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PHOTOGRAPHY INTERNATIONAL | | 6 — 13 December 2017 | |
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| | | On Tuesday Dec 5 Art Miami and Context started the Art Week Miami 2017, Art Basel Miami Beach today on Wednesday Dec 6 and PULSE on Thursday Dec 7. More than 500 exhibitors will exhibit more than 1,000 artworks in photography and videoart. From 7 - 10 Dec The Miami Street Photography Festival 2017 is presenting the best of contemporary street and documentary photography. |
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| Nageur sous l’eau, Esztergom, Hongrie, 1917 © Ministère de la Culture et de la Communication - Médiathèque de l’architecture et du patrimoine, Dist. RMN-Grand Palais / Donation André Kertész | | | | until 10 January 2018 | | | | | | | | This fall, Foam presents Mirroring Life, a retrospective exhibition of the work of photographer André Kertész (1894–1985). Kertész is famous today for his extraordinary contribution to the language of photography in the 20th century. This retrospective marshals a large number of black and white prints as well as a selection of his colour photographs, highlighting his exceptional creative acuity to reconfigure reality through unusual compositions. The exhibition comprises of his early work made in Hungary, his homeland, to Paris, where between 1925 and 1936 he was one of the leading figures in avant-garde photography, to New York, where he lived for nearly fifty years. The exhibition pays tribute to a photographer whom Henri Cartier-Bresson regarded as one of his masters, and reveals, despite an apparent diversity of periods and situations, themes and styles, the coherence of Kertész’s poetic approach. This exhibition is organised with Jeu de Paume, Paris, in collaboration with La Médiathèque d l’architecture et du patrimoine, ministère de la Culture et de la Communication – France and diChroma photography. | |
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| | | | Joel Meyerowitz: New York City, 1963 © Joel Meyerowitz/Courtesy Howard Greenberg |
| | | | | | | Fri 8 Dec 19:00 9 Dec 2017 – 11 Mar 2018 | | | |
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| | | | Torbjørn Rødland: Untitled, 2009-2013, Courtesy Privatsammlung © Torbjørn Rødland |
| | | | | | | Fri 8 Dec 19:00 9 Dec 2017 – 11 Mar 2018 | | | |
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| | | | © Sebastian Wolf: aus der Serie Autonomy, 40 x 50 cm, 2014 © Birte Hennig: aus der Serie Navel, 30 x 30 cm, 2017 |
| | | | | member exhibition | | Thu 7 Dec 19:00 8 Dec 2017 – 14 Jan 2018 | | | |
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| | | | Der elfjährige Sergej ist Kadett der Kronstädter Akademie, St. Petersburg, 1997 © Peter Dammann |
| | | | | Fotografien aus St. Petersburg | | 12 Dec 2017 – 22 Apr 2018 | | | |
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| | | | | | | | | | Debuts Jeune prix européen de la Photographie, sur les photographes émergents en Pologne | | Wed 13 Dec 18:30 13 Dec 2017 – 21 Jan 2018 | | | | | | |
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| Jock Sturges, Alisa, Christina, Misty Dawn and Teresa; Northern California, 1993 | | | | 8 December 2017 – 8 January 2018 | | Opening reception: Thursday 7 December 7pm | | | | | | | | The Lumiere Brothers Center for Photography returns «The Absence of Shame» exhibition by American photographer Jock Sturges to its walls. The project was first opened in the beginning of September 2016. It consists of photographs which depict naturist families from France, North California, and Ireland, with whom Sturges has been communicating. The author photographed them throughout the duration of his long artistic career. Having started in the 1970s, he has now shot 3 generations of models. The images uncovered their beauty, so the girls posed to the photographer voluntarily and without embarrassment. «Nudity means nothing to anybody here…People are naked…because they are naturists and spend their summers in a resort dedicated to the absence of shame». | |
