galleries, The Salt Yard is proposed as a new reference in the cultural life of the city. Definitely a place to visit for those who have the occasion to pass by.

Read more about the Mother Russia exhibition curated by Steve Bisson and featuring photographers Olga Chagaoutdinova, Anastasia Khoroshilova, Alla Esipovich and Sasha Rudensky HERE:
 

© The Salt Yard

Dancing Darkness // Zeitgenössische Fotografie

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Group exhibition by curated by Elliott Paul GrantGallery of the Patton Stiftung, Saarbrücken,...

LISA OPPENHEIM‎’Everyone’s...

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LISA OPPENHEIM
‎’Everyone’s Camera’ 

Kunstverein Göttingen
11.01-24.02.2013


Kunstverein Göttingen is pleased to present Lisa Oppenheim’s (*1975) first solo exhibition at a German institution. In the exhibition she continues her exploration of the medium and history of photography. An atmospheric quality runs throughout the works on view, in which pattern, repetition, and the surface of the photograph itself play a central role. Her images of the moon, billowing smoke, flower arrangements, and patterned fabrics are produced without the help of a camera. Instead, the images are created with negatives that stem from the Internet, or Oppenheim makes photograms by using fabric or supermarket flowers that are placed directly on the photographic paper. With motifs that revisit early artistic photography combined with the saturated black or metallic sheen of the paper, Oppenheim’s works constitute a veritable homage to the hand-made print. But despite the lushness of her borrowed imagery, neither romanticism nor nostalgia gains the upper hand. Using appropriation, visual reduction, and serial arrangement the artist engages in a subtle reflection on conflicts that continue to define the photographic medium: between the documentary and the symbolic, between representative and the abstract.

The series “Smoke” (2011/2012) is based on photographs from both historical archives as well as contemporary online sources – images ranging from a volcanic eruption, to the London riots, or a bomb attack from World War II. Oppenheim re-exposes selected segments of the images with the help of a burning match. The resulting solarization reverses lights and darks, causing the images to resemble pictures of clouds, specifically referencing Alfred Steglitz’ famous “Equivalents” series. Parallels between the source of the smoke and production of image invoke fire and destruction as unseen forces – revealed only in the titles of the works – which seem posited against Steglitz’s lyrical attempt to depict the universal and the sublime.

Created by similar processes, Passage of the moon over two hours, Arcachon, France, ca. 1870s/August 11 & 17, 2012 and Heliograms are also based on early, concerns with depicting natural phenomena, but these 19th century images tended to be scientifically motivated. In contrast, Oppenheim’s reproductions emphasize process and even performance. Whereas image the moon’s progress across the night sky in France was simply re-exposed to the moonlight of the artist’s native New York, the Heliograms seem to function as a chronicle or calendar, in which the negative was exposed to daylight multiple times over the course of the day, beginning at dusk, with the intensity of the print reflecting the light conditions at the time. The different gaps in various sequences represent omitted photographs from times of the day when the artist could not make an exposure. Thus images that once were considered miraculously objective representations of heavenly bodies assume a highly personalized and implicitly biographic character.

Other series such as Liesure Work or Language of Flowers, photograms created with antique lace or flowers symbolizing various sentiments seem point to a feminine or domestic frame of reference. But while the one series speaks to the unseen toil of lace-making - historically performed by women - as paralleling Oppenheim’s practice in the studio, the second uses only the headless stems of flowers that once served as Victorian tokens of regard to create bright and aggressively hard-edged compositions.

Finally, Fish Scales, Véritable Hollandais , 2012 is a series of photograms made with mechanically produced textiles from the Netherlands that mimic the handmade batiks of Indonesia but are marketed and sold as “authentic” African fabric. For each exposure in the series the cloth is placed directly on the photographic paper and folded at different angles yielding various moiré-like patterns. Unique prints are thus made from a commercially replicated pattern, whose origins challenge the notions of the original and the copy. Set apart from the other works in its reference to contemporary modes of production and distribution, Véritable Hollandais underscores tensions between the archival and the indexical nature of the photograph, between the image as a cultural artifact and its endless iterations of the world we inhabit.

