" Ζωγραφιζω εκεινο που δεν μπορει να φωτογραφηθει και φωτογραφιζω εκεινο που δεν επιθυμω να ζωγραφισω...Δεν με ενδιαφερει να γινομαι κατανοητος ως ζωγραφος, ως δημιουργος αντικειμενων ή ως φωτογραφος".... "Δεν ειμαι φωτογραφος της φυσης αλλα της φαντασιας μου ... θα προτιμουσα να φωτογραφισω μια ιδεα παρα ενα αντικειμενο κι ενα ονειρο παρα μια ιδεα" Man Ray (1890-1976)

" Δεν ενδιαφερει να αποδωσει κανεις το ορατο, αλλα να κανει ορατο οτι δεν ειναι" Paul Klee (1879-1940)

3/30/2011

Bruce Connew "I Drive You Crazy, to the Moon"

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Bruce Connew
I Drive You Crazy, to the Moon # 1
Archival pigment print on Hahnemuhle Photo Rag
Dimensions Variable
Edition of 10 (individually) and 3 (24 images) 2011

 Bruce Connew | "I Drive You Crazy, to the Moon"
24 March - 16 April 2011
{Suite} Fine Art Gallery 69 Owen Street, Wellington 6021, New Zealand +64 4 976 7663
info@suite.co.nz,  http://www.suite.co.nz
Wed-Fri 10:30-5:30 & Sat 10:30-4:00













Bruce Connew
I Drive You Crazy, to the Moon # 2
Archival pigment print on Hahnemuhle Photo Rag
Dimensions Variable
Edition of 10 (individually) and 3 (24 images)  2011
Bruce Connew’s I Drive You Crazy, to the Moon opens as a photographic exhibition at {Suite} Gallery, New Zealand (March 24–April 16) and will be published later in the year as the final volume in his recent trilogy of artist books. Featuring a series of 24 photographic images, the concertina-format book will run as a signed and numbered limited edition of 600 copies.
As with I Must Behave (2009), the second in the trilogy, I Drive You Crazy, to the Moon has been purposefully compiled without any accompanying text. Connew has asserted the importance of this move away from text as an attempt to negotiate any prescriptive interpretation of the works, although perhaps his title offers a signpost.
Following on from I Saw You (2007) and I Must Behave, I Drive You Crazy, to the Moon continues to explore the social and political imperatives that have become characteristic concerns of Connew’s practice. While the earlier editions in this series focused a critical eye on systems of surveillance and control, this current body of work grapples more abstractly with the geo-political implications of capitalist frameworks. I Drive You Crazy, to the Moon is composed of a collection of photographs taken while making a journey by car. Streams of light are captured as the vehicle makes its way along the road to its elusive destination. Upon excavating this iconography, the journey reveals itself as a metaphor for oil, its production and consumption, and the impact of these processes on our social fabric. That the precise location of this journey remains ambiguous speaks all the more loudly of the trans-national reach of the capitalist machine and our reliance on precious resources, the acquisition of which may be fraught with problems.
These serious themes are explored,somewhat paradoxically, through what are unarguably beautiful, poetic and rather lyrical images that purposefully skew Connew’s social/political thread. The seductive dark surfaces of the night skies are laced with ribbons oflight that convey a sense of speed and complex movement, and which give the images a strong graphic quality. Like the impressionistic images in I Saw You, these photographs have taken on an almost painterly dimension in their move away from purely figurative documentation. There is also something fleeting and otherworldly about the pictures. A sense of tension or frenetic energycan be detected as the lines of light vibrate in unpredictable patterns across the surface of the images.
While the images themselves are clearly more abstracted than in Connew’s previous bodies of work and break free of his earlier more conventional form, a sense of linear narrative structure can be found in the use of musical notation. Full-page photographs are punctuated by sequences in which these same images are repeated on a smaller scale andlaid out like notes on a musical score, complete with ties, slurs and dotted notes. The melancholy, delicate joy, the dense and personal rawness and violent rhythm of Beethoven’s Late Quartet #14 Op 131 are the inspirations here. This notational device registers the sense of cadence to be found within individual photographs, and ties in well with the concertina design of the book so that the pages fold out like an extended piece of sheet music.
In this project, of course, as with the complete trilogy, content is inextricably linked to form. The book is a space of fictional tales and official histories (which, one might argue, are often the same thing), full of narratives that are consumed in our private worlds of reading. In the context of the book,our relation to the images in I Drive You Crazy, to the Moon becomes more intimate, so that the photographs are encountered one-on-one in close proximity. The tactile experience of the book is important too; the feel of paper between your fingers and the opening out of the concertina pages elicit a very physical engagement with the body of the ‘reader’. In doing so, Connew’s book resonates more closely, drawing us into his abstracted world where we as viewers, as readers and as participants in his series, are asked to discover the meanings of the work by engaging all our senses.                                Barbara Garrie 2011

