Category Archives: PHOTOGRAPHY & MOVING IMAGES

Old News

picasso-lightgrafiti

Way back in 1949, LIFE photographer Gjon Mili visited Picasso. He showed him some of his photographs of light patterns formed by a skater’s leaps, obtained by fixing tiny lights on the points of the skates and, inspired, the two created these photographs of Picasso ‘drawing’ with a small flashlight in a dark room.

There’s more to be found in LIFE gallery

Nostalgia

nostalgia

They say that just before you enter heaven you’ll see your life pass before your eyes. Usually imagined as a fast-forward flip book of sentimental still images: birth, parents, school, holiday, first girlfriend, first sex, job, wife, kids, etc. and all the little things in between, summating a totality of meagre existence in a split second flash.
Yeondoo Jung, however, is a man who likes to take a bit of time with things, savour every precious moment, sit back and enjoy the ride.

Documentary Nostalgia is a one-take one-chance-only performance shot in real time. No stops, no pauses. This is Jung’s magnificent autobiography. Birthday party clown tricks, slapstick humour, cartoon exaggeration, and the clumsy ‘special effects’ of silent movie cliche; Jung draws from all the low-fi mysteries of childhood delight to reconstruct his own reality.
Not as it was, but as he prefers to remember it, a make-shift mythology in its conception, wide-eyed, innocent, and confounding.
He offers the possibility of not one existence, but many: to be urban and rural, contemporary or ancient, Eastern or Western, to be anywhere or anything at all. Everyone can do this simply by daring to dream.

Artist: Yeondoo Jung

Are you my friend?

simon_hoegsberg-1

I met a lot of interesting, talented and funny people lately. They are located in different countries all over the world. We follow each other’s activities, we share dreams and thoughts, we make plans and we even party together …….

And it’s all happening in a virtual world.

I never expected to find myself chatting with complete “strangers” but here I am. And I’m truly enjoying it. Only together with these new friends a new problem has entered my life. Not being used to the virtual existence I’m getting frustrated by the inability of actually getting together. Thinking about that it occurred to me that it could easily happen that I ran across one of my virtual friends without knowing.

It could be one of these.

Simon Høgsberg captured 178 people over 20 days standing from the same spot on a railroad bridge in Berlin. Then he put the photos together in what could be the world’s largest panorama (100 meters, yes meters, wide!).

website: www.simonhoegsberg.com

Haute Nature – Haute Couture

phyllis_galembo

American photographer Phyllis Galembo has an obsessive love for attires and garments which people from different parts of Africa are wearing during religious and profane celebrations and rites. Her images are disconcerting. The photographer abstains from every form of décor or stylization, thus drawing the spectator’s eye directly towards the ‘living statues’. The natural extravagance of the dresses with their beads, shells, feathers and waste matter, evokes all sorts of involuntary associations with haute couture shows in Paris.

Do you think you stand out from the crowd?

gabbers

When I was in high school there was this group of kids whom I considered to be really cool and I desperately wanted to join this group. So I asked my parents for the same (expensive) sneakers they wore convinced that would do the trick. My mum then bought me the cheap fakes, which off course were very wrong and obviously I never made it to the cool kids.

So I started to present myself as as a “not wanting to wear ridiculously expensive sneakers original person” and joined another group. Like most people I was looking for a common language to express my individuality… by dressing alike

It’s this universal human desire to conform that’s led to Exactitudes

Photographer Ari Versluis and stylist Ellie Uyttenbroek have traveled the world to identify and document modern tribes, focusing on groups as diverse as Brazilian beach honeys in matching bikinis and Dutch grannies in identical beige raincoats. Whether the catalyst to fit in is created by class, gender, rebellion or other faces of identity, each individual subject in a series is posed and shot exactly the same as the others. When placed together in groups, it’s the ubiquitous style code that’s immediately apparent.

Note: looking at Exactitudes may cost you a lot of (fun) time.

Lost-Persons

anthony-goicolea

I once met someone who collected old family portraits because he felt sorry for the people in it. He thought that they would be very sad knowing they ended up in a garbage can because nobody cared anymore, so he made it his task to save them.

It was a wonderful story and the same feeling came right back to me when I saw the work of  Anthony Goicolea. 

Inspired by old studio portraits of his long-dead relatives, he reproduced them in pencil as if they were negatives, and then photographed them as missing-person posters – appended to streetlights, trees and buildings.

The result is a series where I find, in Goicolea’s words, “the strange sense of nostalgia for something I have never been a part of or experienced directly.”

 Website: www.anthonygoicolea.com

Temporary Sculpture

martin-klimas1

Combining the silence of Edward Muybridge’s pictures with the association-rich composition of a still life, Martin Klimas breaks recognizable objects so they become something else, and stops us just at the moment of transformation. And it’s this moment of transformation that provides for us something that we normally cannot see. It is an in-between state where rest and motion can exist together.

Website: www.martin-klimas.de

Dawn

ruud-van-empel

Ruud van Empel used to design, among other things, the sets for the wacky misadventures of my absolute favorite Dutch television series for kids called Theo & Thea. I was still in art school back then, studying scenography, and he was one of my inspirators. So at first when I heard of his decision in to turn his back on film and television because of his irritation about its growing commercialization I was truly disappointed.

 Until I laid eyes on his digital photo collages and found they absolutely justified his decision. He still cuts, glues and manipulates to create new worlds only now using a computer as his paintbrush and not limited in any way anymore, the results are astonishing.

His photos may look quite realistic, but what they represent has in fact never existed. They are creations, subtly and meticulously composed by combining as many as 100 images into a single scene and almost too perfect to be true, every detail, every color is sublimated.

But you only have to look a little bit closer to at all that perfect greener-than-green scenery to know that there is something malicious lurking beneath the surface, a nameless, indefinable threat, but nonetheless present everywhere. A feeling of disquiet crawls under your skin and will remain with you for quite a while.

Website: www.ruudvanempel.nl
Show: gallery Terra in Tokio, Japan, April 18 – May 23, 2009

Looking aside

pieter-hugo

A couple of weeks ago I read an article about albinism in Africa. Albinism is a congenital disorder that affects skin pigmentation. In most African countries it can lead to expulsion and discrimination. Albinism is referred to as ‘sope’, meaning something magical inhabited by powerful evil spirits; albinos sometimes are even hunted for their body parts, which are supposed to be useful for curing various diseases.  

It made me wonder whether this could all be filed under lack of education as the article lets us believe. Or, could it be the case that we share collective prejudices only slightly  curbed by education? What can we do about our own prejudices, then?

Pieter Hugo confronts us with these prejudices as we look at his frontal portraits. Here we see what we usually choose to look at from the corners of our eyes. His series: Looking Aside (2003/2005) not only questions why we are so awkward when we encounter people who are unusual in some way but at the same time also force us to think about the meaning of ‘black’ and ‘white’.

Website: www.pieterhugo.com

Pimp your daughters

high-glitz

Beautiful yet disturbing portraits by Susan Anderson.

The “High Glitz’ genre refers to the young competitors’ couture costumes embellished with glitter, this ‘glitzy’ appearance is further perfected with a broad array of cosmetic preparations that go from glamour makeup to lacquered hairstyle and, believe it or not, flippers (false front teeth veneers). I would love to see a follow up after 5 years

Seen at TORCH gallery in Amsterdam.

source: www.highglitz.com