Category Archives: Photo Stroll

Photo Stroll LOOK/13 Liverpool International Photography Festival Pt 2 – Tom Wood and Martin Parr, plus group show Blackout

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‘Every Man and Woman is a Star © Tom Wood

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New Brighton 1976 © Martin Parr Magnum Photos

There is still time to see around 20 works by Martin Parr and Tom Wood at the Walker Art Gallery Liverpool in an exhibition that runs until 18 August. The photographs, which were taken in the late 1970s and 80s, are drawn from the art gallery’s own collection and concentrate on both photographers’ Merseyside work forming an exploration of the similarities and differences between the two photographers.

A small selection of Parr’s Irish scenes are included as well as possibly the earliest work by Parr in a public collection (New Brighton, 1976). Images from some of Wood’s seminal projects, such as All Zones Off Peak (bus journeys in and around Liverpool) and Looking for Love (Chelsea Reach nightclub, New Brighton) are also on show. In connection with the City of Contrasts Photography Competition 2013 two pairs of photographs by Tom Wood from the exhibition are on display at Liverpool Cathedral until 26 August. Tom Wood at Liverpool Cathedral.

 

BLACKOUT: LIVERPOOL JOHN MOORE’S UNIVERSITY

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BLACKOUT was shown as part of the festival and was curated by Imogen Stidworthy and festival director Patrick Henry. The show considered the relationship between viewer and (photographic) subject. Asking: what is at stake in this relationship and to what extent do they constitute each other? In BLACKOUT the presence and nature of the subject is brought into question, even to the verge of disappearance. The show is now closed.

Of note was Danica Dakic’s absorbing short video Emily which places the viewer in the charged space between a young deaf girl and her teacher, as she is inducted into the signs and facial expressions of sign language. While Dominique Hurth‘s Un Cup D’Ull (from Catalan, meaning ‘a glance’) combined archival photographs with text to reflect, in highly personal terms, on how what we see is incorporated into broader historical narratives.

Photo Stroll LOOK13 Liverpool International Photography Festival Pt 1 – Rankin’s Alive: In the Face of Death

The second edition of LOOK13 Liverpool International Festival (17 May -15 June 2013) opened in May and closed this weekend, but you can still catch some of  the exhibitions taking place in Liverpool.

In collaboration with some of Liverpoolʼs well-known museums and galleries, LOOK/13 presented “a diverse programme of contemporary and historical exhibitions” that includes new work by the portrait photographer Rankin, Alive: In the Face of Death (until 15 September) at the Walker Art Gallery in a show in which he “sets out to explore and challenge our perceptions of death”; rarely-seen early photographs by Martin Parr and Tom Wood in Every Man and Woman is a Star (until 18 August), and Double Take: Portraits from the Keith Medley archive (15 September). Bringing together influential and established photographers, presented alongside international emerging talent, LOOK/13 explored ideas of subjectivity and selfhood, based around the question, ʻwho do you think you are?ʼ.

Today’s post is a Photo Stroll through, Alive: In the Face of Death – a slick offering encompassing a diverse range of photographic approaches to the subject of death, which will also be the subject of a BBC2 Culture Show documentary this summer. The Walker Art Gallery is impressive and the space given over to the show is substantial – there’s even a wall for visitors to record their responses to the show with coloured post-it notes and details of The Dying Matters coalition, an organisation that seeks to encourage more open discussion around dying, death, and bereavement.

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Alongside portraits of those who are terminally ill, or who have faced death, are photographs of people whose business is death  – from a gravedigger and the only UK maker of death masks, to a studio where the ashes of a loved one can be incorporated into cremation tattoos. Rankin’s own responses to the subject feature too, reflected in a series of self portrait, as well as in his ‘life’ masks, including the one captioned, Michael Jackson, which caused some confusion.

From skulls – whether they are Vanitas, Day of the Dead, Damien Hirst or Salvador Dali-influenced ones – to ‘life’ masks, Rankin hones in on familiar symbols of death, borrows heavily from them and then offers back his collection of works beautifully packaged. His heart-shaped display Anne + Roy is a tribute to his now dead parents and the variously-sized photos of his parents mirrors the ongoing fashion in contemporay photography for the vernacular, the personal archive and the family album. Death is an emotive, and often gloomy, subject but in Alive: In the Face of Death, Rankin celebrates life.

