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Archive for the ‘Contemporary Photography’ Category

Photo biography – an illustrated lecture by Martin Parr

Sunday, September 7th, 2008 by Bohoe

Martin Parr discusses his long career as one of the most original and innovative photographers of our time. From the early days of taking black and white photographs of Ireland, notably A Fair Day (1984), Bad Weather (1982), the groundbreaking The Last Resort (1986) and up to his most recent work exploring globalisation and tourism. Martin’s unique perspective on the follies and vanities of our time has consistently enlighted, amused and even alarmed. A photograph by Martin Parr is instantly recognisable as his: in a world in which we are bombarded by the visual media, his image always engage and can never be ignored.

Entries are still being accepted for the Ranelagh Outdoors exhibition of street photography to be judged by Martin Parr. Further details at the bottom of this page.

Date –Sunday 28th September at 2.00pm
Venue: Ranelagh Multidenominational School
Tickets: €10

Tickets must be booked in advance at The Ranelagh Arts Festival web site.

Ranelagh Outdoors – Photo Exhibition

Date – Friday, 26th September – Sunday, 28th September
Venue: Ranelagh Multidenominational School
Time: On view from 11am – 6.00pm, entry is free.

This exhibition is of original photographs taken outdoors in Ranelagh. Street photography has inspired and been the subject matter of many of the great photographers including Martin Parr who will be judging the exhibition and awarding a prize. We hope to have a large contribution from local amateur photographers.

15th NOORDERLICHT International PhotoFestival

Saturday, September 6th, 2008 by Bohoe

We rarely have the chance to survey the photohistories of Eastern European countries, let along the life, culture, traditions, etc. of so many different countries in the eyes of 35 photographers, as in the 15th Noorderlicht International PhotoFestival. It is a unique opportunity to learn about the History of a great part of Europe that has been for too long ignored. It is an inmense insight to the works of many practitioners, but even better, to the life before and after the fall of the Berlin Wall in East Europe. Im already booking my flight…!

Have a look at the Press Release

BEHIND WALLS: Eastern Europe before 1989.
Behind Walls concludes the series of five editions of the festival that focused on photography from various non-Western regions and earlier looked at Africa, South America, the Arab world and South and Southeast Asia.

In 1989 the fall of the Berlin Wall heralded the end of the East Block. Socialism and totalitarianism made way for capitalism and democracy. A unique reservoir of photography was buried along with the old values. Over the years, each of the member states of the East Block had developed its own photographic vocabulary, which almost never extended beyond its national borders. Now that memories of the Communist era are no longer welcome, this historically important body of photography faces the threat of remaining unseen forever.

Two decades after the end of the East Block, Noorderlicht unlocks this forgotten treasure. In service of the regime, independently or working underground, photographers in the East Block documented a now vanished era, each in their own way. Behind Walls, the 15th Noorderlicht Photofestival, offers an overview of their work, which is generally being seen here for the first time outside its country of origin. Never before has photography from all the former East Block lands been brought together in one large-scale presentation.

Censorship and lack of freedom were a self-evident part of life in the days of the East Block. The totalitarian regimes propagated an heroic image of socialist society. Photographs of everyday scenes and personal interests were not appreciated. Only in periods of relative freedom, such as during the Prague Spring, but also in the DDR of the late 1970s, did photographers violate the unwritten rules, and then carefully. At other moments flight into a self-created reality offered solace, and this became a great stimulant for photographic experimentation.

Proud portraits of the ‘worker of the month’, clandestine photographs of staged people’s manifestations, advertising for products that were not available, forbidden photographs of nude women: Behind Walls provides a fascinating picture of life and photography in the Socialist paradise. In one international presentation the viewer can see how photographers throughout the East Block experienced the world around them, and how the absence of freedom affected their work. With contributions by 35 photographers from twelve countries, Noorderlicht brings to life a world that ceased to exist in 1989.

Beyond Walls – Eastern Europe after 1989
A new Eastern Europe arose after 1989. The Iron Curtain disappeared, the street scene changed unrecognizably. Some countries disintegrated, a majority have become members of the European Union. After four decades of Communism, capitalism is the new ideology. Individualism has replaced collectivism, opposition politics is again permitted. The heroic worker has had to become a critical consumer.

As a mirror held up to Behind Walls, a second exhibition, Beyond Walls, provides a picture of Eastern Europe after the fall of the Iron Curtain. Left opposes right, nostalgia for the old days faces off against the blessings of capitalism. Among the remains of the Communist era – from the gray architecture to the discrimination against ethnic groups – a frantic search for a new identity is going on.