Lisa Oppenheim was born in New York (1975). She studied film and video at Bard University and took part in the Whitney Independent Studio Program. From 2003 to 2005 she was a resident at the Rijksakademie in Amsterdam. Her work has recently been exhibited at the Deutsche Guggenheim, Berlin, the Belvedere Museum, Vienna, and the Ricard Foundation, Paris.

© Kunstverein Göttingen

LISETTE MODEL‘Photography from the guts’ Keitelman...

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LISETTE MODEL
‘Photography from the guts’

Keitelman Gallery, Brussel
18.01.2013 - 02.03.2013

 

Photographer Lisette Model (1901-1983) has been somewhat overshadowed by her famous students Diane Arbus, Bruce Weber, and Larry Fink. But she was and still is a role model, both as a teacher and a photographer. Her pupil Diane Arbus’s photos reveal clear traces of Model’s influence.

Model was a pioneer of street photography. In 1934, she made her first photoreport on the Promenade des Anglais in Nice. They are remorseless photographs of the bourgeoisie, unique for their period. Model saw through the world of glitter and glamour and photographed people as they were: marked and drawn by life. She had a keen eye for the bizarre without ever becoming voyeuristic. At that time, her name was still Lisette Seybert. She was born in Vienna to a relatively affluent family. As a young girl, music was her great passion, and she studied with the renowned Schönberg. After her father’s death, the family moved to France, where Model dreamed of becoming a singer. At one point, however, she suddenly abandoned music and acquired a camera. She learned to take pictures from Rogi André, André Kertész’s first wife. “Never take a picture of anything you are not passionately interested in,” André told her. Model never strayed from this maxim, and later passed it on to her own students. In that same year, 1934, she met her husband, Evsa Model, a painter of Russian origin. Three years later, they were married, and in 1938 they emigrated to New York. The city had an enormous impact on Lisette Model’s work.

In the series “Reflections”, she focuses on display windows and the reflections of skyscrapers and random passers-by. “Running Legs” evokes the hurry in which men and women move through street scenes. But in addition to the weather-beaten faces of beggars and the faded beauty of rich ladies, Model also photographed the joy and vivacity of jazz clubs. That joie de vivre also radiates from what is probably her most famous photograph. A corpulent sunbather poses in her black bathing-suit on Coney Island, without a hint of camera shyness. Proud of her curves. Model regularly published in Look andHarper’s Bazaar, but by the 1950s her commissions were on the decline. Her photos were considered too hard and too distressing for a period of unbridled positivism. So Model devoted herself completely to teaching. “Photograph from your guts,” she told her students. She taught her last class a few weeks before her death, at the age of 82. With 40 original prints, Keitelman is paying homage to a photographer who is, without any doubt, one of the key figures in the history of photography.

© Keitelman Gallery

ALFREDO JAAR‘The Sound of Silence’  The Nederlands...

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ALFREDO JAAR
‘The Sound of Silence’ 

The Nederlands Fotomuseum, Rotterdam
19.01.2013 - 24.02.2013 

The Nederlands Fotomuseum in Rotterdam is exhibiting the controversial artwork The Sound of Silence by Alfredo Jaar from Saturday 19 January to Sunday 24 February. In this exhibition the leading Chilean artist Jaar follows Christian Boltanski’s installation Chance and is the second artist to create an installation using up an entire room in the ZWART/WIT (BLACK/WHITE) programme of the Nederlands Fotomuseum.

From 2012 to 2014 the museum has a ZWART/WIT theme. Installations, exhibitions and activities on this theme will be presented for three years. For the past 30 years the work of Alfredo Jaar has been inspired by violations of human rights.His work, based on photographs, films, installations and texts, responds to current international events and touches on themes such as social and economic inequality, genocide, refugees, border conflicts and the role of photojournalism. Another theme of The Sound of Silence is the role and influence of the image in western society.