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| Secret Doorway, Buenos Aires, 2017 (Detail) © Michael Eastman | | | | until 20 January 2018 | | | | | | | | Edwynn Houk Gallery is pleased to announce an exhibition of large-scale photographs by Michael Eastman (American, b. 1947). The show opens on Thursday, 16 November 2017 and runs through Saturday, 20 January 2018. The artist will be present at the opening reception on 16 November from 6-8pm. The exhibition features unexpected photographs of iconic interiors in Buenos Aires. It is natural that Michael Eastman, whose works tell stories through the details of interiors located throughout the world, found rich material and inspiration in this city. In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, Buenos Aires staged ambitious and extravagant architectural projects to brandish its wealth, its stunning architecture helping the city earn its nickname “the Paris of South America.” Latin America’s tallest building and a series of neoclassical palaces were amongst the feats the city boasted. While Buenos Aires proudly retains this legacy today, still teeming with examples of architectural achievement from its belle époque, many of its buildings show signs of the country’s recent political and economic hardships. Eastman’s series illuminates how these interiors, captured a century after their heyday, have not dimmed with time but rather become more intriguing in their age. At the heart of each photograph is an essential element of surprise: an electric blue light illuminating the doorway of a classic palace, the psychedelic twist of a spiral staircase, the blazing reflection of light in an entirely golden theater. These details dazzle, but equally important is what is absent from these photographs. Each interior is largely devoid of contemporary design, technology, and, somewhat hauntingly, inhabitants. A college stairwell transport… | |
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| Tom Arndt Young woman, Englewood, Chicago, 2000 Tirage gélatino-argentique moderne, réalisé par l'artiste Dimensions du tirage : 40 x 50 cm © Tom Arndt / Courtesy Les Douches la Galerie, Paris | | | | | Tom Arndt » Yasuhiro Ishimoto » Vivian Maier » Ray K. Metzker » Wayne F. Miller » Marvin E. Newman » Carlos Javier Ortiz » | | until 13 January 2018 | | | | | | | | The seven photographers who are the subject of this exhibit – Wayne Miller, Ray K. Metzker, Yasuhiro Ishimoto, Marvin E. Newman, Vivian Maier, Tom Arndt and Carlos Javier Ortiz – cover the period from 1940 to the present. None of them has followed the same path and none have the same way of looking at things. Each one presents us with a different image of the African-American community that had come to Chicago from the Deep South with the hope of greater freedom and better jobs. Their photos are a shocking and highly artistic testament to the life of the blacks of Chicago for over a half century. Ray K. Metzker and Marvin E. Newman are all descendants of the unique talents of Laszlo Moholy Nagy. They all began their apprenticeship at the New Bauhaus, which was transplanted to Chicago in 1937 under his aegis, and followed it through the 1950s, under the direction of Harry Callahan. Through experimental and practical learning, they trained their eye to different aspects of creation: they were introduced to industrial design and advertising, followed by a specialisation in photography and its technical aspects, especially developing finesse in capturing light, geometric forms, the movement of silhouettes and tonal contrasts. But their common background is not a mark of uniformity – quite the contrary! Ray K. Metzker chose the most geometric approach, ingeniously following Callahan’s teaching. He explores haziness, geometric forms, all the nuances of black and white, turning streets into theatre backdrops. Coming from New York, where he gained a wide experience in short films and photography, Marvin E. Newman brought his Japanese accomplice, Yasuhiro Ishimoto, along w… | |