Photo Stroll – Jane Hilton’s Precious launched as a book and on show at Eleven Gallery London

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Phewwww. There has been a lot happening and finding the time to write blog posts has been difficult recently. Not least as I got a new six-month part-time contract as Editorial Content Manager and Project Developer for Frame and Reference  – an online visual arts magazine and resource for the South East, not including London. Please check the site out, sign up to the E-bulletin and twitter feed and give me feedback as I develop the site to make it a go-to resource for anyone interested in what’s happening in the visual arts. Plus, Hotshoe has been relaunched and the website redeveloped. This means there will be changes afoot with regards to this blog also as I want to maintain editorial control, develop some of the content further and keep the personal feel that I have tried to build over the last three years. More of this another day. For now, I want to share with you some photos taken at the opening of photographer and filmmaker Jane Hilton’s new show, Precious, a collection of nude portraits of Nevada working girls. The title is apt and describes Hilton’s feelings towards her subjects: “To me, they are all precious,” she says.

In 2010, Jane decided to return to the American West for her latest book, Precious, a collection of intimate nude portraits of working girls. Hilton visited eleven brothels to find women prepared to be photographed in the nude. She first came across Madam Kitty’s Cathouse (Nevada, USA) in 1998 and returned in 2000 to film ten documentary films here as well as at the Moonlite Bunnyranch (Nevada, USA). The women in the photographs work in brothels where she had already built strong connections as well as smaller places, such as Shady Lady’s and Angel’s Ladies. Using a plate camera, with its associated slowess, became a bonding experience for Hilton as she discovered how some of the women had “issues about their own body shape” and unraveled different feelings about their journey as a working girl. “In some cases this became a very positive and cathartic experience,” Hilton notes.

“I hadn’t even thought about prostitution until I walked into a brothel. I was probably very naive, which actually in retrospect did me a favour. I am by nature very non-judgemental, and feel it very important to have experience of a subject matter before making any points of view about it. For the last fifteen years I have spent a lot of time getting to know the working girls from the legal houses in Nevada, producing ten documentary films and an exhibition. I know there are some incredible women hidden in these brothels and I wanted to show this. So I decided to go back again to make a series of intimate portraits in eleven different brothels across Nevada.” Jane Hilton.

Unlike many other photographic bodies of work on prostitution where the women remain anonymous with no attempts made to find the humanity in their physicality, Precious names the women (first names only) and focuses on the women, their stories, their lives, their bodies and the places where they work. The worlds and the lived lives of these women are embedded in the portraits and animate the women, unlike (for me) other recent photographic projects on the subject.

For now, I’m thinking of how some projects and approaches (Joachim Schmid’s, LA Women; Mishka Henner’s, No Man’s Land, and Scott Southern’s, Lowlife can be seen to fuel anonymity and separate the women from the audience, the world in general and the photographer/visual artist. At times in these projects, the focus seems to be on the project idea, above all. Schmid publishes police released-photos from the collection of a serial killer of women, some of whom may or may not be prostitutes, while Henner takes a conceptual approach using Google images where the “street women” have pixelated faces – in both cases distance is reproduced again. I will pick up on this in more detail in a future post and add to the discussion the question of how easy, or difficult, it has been for Hilton to get the work seen because many of the portraits show women in the nude.

Prostitution is one of the oldest professions and, although it is legal in Nevada, it is still not socially acceptable. Precious, according to Hilton, aims to challenge “traditional ideas of beauty” through showing women from different cultural backgrounds, ages and body shapes, as well as to challenge “misconceptions” surrounding prostitution. Precious, however, draws the viewer in and reveals as much about the women’s lives as their bodies. In this series, the overriding impression is that Hilton really does care about her subjects; she has observed and listened to these women in ways that go beyond what they do to make a living.

The portraits are (as always with Hilton’s work) intimate and gentle portrayals of different women working as prostitutes in Nevada, as well as some landscape images and details from the brothels, which help provide a context for the portraits. The approach is sensitive and the aesthetic is familiar from Hilton’s previous work including her debut book, Dead Eagle Trail – Portraits of the American Cowboy. Look out for Chelsea, a former drug and sex addict who planned on a career in forensic science; Cassie, a bright and sunny optimist, who, as a young woman had to overcome the bleakest of pasts after witnessing her mother’s murder by a brutal stepfather, and who looks to a future where her ambition is to be a businesswoman and philanthropist. Then there’s Nikki, who, three months into her pregnancy, became a prostitute to save money for single motherhood; and Sonia, a married 52-year-old writer living in a brothel with her husband.

Precious is on show at Eleven Gallery, London and runs until 26 May. The hardback book is published by Schilt Publishing and is available for £35.