Barbara Garrie is an arts writer and PhD candidate at the University of Canterbury, Christchurch, New Zealand.
















Bruce Connew
I Drive You Crazy, to the Moon # 3
Archival pigment print on Hahnemuhle Photo Rag
Dimensions Variable
Edition of 10 (individually) and 3 (24 images)
2011
photography-now.com
Torstr. 218 | 10115 Berlin | Editor: Claudia Stein

3/05/2011

André Kertész - Retrospective

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André Kertész
Satiric Dancer, 1926
Gelatin silver print
printed in the 1970s, 25,4 x 20,3 cm
Courtesy of Estate of André Kertész, New York

André Kertész - Retrospective

26 February 2011 until 15 May 2011 (Main Gallery & Gallery)
Opening: Friday, 25 February 2011, from 6 p.m. till 9 p.m.
At 7 p.m., the exhibition will be introduced by Michel Frizot and Urs Stahel.
FOTOMUSEUM WINTERTHUR
Grüzenstrasse 44+45 , CH-8400 Winterthur (Zurich)
Tel: +41 52 234 10 60 Fax: +41 52 233 60 97
fotomuseum@fotomuseum.ch www.fotomuseum.ch
Tues-Sun 11 am to 6 pm, Wed 11 am to 8 pm
André Kertész
Underwater Swimmer, Esztergom, 1917
Gelatin-silver print
printed in the 1980s, 19 x 27 cm
Bibliothèque nationale de France


André Kertész - Retrospective
André Kertész – who was born in Budapest in 1894 and died in New York in 1985 – was a supporter of Brassaï, an inspiration for Henri Cartier-Bresson, and is considered one of the founders of photojournalism. He introduced stylistic elements that can still be found today in the works of contemporary photographers. Kertész was a genuine photographer and artist—poetic, investigative, essential, free in thought and actions. He liked to characterize himself as an “eternal amateur.” But what a brilliant “amateur” he was; what virtuosic imagery he employed his entire life to capture the poetry of the everyday! His photographic production was closely connected to his life and psyche. Even when he seemed to be documenting something, he let himself be guided almost exclusively by feeling, by instinct, from his soul. This resulted in a body of work that he liked to compare to a “visual journal,” and about which he said, “I have never just ‘made photos.’ I express myself photographically.” With around 250 photographs and countless magazine contributions, the retrospective at Fotomuseum Winterthur enables a comprehensive view of his work. It shows in depth his unique methods (in photographic postcards, in distortions), his editorial engagement (for example, in the volume Paris vu par Kertész, 1934), his passion for experimentation (with light and shadow), and the evocation of emotions, above all of loneliness in the city.

André Kertész
Distortion n° 41, 1933 [with André Kertész self-portrait]
Gelatin silver print
later print, 18,5 x 24,7 cm
Collection of Maison Européenne
de la Photographie, Paris


The exhibition has been organized by the Jeu de Paume in Paris in collaboration with the Fotomuseum Winterthur. Curators of the exhibition are Michel Frizot and Annie-Laure Wanaverbecq. We would like to thank the French embassy, as well as Jürg Marquard, Honorary Consul General of the Republic of Hungary, and Gratian Anda, Consul General of the Republic of Hungary, for their generous support.

Events in the context of the Kertész-Retrospective: On March 30, Michel Frizot will deliver a double lecture on Kertész and on Cartier-Bresson. We will also host three Image Foci.