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| Hito Steyerl HOW NOT TO BE SEEN: A Fucking Didactic Educational .MOV File, 2013 Still image, single screen, chromogenic prints, C- Stative, Floor installation Courtesy Hito Steyerl, Andrew Kreps Gallery, New York, and KOW Berlin | | Space & Photography | | Philip Kwame Apagya » Herbert Bayer » Franz Bergmüller » Giacomo Brogi » Jindrich Eckert » Hans-Peter Feldmann » Seiichi Furuya » Isa Genzken » Georges Lévy & Moyse Léon » Johannes Gramm » Birgit Graschopf » Florence Henri » M. Hoffmann » Kenneth Josephson » Wolfgang Kudrnofsky » Werner Mantz » Ingrid Martens » Santu Mofokeng » László Moholy-Nagy » Negretti & Sambra » Beaumont Newhall » Gregor Sailer » Alfons Schilling » Allan Sekula » Dayanita Singh » Margherita Spiluttini » Hito Steyerl » Sasha Stone » Clare Strand » Yutaka Takanashi » Wolfgang Tillmans » UMBO (Otto Umbehr) » Felix Weber » Stephen Willats » | | until 22 April 2018 | | | | | | | | Stereoscopic vision and conceptions of spatial dimensions, their extension and transformation are fundamentally at odds with the two-dimensional technically recorded image. Since the dawn of photography, this very incompatibility has prompted photographers to grapple with the question of how to represent space. The pioneering exhibition Space & Photography at the Museum der Moderne Salzburg surveys the history of this engagement with a selection of works by thirty-five artists from fourteen countries spanning the period from 1860 to the present. The exhibition’s thematic spectrum ranges from works by Wolfgang Tillmans and others that examine architectonic and virtual spaces, to photographs addressing social, economic, and conceptual questions, as in the work of Santu Mofokeng. "As a center of expertise on artistic photography, we have designed this exhibition to tease out the interconnections between the photographic medium and sociopolitical questions around space, with a particular view to the recent renaissance of boundaries and standardizations," Sabine Breitwieser, Director of the Museum der Moderne Salzburg, explains. "Our objective is to shed light on photography’s formal and technical diversity as well as the evolution of genres and themes in a variety of geographical and sociopolitical contexts." Christiane Kuhlmann, the museum’s Curator of Photography and Media Art, underscores the historical depth and cultural breadth of the selection on view in Space & Photography: "In addition to examples from the early days of photography, we showcase contemporary works by artists whose non-European backgrounds and circumstances inform their perceptions and interpretations of space, complementing the long-domin… | |
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| Willy Spiller: Lunch on Broadway, New York, 1982, Archival Pigment Print, 80 x 110 cm, Edition 5 & 2 AP | | Willy Spiller » Street Life: NY/LA 1977-1985 | | 7 December 2017 – 27 January 2018 | | Opening: Thursday 7 December, 6-9pm Willy Spiller will attend the opening. Guest speaker: Tobia Bezzola, Director Museum Folkwang Essen | | | | | | | | Between 1977 and 1985 Swiss photographer Willy Spiller lived in New York and L.A. Fascinated by the speed, the energy and the absurdity of the 1970s and 80s, he roamed the streets far and wide with his camera. Whether it was rides on the subway, dancers at the legendary Studio 54, hip-hop culture in the streets of New York or the poolside life of L.A.'s high society, Spiller captured all the many facets of a bygone world in images as varied, as fascinating and as absurd as that world itself had been. In the process, he combines his curiosity for his fellow human beings with a profound understanding of the beauty of the banal and mundane in the world around him. It is this that ensures his place in the annals of great Swiss photography. Like many of the resonating names before him, he managed to translate empathy into form through strength of will. Or, as his long-time friend and companion Paul Nizon so aptly put it: "I've often asked myself what made Willy Spiller's photography so forthright, so refreshing and so riveting. I believe it's a blend of unabashed curiosity and roguish complexity combined with a fraternal sense of compassion. It isn't something you learn at school: it's more a question of class, of predisposition, and ultimately of character. Behind the swashbuckling, wheeler-dealing façade is a dreamer, a man hungry for life and beauty. And that is the reason he sides with humanity, which is just another way of saying that he had an innate love of mankind. That is the way he sees things. And it is driven by a highly developed artistic energy." Willy Spiller is one of Switzerland's greatest living photographers. A man of his metier through and through, he has shown us that photography… | |