Photo Stroll – Liane Lang’s Fallen on show at Art First Projects London

LIANE LANG – FALLEN
I am interested in the idea of the sculptural object that has forfeited its role to be treated and seen as an artwork. Traditionally the sculpted figure loses its status as artwork the closer it becomes to being life‐like, ranging from the marble carving down to the tawdry side‐show reputation of the wax work. The Socialist statues, many made with great skill by important sculptors of the time, became culpable by association and lost their status as artwork in this way.

“Central to this series is the notion of iconoclasm, which continues into other projects. The statue becomes the object of bodily punishment in acts of iconoclasm, being treated as a symbolic site for physical humiliation, injury and execution in lieu of the real body. The symbolic act of deposition is often more powerful and long lasting than the fate of person portrayed.” Liane Lang

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Winner of last year’s Hotshoe Photofusion Award, Liane Lang has a new solo show on until 11 May at Art First Projects London. I knew of Lang’s work from a previous post, way back when her series Monumental Misconceptions first came to my attention.

Needless to say, I went along to the private view last week to see Lang’s photographic and sculptural work and support her. I also grabbed a few shots for my Photo Stroll and was pleased to find out that she has also been selected for the Art Omi Residency 2013 in New York State this summer. If you are anywhere near the West End in London, do pop by and take a look. All the works are for sale; the photos are C-type prints in editions of 3 in two sizes and the cold-cast bronze statues are editions of 3 also. (ASIDE: The cold-cast bronze technique is one that is familiar; my mum worked for South African sculptor Giovanni Schoeman in Covent Garden in the 1970s and used to teach people how to cast them using the technique. Giovanni, however, met an untimely and rather gruesome end in a triple execution-style killing. Yes, this is true.)

Anyway, back to the show. Lang’s show Fallen “combines elements of her ongoing series of works undertaken during her residency at the Memento Sculpture Park in Budapest (the resting place of discarded and exiled monumental sculptural works from the socialist era in Hungary) with a new series of sculptures that take as their subject defaced and destroyed monuments to dictators and deposed leaders – the sculptures themselves derive from documentation of these acts of symbolic violence: from the black and white footage of the Czar’s statue being torn down by horse-power in Eisenstein’s 1928 film October, to contemporary footage of a different kind of horsepower at work on the iconic statue of Saddam Hussein in 2003.”
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“The role of scale in art is questioned in the show. “In the case of monumental sculpture, the sense of subjective appreciation or interpretation is determinedly overridden by the artist – the work has a distinct purpose and employs tried‐and‐tested mechanisms in its approach to materials and scale to achieve its function – to depict the subject as heroic; all‐powerful; permanent. By tweaking one of these vital mechanisms – scale – Lang is able to create space for a much broader range of interpretations.

“The statuesque subjects of her works are variously belittled (in their reduction to sculptural miniatures) or revealed as grotesques as Lang introduces her life‐size simulacra to them, highlighting the absurdity of their heroic poses. The resulting original works thus retain the echo of the appropriated sculptures polemic message, but create room around them for humour and a strange and haunting beauty, born of empathy – for the mighty (however tyrannical) brought low, and for the very human condition of impermanence.” Press release.
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All iPhone photos © Miranda Gavin 2013.

Photo Stroll and podcast – Susan Derges in conversation with Gareth Evans at Purdy Hicks

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Pavement Network, iPhone Miranda Gavin on the way to Susan Derges in conversation at Purdy Hicks last week. I was getting into the zone…

SUSAN DERGES AT PURDY HICKS
Last week, I attended a well-structured, informative and informed in conversation led by Whitechapel Gallery film curator Gareth Evans with Susan Derges at Purdy Hicks Gallery in south London. The show closes on 19 January.

A small brook on Dartmoor,  Devon near the artist’s studio is the focus for this new series of images. Two different views of the brook’s surface, from above and below, explore themes of reflection and immersion that echo experiences of place as a site of memory and loss, the flow of time and changing perceptions.

The talk lasted just over 30mins and touched upon the development of her latest body of work Alder Brook (see the work in the photos below), the role of agency in her work, her recent move to using a camera once again, and the place of perception, illusion and magic in her oeuvre. Derges’ work, at least for me, is also informed by notions relating to shallowness and depth – terms that are used when talking about fields of vision as well as water (one of the key elements in her work).

For any of you who are fans of her work and for those who don’t know of it, this in conversation is a must. Derges, guided by Evans’, takes the audience through her work while maintaining a level of mystery around the photographic processes at play behind Alder Brook. It makes sense. Magic dissipates when we peel back the illusion and reveal its production.

I hope you enjoy the in conversation as much as I did. Roll over the link below, click and listen to the podcast. You need to be patient with it uploading as it’s quite a large file. Enjoy.

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