There is an comprehensive catalog accompanying the exhibition – it is also available in English:
André Kertész, eds. Michel Frizot / Annie-Laure Wanaverbecq. Editions Hazan, Paris
360 pages, hardcover, 544 images. With essays by Michel Frizot and Annie-Laure Wanaverbecq.
Price: CHF 69 / EUR 52 / USD 70

Correlazioni. Dialoghi visuali sul tema del paesaggio. Fotografie di Bianchi, Covino, D’Agostino, Gammarota, Youdovich

di Maurizio G. De Bonis - Carlo Gallerati - Valentina Trisolino

correlazioni-dialogo_visuale

Percorsi imprevedibili, riflessioni intrecciate, pensieri concordanti che si inseguono, sensibilità opposte che si incontrano, idee che si nutrono di altre idee, sguardi che tentano di identificare l’altro, diversità che non si rifiutano. Parlare, studiare, vedere, annotare mentalmente considerazioni e intuizioni, abbandonarsi agli abissi soggettivi degli interlocutori, percepire risonanze nascoste ma potenti, rintracciare una possibile apertura grazie all’ascolto.
Tutto ciò è stato (e continua a essere) il Ritiro di Studi sulla Fotografia di Prato, appuntamento annuale che si svolge sotto l’egida di Punto di Svista e nell’ambito del quale, di volta in volta, si sono confrontati fotografi, critici e curatori, in una sorta di territorio anarchico che considera la fotografia non solo una “questione dello sguardo” ma anche “luogo mentale” che vive artisticamente grazie allo “scandalo intollerabile” (per i tempi attuali) della condivisione.

Samuele Bianchi, Alfredo Covino, Pietro D’Agostino, Giovanna Gammarota e Orith Youdovich hanno coltivato il loro intenso rapporto all’interno di questa esperienza collettiva, di questo articolato filtro umano caratterizzato da connessioni che negli anni non si sono mai dissolte. I cinque autori hanno affrontato insieme un lavorìo denso e aperto, sincero e rigoroso che li ha portati, in modo del tutto naturale, a convergere verso un punto di passaggio che appariva ormai inevitabile. La mostra Correlazioni rappresenta, in tal senso, il raggiungimento di un obiettivo comune che però non vuole essere un traguardo ma solo il trampolino di lancio verso una rinnovata esperienza interpersonale. La sostanza di questa iniziativa espositiva non si esaurisce, dunque, nella sua realizzazione concreta quanto piuttosto nell’ulteriore spinta alla ricerca, che i fotografi considerano fondamentale impulso per il loro futuro percorso individuale.

Correlazioni è un dialogo visuale/filosofico sul tema del paesaggio, argomento che nel tempo ha consentito agli autori di stabilire un legame sviluppatosi poi naturalmente nelle loro rispettive opere. Bianchi, Covino, D’Agostino, Gammarota e Youdovich hanno lavorato su un concetto che tutti cercavano autonomamente e che si è palesato ai loro occhi nell’atto, quasi performativo (e certamente psicologico), della riflessione condivisa: il paesaggio inteso come “luogo della mente” e non come mera raffigurazione di una realtà fine a se stessa. E ancora: l’estetica non legata in maniera rigida alla “bellezza” quanto piuttosto al “sentimento della percezione” e alla dimensione delle “infinite possibilità creative” del fare fotografia.
Alla luce di quanto affermato, l’azione fisica della luce, la casualità misteriosa dello sguardo, lo spazio privato dall’angoscia castrante del senso, la distruzione liberatoria del “matrimonio asfittico” tra sguardo e realtà, la certezza della relazione tra fotografia e altre forme espressive (visive e non) sono stati i fattori sui quali i fotografi hanno costruito il loro dialogo interiore che è poi divenuto complesso labirinto di rimandi e concetti organizzati fotograficamente, appunto. E tale dialogo, oltretutto, ha tratto una sua vitale (e antica) forza poetica dalla pratica costante e spontanea (che continua ancora oggi) della corrispondenza telematica non incentrata sulle parole ma sulle immagini. Invii reciproci di paesaggi, scatti, luoghi: una rete di “possibilità”, senza demiurghi e guide, che si è fatta da sola e che ha alimentato i processi creativi dei singoli nonché la sostanza filosofica della loro pratica creativa.