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| Wang Tuo, Addicted 2017 Single channel 4K video, color, sound 16min 33sec To be an image maker (curated by He Jing) | | Jimei x Arles International Photo Festival 2017 | | | Ali Nadjian & Ramyar Manouchehrzadeh » Wimo Ambala Bajang » Carlos Ayesta & Guillaume Bression » Ricardo Cases » Federico Clavarino » Gohar Dashti » Wu Ding » CAI Dongdong » Yoshikatsu Fujii » Lara Gasparotto » Shadi Ghadirian » Sarah Mei Herman » Bahman Jalali » Abbas Kiarostami » Abbas Kowsari » Feng Li » Silin Liu » Alejandro Marote » Guy Martin » Guy Martin » Joel Meyerowitz » Mehran Mohajer » Óscar Monzón » Tahmineh Monzavi » Chad Moore » Mathieu Pernot » Ruang MES 56 » Max Sher » Sina Shiri » Sheida Soleimani » Michele Tagliaferri » Newsha Tavakolian » Sadegh Tirafkan » WANG Wusheng » SUN Yanchu » ... | | until 3 January 2018 | | | | | | | | Jimei x Arles International Photo Festival was created in 2015 in Xiamen by Sam Stourdzé, the director of Rencontres d’Arles, and Chinese photographer RongRong, founder of Three Shadows Photography Art Centre (Beijing and Xiamen). The festival features international artists selected from Rencontres d’Arles alongside Chinese and Asian photography talents, and has attracted more than 100,000 visitors since its inception. The 2017 festival will boast the works of more than 250 artists from the United States, France, Iran, Spain, the Netherlands, Indonesia, and of course China. The festival’s aim of providing a platform for new Chinese photography has once again been re-affirmed with several exhibitions showcasing young Chinese photographers and curators. The 40 exhibitions of 2017 Jimei x Arles attest to the diversity of photographic approaches and practices, and will include: 8 exhibitions from Rencontres d’Arles 2017: 3 China Pulse exhibitions curated by young Chinese curators and China photography specialists: Uncertain Traces (curated by Du Xiyun), To be an image maker (curated by He Jing), BrokenIce: 160118-170811 (curated by Ruben Lundgren); A Crossover Photography exhibition curated by Shen Chen, Phantom Pain Clinic; 10 Jimei x Arles Discovery Award nominees picked by five young curators: Guo Yingguang and Jiang Yuxin (curated by He Yining), Shao Wenhuan and Yu Mo (curated by Liu Tian), Deng Yun and the real (curated by Nie Xiaoyi), Yu Feifei and Siu Wai Hang (curated by Tang Zehui), Feng Li and Sun Yanchu (curated by Thomas Sauvin). The winner of the 2017 Jimei x Arles Discovery Award will be awarded a 200,000 RMB prize and an exhibition in 2018 Rencontres d’Arles; 7 Local Action programs featuring Xiamen curators and artists: After the Ebb curated by Chen Wei, Visuality is the Scene of Negligence curated by Wang Qi, Lu Yanjin's Sister curated by Huang Rui, DaSoHo Project curated by Kong Yan, City Thinking curated by Lei Yuting, Houtian Project; A solo show of photography master Wang Wusheng, curated by RongRong & inri; 3 "Greetings from Indonesia" exhibitions showcasing the vitality of contemporary Indonesian photography, with works by Oscar Motuloh and Ruang MES 56; A Collector’s Tale exhibition showing collector Huang Jianpeng's Chinese photography treasures, namely the works of Chinese photography pioneers Chin-San Long, Xue Zijiang and Lan Zhigui. Jimei x Arles aims at strengthening its role as a platform for photography in Asia. Along with the exhibition program, a number of events are organized for photography professionals, art lovers and the public during the Opening Week (November 25-28): Photobook Station, PhotoFolio Reviews, public discussions about photography, the ‘Arles Night of the Year’ screenings, university lectures, performances, and exhibition tours guided by artists and curators. Aside from the Jimei x Arles Discovery Award, the festival has created this year a special prize rewarding a woman photographer: the Jimei x Arles – Madame Figaro China Women Photographers Award, co-organized with women's magazine Madame Figaro, with the support of Women in Motion, an international programme launched in 2015 by luxury group Kering to showcase the contribution of women to the film and image industry. With two main sites in Xiamen’s Jimei District and several other sites in the city, the festival aims to connect and animate separated cultural areas and spaces, to relay and promulgate different art forms through the city. | |