The Sound of Silence
A rectangular construction with blinding light tells the story of the photojournalist Kevin Carter, who witnessed the famine in Sudan in 1993. InThe Sound of Silence the problem of the image has central place, the controversial relationship between photography, and violence and human suffering. In an age when photographs of horrific acts have become commonplace and interchangeable, Jaar poses critical questions about media consumerism, empathy and individual responsibility, and denounces the “collective silence”.

About Alfredo Jaar
Alfredo Jaar (1956, Chile) is an internationally famous artist, architect and filmmaker who lives and works in New York. His work has been exhibited all over the world. He has participated in the Biennales in Venice (1986, 2007, 2009), São Paulo (1987, 1989, 2010), Sydney (1990), Istanbul (1995), Gwangju (1995, 2000), Johannesburg (1997), Seville (2006) and Liverpool (2010), and in the Documenta in Kassel (1987, 2002). He has created more than sixty works involving interventions in public spaces and more than fifty monographs have been published on his work. He has been a Guggenheim Fellow since 1985 and a MacArthur Fellow since 2000. In 2006 he was awarded the Spanish Premio Extremadura a la Creación. Alfredo Jaar will represent the country of his birth, Chile, at the Venice Biennale in 2013. 

About ZWART/WIT
The contrast between black and white plays an important role in everyday life. The ZWART/WIT programme deals with thinking in terms of black and white, as well as with the cultural, political, anthropological and historical connotations of this contrast. Black-white has been the norm in our visual culture for many years, and even today people are experimenting with this theme in all sorts of ways in photography, film, the visual arts, advertising, graphic design, fashion, architecture and design. With this total concept of ZWART/WIT, the museum is presenting itself as the photo museum in the Netherlands in the field of historical and contemporary photography which looks across the borders and has social relevance. The programme, developed and composed by the curator Anne van der Zwaag, is supported by an extremely generous and exceptional contribution from the Wertheimer Foundation.

@ The Nederlands Fotomuseum 


CHRISTIAN FOGAROLLI‘White’ Galleria Arte Boccanera,...

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CHRISTIAN FOGAROLLI
‘White’

Galleria Arte Boccanera, Trento
02.02.2013 - 31.03.2013 


Arte Boccanera is pleased to present white of Christian Fogarolli, following the worldwide recognition of dOCUMENTA (13). The artist shows in the exhibition space the projects lost identities, worthy of the international scene in Kassel, and blackout.

In the work lost identities, Christian Fogarolli - interested from the very beginning of his career in questions challenging the essence of the identity dimension – explores the archives of some former Italian psychiatric institutions. Working with the examined documentation allowed the establishment of a close dialogue, able to go further and deeper than the first shocking harshness of the images, expanding the boundaries of the project and giving new presence to a passed temporal dimension. In fact, the seriality of the pictures selected in the mental hospital, is immediately checkmated by the artist Fogarolli through a continuous metamorphosis of shapes and used techniques, giving birth to unexpected standpoints, which would be otherwise not historically accessible. In line with the approach of research and experimentation that characterizes his work, Fogarolli explores his thresholds of perception of the terrible and the viewers’ ones, placing them in the middle of the concept through site-specific installations that cannot fail to surprise.

The underlying melody continues in the second project installed, blackout, which allows the visitor to touch the accumulation of a lifetime of Miss Swann, whose alienation fascinates the observer inevitably involved in the anxiety of collecting. The video Hotel-Dieu documents this research through and for madness, in such a depth to become expression itself. Released for the opening the exhibition catalogue, in Italian and English, with the curator’s essay, the works’ on show images.

Christian Fogarolli (Trento, 1983) obtains in 2010 the Master Inside the image: study, diagnosis and restoration of antique, modern, contemporary paintings, and the following year he graduates in the Master’s Degree of Management and Conservation of Cultural Heritage at the University of Trento. Among recent acknowledgments The Worldly House, dOCUMENTA(13) – Kassel, and The magnificent obsession, (2012/2013) Mart – Rovereto as special guest, the 54th Venice Biennale, Italian Pavilion, Turin.

©  Arte Boccanera

COMING SOON / FORMAT13: FACTORY Throughout Derby between 8th...