La scelta di esporre alla Galleria Gallerati di Roma è dovuta proprio al fondamento stesso del progetto espositivo, cioè la volontà di collaborare nell’ambito di un’iniziativa i cui scopi culturali e artistici sono profondamente condivisi da tutte le realtà in campo: autori, curatori, gallerista. Il rispetto tra i soggetti in questione va di pari passo con l’interesse e la stima per il lavoro svolto dalla galleria nella promozione della fotografia contemporanea e dell’arte in generale. Pur se giovane, Galleria Gallerati si è chiaramente distinta per una costante sensibilità nei confronti della fotografia e degli autori che vi hanno esposto: grazie a mostre che hanno dato spazio e adeguata divulgazione a un ramo dell’arte contemporanea ancora solo parzialmente riconosciuto dalla mentalità del pubblico nel suo status di autonomo medium artistico.
Ecco dunque che, all’interno di questa spinta collaborativa, tre curatori decidono di unirsi e di lavorare a stretto contatto. L’esperienza del singolo si mette in gioco per dare e ricevere, per crescere confrontandosi con altre figure che sulla curatela hanno impostato la propria ricerca e il proprio lavoro.

© Maurizio G. De Bonis, Carlo Gallerati, Valentina Trisolino / CultFrame 03/2011


INFORMAZIONI

Correlazioni / Mostra ideata da Punto di Svista
A cura di Maurizio G. De Bonis, Carlo Gallerati e Valentina Trisolino
Da 4 marzo all’8 aprile 2011 /
Galleria Gallerati / Via Apuania 55, Roma / telefono: 06.44258243
Orario: lunedì – venerdì 17.00 – 19.00 / sabato, domenica e fuori orario: su appuntamento

Ufficio stampa:
Galleria Gallerati (info@galleriagallerati.it)
Punto di Svista (puntodisvista@gmail.com)
Valentina Trisolino (valentina.trisolino@gmail.com)

http://www.cultframe.com/2011/02/correlazioni-dialoghi-visuali-paesaggio-fotografie-bianchi-covino-d%E2%80%99agostino-gammarota-youdovich/

Jeremy Lynch Ghosts from Cairo / Simulacrum

New Editions 2011
PHOTO EDITION BERLIN.
gallery for contemporary photography
Ystaderstr.14a, D - 10437 Berlin +49 (0)30 41717831
www.photo-edition-berlin.com
Opening hours: Wed 2 - 6 pm, Sat 12 - 4 pm and by appointment

Jeremy Lynch Ghosts from Cairo / Simulacrum


Jeremy Lynch, Simulacrum # 01, 40 x 40 cm, C-Print, Ed. 1/5, 2010

In the new photographs by Canadian artist Jeremy Lynch (*1966) we discover something which since the invention of photography has not lost its fascination at all: to make the invisible visible.That visibility depends on the media (technique) introduced by the spiritualists of the 19th Century, their laconic motto probably is as valid today as it was understood back then: "No Medium, no photograph".

The precise form of "Simulacrum" goes back to the atomistic theory of perception of Lucretius.To generate their own visibility by sending out constantly fine layers of its outer envelope into the room, things then leave the appropriate marks on the retina. These flying-around layers or "skin" are the simulacra.

Roland Barthes said that a simulacrum reconstructs his subject through selection and recombination and in this way designs it anew. The result is a "world that is similar to the first, not copying it, but wants to make visible. "



Jeremy Lynch, Simulacrum #2, 40 x 50 cm, Baryth-Print, Ed. 1/5, 2010

PhotoArts - Landscapes: Casamiro Mondino | Jean Lewis :: Le Marche | Nebraska

http://photoarts.com/

The agricultural landscape of Le Marche in Italy and that of the U.S. state of Nebraska share remarkable similarities. Or is it a similarity of vision of the photographers Casimiro Mondino and Jean Lewis?
These carefully cultivated terrains - so far distant geographically - come together in the devoted attention of their respective stewards.
But, while it is the agriculturalist who harvests the land; it is the artist - here photographer - who harvests the landscape.