These changes also leave their mark on photography. What was previously forbidden ground – literally, in the case of once heavily guarded border areas – or new phenomena such as a beauty contest in Poland or the rise of a Romanian tourist industry, can now be documented. Eastern European outcasts also have a chance to visualize their youth behind the Iron Curtain.

Together with Behind Walls, Beyond Walls forms a full-fledged diptych. In an extraordinary presentation, 35 photographers from East and West visualize the most recent history of Eastern Europe, with work from all the former East Block countries. Beyond Walls tells the intriguing story of a world full of contradictions in which a dynamic present still bears the traces of a charged past.

Fries Museum
Leeuwarden
7 Sept – 26 Oct

[Loads more information and photographs about this fantastic retrospective can be found here and here]

Festivals Month: Köln & Biel

Friday, September 5th, 2008 by Bohoe


19th Internationale Photoszene
Köln 2008
1st September – 1st October 2008
www.photoszene.de

* * *


12th Photo Festival in Biel /Bienne
Make believe. Staged photography
5th – 28th September 2008

Istvan Balogh | Markus Bertschi | Jojakim Cortis / Adrian Sonderegger | Geoffrey Cottenceau / Romain Rousset | Catherine Gfeller | Roland Iselin | Elisa Larvego | Stefania Malorgio | Chantal Michel | Loan Nguyen | Taiyo Onorato / Nico Krebs | Olivier Pasqual | Annaïk Lou Pitteloud | Corinne L. Rusch | Christian Tagliavini | Herbert Weber | Schule für Gestaltung Bern und Biel.

Bieler Fototage
Postfach 83 . 2501 Biel
Switzerland
www.bielerfototage.ch

Festivals Month: Köln & Biel

Friday, September 5th, 2008 by Bohoe


19th Internationale Photoszene
Köln 2008
1st September – 1st October 2008
www.photoszene.de

* * *


12th Photo Festival in Biel /Bienne
Make believe. Staged photography
5th – 28th September 2008

Istvan Balogh | Markus Bertschi | Jojakim Cortis / Adrian Sonderegger | Geoffrey Cottenceau / Romain Rousset | Catherine Gfeller | Roland Iselin | Elisa Larvego | Stefania Malorgio | Chantal Michel | Loan Nguyen | Taiyo Onorato / Nico Krebs | Olivier Pasqual | Annaïk Lou Pitteloud | Corinne L. Rusch | Christian Tagliavini | Herbert Weber | Schule für Gestaltung Bern und Biel.

Bieler Fototage
Postfach 83 . 2501 Biel
Switzerland
www.bielerfototage.ch

Kollektiva

Sunday, May 11th, 2008 by Bohoe


Kollektiva is an exhibition of contemporary photography by 3rd year
students of the Dublin Institute of Technology.
Opening on Tuesday the 13th at 6pm at the Back Loft/La cathedral, 7/8 Augustine Street, Dublin 8.
Daily openings 11am-7pm until Saturday the 17th.

La catedral studios

DAVID DREBIN

Friday, May 9th, 2008 by Bohoe

Julian Wolkenstein

Sunday, April 27th, 2008 by Bohoe

Very interesting work, high production values. More at www.julianwolkenstein.com.

Caio Reisewitz: “Não tem coisa certa”.

Wednesday, April 23rd, 2008 by Bohoe

Caio Reisewitz - Goiânia Golf Club, 2007.
Galeria Brito Cimino presents Não tem coisa certa, a solo exhibition of works by Caio Reisewitz. At this show, the artist brings before the public 18 photographic images that render his reflections on the landscape, the ever-changing natural environment, and their occasional encounters.

Caio Reisewitz is known for his studies about the São Paulo architecture as well as landscapes that seemingly were shot in the heart of the jungle but that, in fact, come from the vicinity of the city of São Paulo. In a way, his photographs evoke dreams that have materialized in the Brazilian territory, a land frequently cited for its prodigality and natural beauty.

Virgin forest, desert land, vegetation growing in man-made spaces and the humanized landscape are themes addressed at the exhibition. Thanks to the artist’s careful attention to details, viewers perceive the human influence in each of his photographs. Even though there is no person to be seen, the consequences of human actions are present through buildings or other interventions. Caio Reisewitz points out a before and an after in terms of nature: “whereas the ‘before’ challenges us with its virginity, the ‘after’ startles us by showing the mistakes we have made, which are also sublime and rather terrifying.”

At the show, five large-format photographs will embrace the spectator with their bulk, their texture and their rich details. In addition, 13 small- and medium- format works will be on display.