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COMING SOON / FORMAT13: FACTORY

Throughout Derby between 8th March - 7th April 2013

FORMAT13 is the 6th FORMAT International Photography Festival, an includes an exciting line-up of exhibitions under the collective idea of FACTORY: Mass Production, including a new exhibition Notes Home from the Archive of Modern Conflict; the UK premier of Album Beauty from the collection of Erik Kessels; a FACTORY survey from the Piece of Cake Collective; a new exhibition featuring an intervention by Melinda Gibson in conjunction with Thomas Sauvin and The Archive of Modern Conflict’s Silvermine collection from Beijing and Still Waters a special commission by Brian Griffin, one of the UK’s most influential and creative portrait photographers.

FORMAT13 promises to be the biggest and most ambitious yet, it will be not only a celebration of Derby, the birth place of mass production, but will also explore how the factory continues to be relevant in the 21st century digital age through a programme of exhibitions, events, workshops, mass participation and much more.

Founded in 2004, FORMAT International Photography Festival presents the best of emerging international talent, showcasing it alongside the masters of photography and has established itself as a world class biennale and must-see event in the photographic calendar. FORMAT is Directed by Louise Clements, organised and hosted by QUAD and the University of Derby.

Download the press release HERE:

For press enquiries please contact:

Bridget Coaker
Troika Photos
020 7833 2330
07968 950 703
pictures@troikaphotos.com

© FORMAT 

GORDON HOLDEN «all of us engage in irrational behavior from time...

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GORDON HOLDEN

«all of us engage in irrational behavior from time to time, and have no idea why we feel the way we do about certain things because we’ve forgotten the experience that makes those certain things resonate with in. but it really doesn’t matter because.

this is a  collection  of things created by gordon holden. sometimes things with friends. none of it is real, but then again, none of it is fake.

the only way to do it is wrong. things to look at. things to buy. things to like + things to dislike. some insight on things you may be thinking about. maybe not. the idea is to think about it for yourself. & try to comprehend why you are here. at this website. on this device. times have changed. eat more candy»


© Gordon Holden

HEIDI SPECKER‘Termini’ Brancolini Grimaldi,...

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HEIDI SPECKER
‘Termini’

Brancolini Grimaldi, London
01.02.2013 - 16.03.2013

Brancolini Grimaldi is delighted to announce Termini, Heidi Specker’s thrid solo exhibition with the gallery.

Termini was created during Specker’s 2010 residency at the German Academy’s Villa Massimo in Rome. Comprised of different series of images, it begins with an interest in Surrealism and Metaphysics at the home of Giorgio de Chirico and progresses to the Rationalism and New Objectivity of Carlo Mollino. The theme of memory and of intellectual legacy is central to the poetics of Heidi Specker. Surfaces, buildings and objects are transfigured, starting with the precision with which they are photographed. The image, which is often a close-up, modifies spaces and proportions, isolating the subjects from the context and making them absolutes.

Piazza di Spagna 31 features images taken at the apartment of the Italian surrealist Giorgio de Chirico that is now a museum. Although the interior is opulently furnished as befitting a successful artist like de Chirico, Specker has chosen to photograph separate objects within the house, from an ornate silver bowl to the edge of sofa cushions. Texture, material and surface come to the fore; in an image of one of De Chirico’s sculptural maquettes, Le muse inquietanti, two figures are draped in what looks like togas. We are reminded both of de Chirico’s interest in classicism as well as Specker’s on-going investigation into the layering of history in an ancient city like Rome.

Via Napione 2 features photographs of the house of Carlo Mollino, the highly influential Italian architect, designer and dandy whose legacy of modernism and eclecticism has had a huge influence on contemporary design in the last 20 years. Mollino had a long and enduring interest in Egyptian culture and his house reflects his varied tastes, from frames filled with butterflies to leopard skin wallpaper. Specker’s images pick out some of the key elements of Mollino’s apartment as well as hinting at some of the activities that went on inside there - the image of the blue and white tiles and the red velvet curtain marks a spot where many different women were photographed by Mollino. 