Casimiro Mondino
Le Marche



Jean Lewis
Remembering Nebraska

Thomas Wrede | Anywhere

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Thomas Wrede, High-Rise Housing Estate II (Arco), 2009, Lambda Print Diasec, 190 x 150 cm

Thomas Wrede | Anywhere
February 18 to April 9, 2011
Opening reception Friday, February 18, 2011, 7 to 10 p.m.
The artist will be present.
WAGNER + PARTNER
Cai Wagner + Margret Uhrmeister Karl-Marx-Allee 87, 10243 Berlin
+49 (0)30 21 960 137 mail@galerie-wagner-partner.com
www.galerie-wagner-partner.com
Tues-Sat 12-6 p.m. and by appointment

Thomas Wrede, Fjord, 2010, Lambda Print Diasec, 170 x 245 cm

Thomas Wrede, Anywhere
Landscapes as projection screens for desires are the overarching theme of the German photographic artist Thomas Wrede (*1963, Lethmate). Since the late 1990s the artist has in various photographic series delved into our – still rather romantically characterised - desire to experience nature. He further questions the truth value and the messages of media images, which are surround us everywhere and at the same time form the visual basis for such desires.
Galerie Wagner + Partner is excited to be able to present the next instalment of the series “Real Landscapes” through new works by the artist. The works display Wrede’s joy of creating his own visual worlds, which give the viewer the impression of already knowing them. By means of a foreground illusion, achieved through skilful staging of models in the real landscape, such as on the North Sea beach, Thomas Wrede produces pictures that seem without time and place. “Anywhere” leads through housing projects, snowfields or a South Sea paradise…



Thomas Wrede, Above the Valley, 2009, Lambda Print Diasec, 170 x 210 cm

By constantly starting with omnipresent media imagery and merging them in his staged pictures with our desires, the artist achieves virtually hallucinogenic landscape images. Wredes works thus become an allegory of our time, in which - as media philosopher Vilém Flusser has put it – reality is forgotten in favor of artificial images. The world of images more real than reality. Absolutely everywhere.



Thomas Wrede, At the River, 2009, Lambda Print Diasec, 170 x 170 cm

photography-now.com
Torstr. 218 | 10115 Berlin | Editor: Claudia Stein
contact@photography-now.com | T +49.30.24 34 27 80

3/03/2011

Veronica Bailey | Modern Myths

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© Veronica Bailey, Apollo from the series Modern Myths

Veronica Bailey | Modern Myths

02 March - 16 April 2011

Bernheimer Fine Art Photography
Brienner Str. 7 . D-80333 Munich Tel: +49 (0)89-22 66 72 Fax: +49 (0)89-22 60 37
ww@bernheimer.com www.bernheimer.com
Tues-Fri 10 a.m. - 6 p.m., Sat 11 a.m. - 4 p.m.


© Veronica Bailey, Demeter from the series Modern Myths

Veronica Bailey – Modern Myths

Bernheimer Fine Art Photography is proud to announce an exhibition of Photographs by the English artist Veronica Bailey.
Modern Myths is Veronica Bailey’s latest body of work and again it is a meditative exercise focusing upon traditional yet increasingly threatened forms of human communication and knowledge dissemination. Where 2 Willow Road and Hours of Devotion took the book and Postscript the more delicate nature of letters, Modern Myths takes newsprint as its trigger.
Newspapers are intrinsically ephemeral wedges of low-grade paper written and designed to pass on only the most recent take on an ever evolving and devolving news story. They are the essence of cheap, disposable pulp, their shelf life barely even 24 hours. But in that time, in one way or another, the whole broad spectrum of the human experience is embedded within. With Modern Myths, this is inferred obliquely while Bailey manipulates the tight sheets, into suggestive forms and haphazard shapes, creating line from the paper’s edges.
The typefaces that lie, almost scattered, across these sheets are intentionally obscured and the series is reliant on form and colour to engender its own rhythms. Each image has been allotted with a title referencing the deities of Greek mythology, imposing the relevant characteristics of each on the form, as it is read. And the key image, the one that in a sense resonates across the series and endows it with its meaning, is Olympus, that rarefied dwelling place of the gods, the hub that lay at the heart of all their nefarious plots and petty jealousies.