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| | | | Kabangu 2016 © Osborne Macharia |
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| | | | © Michael Wolf Google Streetview 2008-2012 Digital C-prints circa 121 × 152 cm |
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| from the series The 'Real' Somali Pirates © Jan Hoek (Detail) | | Lagos Photo Festival 2017 | | Regimes of Truth | | Leonce Raphael Agbodjelou » James Barnor » Alun Be » Joana Choumali » Cristina De Middel » Kadara Enyeasi » Samuel Fosso » Hassan Hajjaj » Jan Hoek » Nadine Ijewere » Nicola Lo Calzo » Bas Losekoot » Mohau Modisakeng » Zanele Muholi » Jackie Nickerson » Lakin Ogunbanwo » Thabiso Sekgala » Daniele Tamagni » Justine Tjallinks » Osaretin Ugiagbe » ... | | until 15 December 2017 | | | | | | | | LagosPhoto is the first and only international arts festival of photography in Nigeria. The festival presents photography as it is embodied in the exploration of historical and contemporary issues, the promotion of social programmes, and the reclamation and engagement of public spaces in showcasing contemporary photography. LagosPhoto Festival is delighted to announce the 8th edition of the Lagos Photo festival, themed Regimes of Truth. Held between the 24th of November- 15th of December, this year’s LagosPhoto encompasses an engaging programme of events with cultural and artistic gains. Exhibitions of finely curated works of photography from the African continent and the diaspora, large-scale and performative installations dotted around iconic public spaces in Lagos, as well as artists’ presentations, workshops and the like. Regimes of Truth will explore the pursuit for and presentation of truth in contemporary society, gleaning inspiration from the writings of some of the 19th and 20th centuries' most influential literary realists and intellectuals. Gustave Flaubert’s L’Empire de la Bêtis (The Empire of Stupidity), Orwell’s creation of “doublethink” from his dystopian novel 1984, as well as the writings of Foucault, Achebe and Huxley, all possessed foresight about contemporary society’s concurrent quandary, whereby access to information on one hand and substantive facts on the other hand, are masked by a constructed rhetoric. Regimes of Truth thus ruminates on the tension and confluence between veracity and artifice in society today. Contemporary photography serves as a gatekeeper of reality and truth as well as a conjurer of artistic imaginings for the viewer’s pl… | |
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| | | | Coins (Girl in Deep Thought) © Chen Wei |
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| | | | Opatija, Croatia, August 30, 2011 Concrete bathing area along the Adriatic coast. From the series "Mediterranean. The Continuity of Man" © Nick Hannes |
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| Baño X, de la serie Antesala de un desnudo, 1999 © Paz Errázuriz | | FOTOMÉXICO 2017 | | LATITUDES - International Photography Festival | | 136 venues | 147 exhibitions | 614 artists | 23 cities | | Alfred Briquet » Marcelo Brodsky » Martín Chambi » Alejandro Chaskielberg » José Luis Cuevas » Antoine d'Agata » Alinka Echeverría » Paz Errázuriz » Samuel Fosso » Carlos Ginzburg » Naoya Hatakeyama » Dulce Pinzón » Raghu Rai » Pedro Slim » Gerardo Suter » Marcela Taboada » Diana Thater » Pierre Verger » Garry Winogrand » Nobuyoshi Araki » Graciela Iturbide » Pía Elizondo » Zanele Muholi » Ricardo Nicolayevsky » Patricia Lagarde » ... | | October ‐ December 2017 | | More information and complete program: www.fotomexicofestival.com.mx | | | | | | | | FOTOMÉXICO 2017, the