Ultimatum Alla Terra takes its name from a Hollywood movie poster (The Day the Earth Stood Still) photographed by Specker pasted onto a clock tower in the EUR district of Rome. This part of the city was developed by Mussolini during the 1930s, but work was halted by the Second World War and the building weren’t completed until the 1960s. This has created a sense of halted time in the area and a juxtaposition of architectural styles. Specker is also interested in the image of the clock throughout art history, particularly its use in Surrealist art connecting these images back to her work at de Chirico’s apartment.

© Brancolini Grimaldi | Heidi Specker

REPRESENTATION OF ARCHITECTURE

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BY STEVE BISSONI have recently curated the film session for the event ‘Representation of...

INEZ VAN LAMSWEERDE AND VINOODH MATADIN AT GAGOSIAN GALLERY PARIS

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Gagosian Gallery, Paris24.01.2013 - 09.03.2013 Basically every picture we take is a...

ROMAN VISHNIAC'S 'REDISCOVERED' AT ICP, NEW YORK

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International Center of Photography, New York18.01.2013 - 05.05.2013 Roman Vishniac Rediscovered, on...

NEL TEMPO, NEI LUOGHI(In Time, In Places)“Spazio...

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NEL TEMPO, NEI LUOGHI
(In Time, In Places)
“Spazio Giotto”, Torino, Italy
 

Curated by Fulvio Bortolozzo.

Photographers: Renato Ballatore, Marco Boggero, Andrea Lombardo, Bruno Picca Garin, Fiorella Rabellino.

The works in this collective exhibition are connected each other with the subtle red line originating from the experience of time as a primary existential space. Pictures are optical traces of lived connections. They convey thoughts and emotions in unexpected forms.

Suspended times, slowing of the every day paths make for new ways to look at things. “As if it was the first and the last time”, wrote Luigi Ghirri. This option to rethink our perception via what we could call “photographic experience” gets caught by the authors, each in their own way, with strong intensity and consistency.

© Fulvio Bortolozzo 

AMY STEIN AND STACY AREZOU MEHRFARTall Poppy SyndromeClampArt,...

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AMY STEIN AND STACY AREZOU MEHRFAR
Tall Poppy Syndrome

ClampArt, New York
10.10.2013 – 16.02.2013

“Tall Poppy Syndrome” is a term used to describe a social phenomenon in Australia in which successful people (the “tall poppies”) get “cut down to size,” criticized, resented, or ridiculed because their talents or achievements distinguish them from their peers.

ClampArt is happy to announce the opening of “Amy Stein & Stacy Arezou Mehrfar: Tall Poppy Syndrome.” The exhibition is accompanied by the artists’ monograph of the same title from Decode Books (Hardcover, 96 pp., 9.8 x 7.9 inches, $60).

In 2010, American photographers Amy Stein and Stacy Arezou Mehrfar embarked on a month-long road trip throughout New South Wales—Australia’s most populous state. They were interested in investigating “Tall Poppy Syndrome.” Is the syndrome even real? Can it be documented or observed? Stein and Mehrfar set out to explore quintessential Australian life and find what evidence they could of the existence of this phenomenon. They spent their days meeting and photographing everyday Australians—from schoolchildren in their plaid uniforms to young surfers playing at the beach to grandmothers meeting at their social clubs—all the while learning about the relationship between the group and the individual within Australian society. The resulting photographs in “Tall Poppy Syndrome” present their findings.

Amy Stein’s work explores man’s evolving isolation from community, culture, and the environment. Her photographs have been the subject of numerous national and international exhibitions, and are represented in the collections of the Philadelphia Museum of Art; the Museum of Contemporary Photography, Chicago; and the George Eastman House, Rochester, New York; among many others. Her first monograph, Domesticated, was published by Photolucida in 2008.

Stacy Arezou Mehrfar is a first generation American artist and lecturer currently residing in Sydney, Australia. Predominately working on long-term projects that explore cultural identity, her images have been exhibited in the United States, Australia, Poland, and Germany. She has received distinctions from the Moran Arts Foundation, Photography.Book.Now, the Camera Club of New York, the Center for Photography at Woodstock, among others. Mehrfar’s images are held in several public and private collections worldwide.