Modern Myths
Total Edition 15 + 1AP in 3 sizes
Print sizes
Size 1 H 50 x W 45 cm Edition 6
Size 2 H 100 x W 90 cm Edition 6
Size 3 H 200 x W 180 cm Edition 3

© Veronica Bailey, Hera from the series Modern Myths


© Veronica Bailey, Olympus from the series Modern Myths

© Veronica Bailey, Zeus from the series Modern Myths

photography-now.com
Torstr. 218 | 10115 Berlin | Editor: Claudia Stein
contact@photography-now.com | T +49.30.24 34 27 80

Hungry Eyes Valérie Belin | Dimitri Tsykalov | Tony Le Duc

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Dimitri Tsykalov, Skull IV, 2008, Lambda print, Diasec © Dimitri Tsykalov / Galerie Rabouan Moussion Paris
Hungry Eyes
Valérie Belin | Dimitri Tsykalov | Tony Le Duc

9 February - 5 June 2011
Photo Museum Antwerp
Waalsekaai 47, 2000 Antwerpen Belgium
+32(0)3 2429300 info@fotografie.provant.be www.fotomuseum.be
Opening hours: Tues-Sun 10am-6pm

In the spring of 2011, the FoMu is set to stimulate more than just the eye: Three photographers approach 'food' in an entirely singular way. Tony Le Duc (B) has dramatically changed our way of looking at gastronomy through his innovative photographs in cookbooks and culinary magazines. The FoMu shows his extensive body of work that spans no less than 25 years of food photography. To strengthen the supportive base of his photographic efforts, FoMu presents a historical overview of the illustrated cookbook.
In the 'Skulls' series Dimitri Tsykalov creates symbols of vanity in which he combines skulls with ripe fruit, as a contemporary interpretation of the still life (nature morte). The concept of impermanence already present in ‘Skulls’, is taken to the extreme in the series ‘Meat’. The 'Meat' photographs take the nature morte almost to its extreme. Tsykalov brings guns to life with dead flesh. This dead meat is held by a man, a man who is seen as living flesh. But for how long? The living flesh starts to die while the dead flesh comes to life.
Valérie Belin (FR, *1964) selects her often banal objects on the basis of their photogenic qualities and expressive tension. All subjects are uniformly portrayed: very detailed, in their entirety, in frontal view, with dramatic lighting in front of a neutral, monochromatic background. The items are photographed in such a way that they seem to lose their status of "thing". The seemingly simple images exude an air of immense complexity. Belin ingeniously plays with the tension between representation and reproduction, surface and volume, Minimalism and Baroque. Her focus lies on matter and light, on the quiet presence of the object that is brought out through photography.

Valérie Belin, Untitled, 2002, Engines series © Valérie Belin. Courtesy Galerie Jérôme de Noirmont, Paris.

Blue Elephant peppers © Tony Le Duc

photography-now.com
Torstr. 218 | 10115 Berlin | Editor: Claudia Stein
contact@photography-now.com | T +49.30.24 34 27 80

Chema Madoz | Obras Maestras

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Sans titre, 2008. © Chema Madoz

Courtesy galerie Esther Woerdehoff
Chema Madoz | Obras Maestras

Vernissage: Wednesday, March 2nd, 6 pm - 9 pm
Exhibition: March 2nd - April 3rd, 2011

36, rue Falguière, 75015 Paris - France +33(0)1 43 21 44 83
galerie@ewgalerie.com www.ewgalerie.com


Sans titre, 2009. © Chema Madoz
Courtesy galerie Esther Woerdehoff

Chema Madoz | Obras Maestras
Esther Woerdehoff gallery is pleased to present Spanish photographer Chema Madoz's recent work. The exhibition comes with the publication of his last monograph Obras Maestras by the edition “La Fabrica”.
Like a poet assembles words, Chema Madoz realizes his photographs based on a vocabulary of objects that he combines, reprocesses, and opposes to finally obtain unexpected conjunctions where surrealism and absurdity aren’t far away from each other. By setting the everyday objects free from their usual destiny, he makes us pass behind the mirror. This poetic vision is the issue of his imagination that questions our perception of reality and its representation.
Chema Madoz was born in Madrid in 1958. At the beginning of the 80’s he discovered cinema and photography in the creative effervescence of the “Movida”. He worked at first outdoors, exploring the relations created between personages and their environment; then he dedicated himself in an exclusive way to photographing objects. He constructs in the course of time a work that reflects his interior world. Ignoring voluntary the modes of contemporary art, he transmits a poetic imagination and fantasizes under the formal precision of a big artistic coherence.