International Photography Festival is a space for creativity, a reference in the reflection and dialogue about national and international photographic production, a diverse expression of the vitality, relevance, and strength of this medium and its creators. From October to December, under the coordination of the Centro de la Imagen, FOTOMÉXICO 2017 is a forum open to the diverse and multiple works of our photographic creators. It is a meeting place for the photography community with venues in museums, galleries, and exhibition spaces that also join the Foto México Network’s initiatives. Dedicated to theme of "Latitudes", this second edition of the festival offers plural, geographic, anthropological, and multidisciplinary perspectives, with exhibitions by renowned artists from Mexico, Brasil, Chile, France, Brasil, United States, Argentina, Peru, Spain, France, Germany, Scandinavia, India, Japan, South Africa, Mali and Nigeria, among others. A broad program of parallel activities complements the festival, which for the first time organizes a call for entries to participate in portfolio review that brings together outstanding photographers, visual artists, and curators, to generate a dynamic of feedback with all those who have submitted their work. The Museo Amparo in Puebla once again opens its doors to host the International Photography Meeting 2017, an event not to be missed in this edition of the festival. FOTOMÉXICO 2017 is an opportunity for the public to experience in this artistic expression that captures the moment to eternalize it through the multiple eyes of the photographic c… | |
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| "spacegarden", 2013, 182 x 280 cm courtesy Wemhöner Collection © Michael Najjar | | Clouds ⇄ Forests | | 7th Moscow International Biennale of Contemporary Art | | Adel Abidin » Matthew Barney » Björk » Hussein Chalayan » Rohini Devasher » Cecile B. Evans » Forensic Architecture » Theaster Gates » Gauri Gill » Elliot Hundley » Pierre Huyghe » Ali Kazma » Michael Najjar » Uriel Orlow » Laure Prouvost » Robert Zhao Renhui » August Sander » Mikhail Tolmachev » Ryan Trecartin » .. | | – 18 January 2018 | | | | | | | | The 7th Moscow International Biennale of Contemporary Art takes place in the New Tretyakov Gallery (The State Tretyakov Gallery, 10, Krymsky Val, Moscow) from 19 September 2017 to 18 January 2018. The Main Project Clouds⇄Forests is curated by Yuko Hasegawa - one of the leading curators in the international art world - and includes 52 artists from 25 countries. The concept of Clouds⇄Forests focuses on a new eco-system formed through the circulation of "Cloud Tribes" born on the Internet cloud space, and "Forest Tribes" born in an analogue world. Works of the artists in the Main Project are displayed in dialogue with works from the permanent exhibition of The State Tretyakov Gallery. Michael Najjar » has been invited to participate in the Biennale with several large-scale artworks from his celebrated "outer space" series. On view for the first time will be his "liquid time" triptych, created especially for the Biennale. This work highlights the fragility of our ecological balance and the significance of the change of state from ice to water because glaciers are storehouses of time - layer on layer they capture the air, water and oxygen of countless thousands of years. The picture was taken in early 2017 in an ice cave under the Breiðamerkurjökull glacier in Iceland. Also on view, in the All-Russian State Library, will be Michael Najjar´s striking new video artwork "terraforming". The work focuses on transformation of a natural environment through energy input and combines footage taken on various locations in Iceland in early 2017 with Martian landscapes shot by NASA´s Curiosity Mars rover. | |
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| | | | from the series Suburbia Mexicana © Alejandro Cartagena |
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© 28 November 2017 photography-now.com Ziegelstr. 29 . D–10117 DE . Berlin . Editor: Claudia Stein + Michael Steinke . contact@photography-now.com . T +49.30.24 34 27 80 |
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