Caio Reisewitz was born in São Paulo and trained in Visual Communications at Fundação Armando Álvares Penteado. In the early 1990s he attended the Fachoberschule für Gestaltung, of Darmstadt, and attained a degree from Kunstakademie Mainz. He worked directly with Andreas Gursky and Thomas Struth, two of the most important artists of the contemporary photography that had the Dusseldorf Academy as birthplace. He was awarded acquisition prizes at the 4th and 6th editions of the Museu de Arte Moderna da Bahia Salon in 1997 and 1999, respectively, and the Sérgio Motta Prize, in 2001. Reisewitz showed his work at biennial exhibitions such as at Biennial of the End of the World, in Argentina, and Biennial of Sport In Modern Art (BIDA), in Spain, in 2007. In 2006, he attended the 5th International Biennial of Photography in Liège, Belgium. In 2005, he integrated the Brazilian delegation to the Venice Biennale and he also showed, in 2004 and 2002 respectively, in the international biennials of São Paulo and Buenos Aires. His photographs have been shown in such museums and cultural centers as Centro Galego de Arte Contemporánea (Santiago de Compostela, Spain, 2002), Museu de Arte Contemporânea de Goiás (solo exhibition, in 2003), Cisneros Fontanals Art Foundation (Beyond Delirious, Miami, USA, 2005), Neuer Berliner Kunstverein (Fotografia Brasileira Contemporânea, Berlin, Germany, 2006), Museu de Arte Contemporáneo (Alegoria Barroca en el Arte Contemporáneo, Santiago, Chile, 2006), in addition to showing solo during PhotoEspaña 2006 at Casa de América, in Madrid, Spain, and in the exhibition Portraits de Villes: Brasília, Chandigarh, Le Havre at Musée Malraux in Le Havre, France, in 2007.

Historical Orient Photography 1864 – 1970

Sunday, April 13th, 2008 by Bohoe

With Camel and Camera – Historical Orient Photography 1864 – 1970
20th April – appr. 7th September 2008
opening: Sunday, 20th April 2008, 11 am

With catchwords like “clash of civilizations” and “Islamist terror” a rather undifferentiated picture of the Islam is currently conveyed in western public. However, about 18,000 historical photographs of the Museum für Völkerkunde Hamburg from the Near and Middle East and North Africa draw a different picture. For the first time, a selection of these aesthetically outstanding and scientifically important documents is offered to the public. The exhibition of these photographs, taken between 1870 and 1970, shows the regional and social complexity as well as the historic dynamism of the region. The displayed images are characteristic examples of the European view on foreign parts at that time. In continuing orient painting they shaped the western perception of the East, as it influenced them in reverse.
The broad scope of represented photographers, regions, and images of our collection is exceptional. There are aesthetically highly appealing photographs from professional studios in North Africa, Egypt, and the Holy Land of the 19th century which reflect the prevalent Eastern stereotypes. Pictures of North African Berbers, who were presented to audiences as living objects, for example at Hagenbeck, reflect the fascination for the wild and the exotic. Historical touristic souvenir pictures are as well part of the exhibition as very early photographs of scientific expeditions which led to regions hardly or not at all accessible for Europeans until then.
Thanks to the intensive support of the ZEIT-Foundation Ebelin and Gerd Bucerius, their photographic stock from the Near and Middle East and North Africa could be digitized, remastered, and scientifically reconstructed within the framework of a three-year lasting project.

via voelkerkundemuseum.com.

Guido Mocafico

Thursday, February 21st, 2008 by Bohoe

Nature morte au hareng - Guido MocaficoNature morte au cochon - Guido MocaficoNature morte aux huîtres - Guido MocaficoNature morte à la grenade - Guido Mocafico

The Guido Mocafico: Nature Morte exhibition–a collaboration between Bernheimer Fine Art Photography and Hamiltons Gallery, London–focuses on photographs inspired by the aesthetics of Old Masters.
Born in Italy in 1962, the photographer concentrates in this exhibition primarily on three genres of still life: banquet, floral and vanitas still lifes, or as
Mocafico calls his groups of works, natures mortes de table, bouquets and vanités. The bouquet and vanité works are new and are being shown to the public here for the first time. At first glance, the photographs seem hardly distinguishable from the compositions of the Old Masters that supplement the exhibition, because in his remarkable works, which are planned down to the last detail, Mocafico replicates typical still lifes of the 17th and 18th centuries.

Bouquet de tulipes - Guido MocaficoGrande composition florale - Guido MocaficoOmnia Vanitas - Guido MocaficoAllégorie de la caducité - Guido MocaficoNature morte au lapin - Guido Mocafico

via Bernheimer


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