© ClampArt

CARNEM

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Group Show*Fabbrica del Vapore, Milano 24.01.2013 - 17.02.2013  On display 10 photographic series...

We Went Back: Photographs from Europe 1933–1956 by...

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We Went Back: Photographs from Europe 1933–1956 by Chim

International Center of Photography, New York
18.01.2013 - 05.05.2013

We Went Back: Photographs from Europe 1933–1956 by Chim, a new exhibition tracing the life and work of one of the most respected photojournalists of 20th-century Europe, will be on view at the International Center of Photography (1133 Avenue of the Americas at 43rd Street) January 18–May 5, 2013.

This retrospective exhibition follows the development of Chim’s career as an intellectually engaged photojournalist, placing his life and work in the broader context of 1930s–50s photography and European politics. Born Dawid Szymin in 1911 in Warsaw, Chim, who after World War II published under the name David Seymour, began his career in 1933 photographing regularly for leftist magazines in Paris, even before his close friends and collaborators Robert Capa and Henri Cartier-Bresson. His most celebrated reportages include the rise of the Popular Front in prewar France; the Spanish Civil War, which he covered alongside Capa and Gerda Taro; the postwar reconstruction of Europe; and the birth of Israel. In each of his images, he combined rare intellectual acumen and emotional intelligence.

“Chim was a keen observer of European political affairs, from the beginnings of the antifascist struggle to the rebuilding of countries ravaged by World War II,” said ICP Curator Cynthia Young, who organized the exhibition. “Although war formed the backdrop to much of his reportage, Chim was not known primarily for his war photography. Through his images of this period of radical upheaval, he emerges as a thoughtful reporter and a creator of elegant compositions of startling grace and beauty.”

Some of his photographs are well known—a woman nursing a child during a political meeting in Spain, a Polish girl in front of a drawing of her “home” after World War II, Picasso in front of his painting Guernica, a wedding in the new state of Israel—but other lesser known images are just as striking—workers at the Vatican waiting for lunch, a tomato garden in the postwar ruins of Frankfurt, children playing on Omaha Beach in front of a half-sunk military boat. These images delineate a sophisticated documentary practice in which Chim infused the informative detail with metaphor.

We Went Back encompasses more than 150 mainly vintage black-and-white prints, previously unseen color prints—including a newly discovered box of transparencies from 1947—and personal ephemera. All of the material in the show is from the collections of ICP and Chim’s nephew Ben Shneiderman, niece Helen Sarid, and extended family. [Read more HERE]


 © International Center of Photography

GARY M. GREEN‘Terrain Vague’ University of Southern...

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GARY M. GREEN
‘Terrain Vague’

University of Southern Maine (Glickman Library), Portland
07.02.2013 - 03.05.2013 

Spanish Architect Ignasi de Solà-Morales coined the term terrain vague to describe the abandoned, ambiguous, or marginalized pieces of land within an urban landscape that stand in contrast to the otherwise cohesive, definable organization of the city. These kinds of spaces – abandoned lots, post-industrial sites, bridge underpasses, for example – define the character of a cityscape through these pauses and stutters of visual dissonance. 

My intention with this work is to expand on Morales’s notion to use it with a bit of poetic license in order  to describe a sense of longing I find so prevalent in these landscapes. The empty storefronts, the spaces between modest homes, and vacant lots are for me filled with beauty, despair, yearning, and disappointment. These photographs do not present us with beautiful or idyllic spaces. These are the spaces most of us barely bother to notice; all the more reason to give them our heightened attention.

In this particular iteration of the project — the complete series is so far comprised of over 60 photographs — some of the work goes back to before this project started in earnest. The first photograph in the exhibit, for instance, Springfield, Missouri, 1997, is included to show the genesis of this project and represents for me the beginning of this work and, along with a few later images from Southern Maine, is included to provide context for the more recent work. [Gary M. Green, 2013]

Titles of images: 
Portland, Maine, 2007
College Avenue, Waterville, Maine, 2011
Springfield, Missouri, 1997
Winslow, Maine, 2012
 

© Gary M. Green

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