Sans titre, 2006. © Chema Madoz
Courtesy galerie Esther Woerdehoff

photography-now.com
Torstr. 218 | 10115 Berlin | Editor: Claudia Stein
contact@photography-now.com | T +49.30.24 34 27 80

Frank Hülsbömer | photokinetiks, or a short guide for the construction of meaning

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constructing meaning in 3 steps (2010)

Frank Hülsbömer | photokinetiks, or a short guide for the construction of meaning

March 5 - April 9, 2011
Public hours: Thursday-Saturday, 12:00-18:00 You are cordially invited to the opening on March 4th, from 6 to 9pm at WiE Kultur in the art district behind the Hamburger Bahnhof Museum in Berlin-Mitte.
Kabinett Termin #6: Meet the Artist, Thursday, March 24, 19:00
WiE Kultur Heidestrasse 52, 10557 Berlin
Fon: +49 (30) 5587-5829 Fax: +49 (30) 5514-0771 wie@wiekultur.de

www.wiekultur.de www.frankhuelsboemer.de


constructivists vacation (2009)

Can geometrical forms be something else from what they actually are? If yes, could they serve as basis for a new vade mecum apt to instruct us on how to construct meaning? This last question is the leading theme of "a short guide for the construction of meaning", the exhibition presenting the new works of Berlin based artist Frank Hülsbömer.
Using photography and video as art media, Hülsbömer depicts a parallel universe inhabited by minimally structured surfaces and forms in which all contradictions are admitted and - sometimes - happily unified. The artist's way of treating objects is both poetical and playful: it seems as though he is taking a step back in order to allow his objects to live and to develop their own life. Hülsbömer does not want to disturb the scenery he is looking at. Indeed, it appears as if the artist has just limited himself to the mere observation of the aesthetic scene he is in front of and then named it by taking recourse to his elegant and characteristic sense of irony.
At first sight, Hülsbömer's dynamic depictions of objects can arouse suspicions of just being computer renderings or 3D computer graphics. However his work surprisingly is subject to no other intervention except for the pure instrument of photography and the simple act of filming. Due to the clarity and minimalism of the work and the artist’s striking virtuosity of photographic technique, the viewer is led to think that Hülsbömer wants to reach a sort of visual perfection. Hülsbömer himself says that there is no attempt of portraying perfection in his work: “Perfection is just an idea, which people can only aim at.” Hülsbömer is attempting to demystify and simplify the phenomena of reality through a continuous reference to the dualism permeating our human experience.
In this attempt of simplification and demystification one is able to recognize a connection between Hülsbömer’s work and the artistic production of the group active in Germany in the decade before and after the WWII, known as Subjective Photography. The photographers belonging to this movement - Peter Keetman, Wolfgang Reisewitz, Otto Steinert and their students - were interested in pursuing a visual purism obtained through the exercise of formalist imagery.
Hülsbömer gives the results achieved within the Subjective Photography a new twist. This is made possible by the very personal interpretation of the media used to portray the geometric shapes by the artist who is not bound to the mere use of photography but crosses over to video art achieving a further fragmentation and reduction of the represented objects. Hülsbömer's original use of Photokinetiks, reminding the viewer of a zoetrope, in which the illusion of action comes from a rapid succession of static pictures giving the impression of a “vision held in suspension”, points out the change of the current state of affairs within the scenery intended by the artist as a metaphor for the human condition. Hülsbömer’s Photokinetiks has a narrative value that, although detached from the perceptual world and characterized by an extreme simplification, allows the spectator to reach a deeper understanding of reality which appears lyrical in its elementariness.
a short guide for the construction of meaning focuses on the strong tension between chance and science. This is a recurring theme in Hülsbömer’s work, already present, indeed, in his book The Fiction of Science. However, in his new work the artist shows an enhanced and matured treatment of the topic, which reaches a full-fledged mastery.
Borrowing from Gottlob Frege, Hülsbömer's works investigate the areas of sense and meaning, establishing a playful relationship with them: Can it be possible to find an unchangeable rule that allows humans to construct meaning? Is Hülsbömer in possession of it? The elegance, balance and minimalism that characterize his work seem to answer positively.
Elisa Oddone guest curator

This exhibition will be accompanied by a catalogue in edition.
The earlier publication includes: the fiction of science (gestalten, 2009)


the tennis speed of light (2008)

Selected solo exhibitions:
„the anatomy of surface“, side program of transmediale at M12, berlin (jan. 2008)
daz (deutsches architektur zentrum), berlin 2006
gallery „no good window“, paris (2005)
gallery magda danysz, paris (2003)
german pavilion at the „world expo“, hannover (2000)
deutsches haus/nyu, nyc

Selected group exhibitions:
picnic magazine group show at beit ha’ir museum, tel aviv. 30/12/2010 - 26/03/2011
"retrato berlin", museo nacional de bellas artes santiago, chile 16.10. - 27.12.2009
palacio nacional de las artes-palais de glace, buenos aires/argentina 26.10. - 03.11.2009
MFF media fassades festival berlin 2008. video projection at the "collegium hungaricum
“berlin:portrait” contemporary photography and video art from berlin. goethe institut washington dc/usa. aug-sept. 2007
“talking cities- die micropolitik des urbanen raumes”, essen/germany (aug.-dez. 2006)
instituto italiano di cultura di tokyo 18-22. dec. urban spaces, tokio (2006)
zkm, “making things public”, karlsruhe (2005)
festival transphotographiques, lille/france (2004)
“electrovillage” museum für angewande kunst, köln (2003)
bundeskunsthalle bonn, europäischer architekturfotografie-preis 2003
vitra museum/design mai, berlin (2003)
festival of visions with goethe institut, hong kong (2000)

decelerating flashmob (2011)

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Torstr. 218 | 10115 Berlin | Editor: Claudia Stein
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Sohei Nishino | Diorama maps

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Diorama Map Istanbul 2011
© Sohei Nishino courtesy Michael Hoppen Contemporary/EMON PHOTO GALLERY

Sohei Nishino | Diorama maps

24th February - 2nd April 2011 3 Jubilee Place, London SW3 3TD
Tel: +44 (0)20 7352 3649 Fax: +44 (0)20 7352 3669
gallery@michaelhoppengallery.com www.michaelhoppengallery.com
Tues-Fri 12noon - 6 pm . Sat 10:30am - 5pm


Diorama Map London 2010
© Sohei Nishino courtesy Michael Hoppen Contemporary/EMON PHOTO GALLERY

Sohei Nishino is one of the rising stars of contemporary Japanese photography. Discovered in 2008 by Michael Hoppen, 28 year old Nishino’s extraordinary photographic dioramas, monumental in size, map out the artist’s personal impressions of the world’s major cities in several thousand intimate details.

© Sohei Nishino
Never before exhibited outside of Asia, Michael Hoppen Contemporary will present the Diorama Map series for his inaugural European show, featuring twelve of the artist's most striking works. Nishino’s collages are not precise geographic recreations, but an imperfect mix of landmarks and iconic features conceived from his personal ‘re-experiencing’ of a city.
Inspired by Japanese cartography and gifted with an impressive power of observation, his extraordinary maps are a result of a long journey through many cities: Osaka, his hometown, Hiroshima, Kyoto, Tokyo, Hong Kong as well as Shanghai, New York, Paris, London and his last creation Istanbul.
When photographing a city, Nishino walks the entire city on foot for a month, capturing streets and buildings from every possible angle, often using over 300 rolls of black and white film and taking over 10,000 pictures. In a lengthy and painstaking process, all made by hand, Nishino creates a photographic map through which the city reveals itself. Nishino’s re-imagination of a city presents a convincing record despite its geographical inaccuracies, a map embodying the intricacies of a city through the eyes and recollection of an outsider.

Diorama Map Tokyo 2004
© Sohei Nishino courtesy Michael Hoppen Contemporary/EMON PHOTO GALLERY
photography-now.com
Torstr. 218 | 10115 Berlin | Editor: Claudia Stein
contact@photography-now.com | T +49.30.24 34 27 80