Showing posts with label IFTTT. Show all posts
Showing posts with label IFTTT. Show all posts

Friday, November 13, 2020

Alessandra Sanguinetti explores the passage of time through one enduring friendship

Reading Time: 3 minutes

“Time is like another character in this work. How much can you control who you become?”

Alessandra Sanguinetti turned her lens on Guillermina, then 10, and Belinda, then nine, in 1999. She had, at first, dismissed the cousins, focusing instead upon the domesticated animals populating their grandfather’s rural Argentinian farm. But, losing connection to this project (which became On the Sixth Day) as it neared its end, Sanguinetti decided to chronicle Guillermina and Belinda as they entered adolescence. She condensed her initial documentation into The Adventures of Guille and Belinda and the Enigmatic Meaning of their Dreams (2003): a rich publication revealing their lives, full of fantasy; ever so slowly encumbered by age. She did not, however, stop there; Sanguinetti continued, and the sequel, The Illusion of an Everlasting Summer, published by Mack this year, charts the cousins’ next chapter: the advent of adulthood replete with men, children, and the responsibilities of getting older.

However, together the books also delve into something deeper, a universal concern divorced from their immediate subject: the passage of time. “Time and what it does to you,” as Sanguinetti puts it. “Time is like another character in this work. How much can you control who you become?” And, in The Illusion of an Everlasting Summer, time reveals Guillermina and Belinda to be the women they envisioned they would become – for better or for worse.

From The Adventures of Guille and Belinda and The Illusion of an Everlasting Summer, 2020 © Alessandra Sanguinetti, and MACK.
From The Adventures of Guille and Belinda and The Illusion of an Everlasting Summer, 2020 © Alessandra Sanguinetti, and MACK.

While working on The Enigmatic Meaning of their Dreams, Sanguinetti, Guillermina and Belinda would often pretend to be on TV; the cousins would interview one another, and Sanguinetti also chipped in. “They must have been 10 or 11 then, and I remember asking Belinda and Guillermina how they imagined themselves in 20 years,” says Sanguinetti. Belinda envisioned living in the countryside, married, with orphaned animals, while Guillermina pictured becoming a geography teacher. “Guille has always been afraid of being alone,” continues Sanguinetti, “and to a certain extent she has made that prophecy come true.” In The Illusion of an Everlasting Summer, we observe as Belinda becomes a mother at 16 and Guillermina follows soon after. However, while Belinda’s husband remains firmly in the picture, Guillermina is alone, committed to her job as an elementary school teacher. 

From The Adventures of Guille and Belinda and The Illusion of an Everlasting Summer, 2020 © Alessandra Sanguinetti, and MACK.

Tracing their lives from age 14 to 24, The Illusion of an Everlasting Summer crystallises a critical juncture in the pair’s development. They change physically – in their appearance, and their style; the way they hold themselves and connect with the camera. But they also change relative to one another. Time has stripped them of the cosseted world they once inhabited – a carefree, make-believe realm shaped by imagination, fantasy and friendship. Fun and games are no longer the focus. Instead, the creeping responsibilities of adulthood take hold. Guillermina and Belinda are increasingly separate; as the book progresses, Sanguinetti rarely captures them together. 

The publication takes its name from that widely held desire to turn back time; to regress to a simpler era, whether that be childhood, adolescence or a period of adulthood. “One of the last times I visited with Guillermina we were looking at the picture and she said, ‘I want to return to that age. I want those summers to last forever’,” says Sanguinetti, recalling Guillermina’s longing for her childhood. And yet, The Illusion of an Everlasting Summer bears witness to those years fading further and further away. Time ticks on, pushing the cousins along an inevitable path; one which every one of us is on. 

The Adventures of Guille and Belinda and the Illusion of an Everlasting Summer is published by MACK.

From The Adventures of Guille and Belinda and The Illusion of an Everlasting Summer, 2020 © Alessandra Sanguinetti, and MACK.
From The Adventures of Guille and Belinda and The Illusion of an Everlasting Summer, 2020 © Alessandra Sanguinetti, and MACK.

The post Alessandra Sanguinetti explores the passage of time through one enduring friendship appeared first on 1854 Photography.



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1854 Presents: Max Riché

Reading Time: < 1 minute

1854 Media’s Zoe Harrison interviews environmentalist, artist and documentarian Max Riché as he talks through his projects in this installment of 1854 presents. Riché’s work begins with Climate Heroes, a multimedia project championing  those fighting climate change across the world. Riché also explores his latest projects, such as the ongoing series Paradise.

In this conversation, Riché explains the importance of working with scientists to document the changing environment, as well as his own artistic process. In his latest project, Riche travelled to the Californian town of Paradise, where the 2018 wildfire killed eighty-six people, as well as destroying 95 percent of the town’s buildings. Now, the remaining 5000 residents have stayed in order to rebuild their homes. Touching on

themes of hubris, loss, human limitations and hope, Riche explains the importance of art in the fight against climate change, and how photography can become a tool of investigation, as well as inspiration.

As you know, we believe photographers’ time is valuable. While this talk is free, Frederick has requested that donations for this talk goes to Climate Heroes  (100% of donations go directly to Climate Heroes ).

The post 1854 Presents: Max Riché appeared first on 1854 Photography.



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Thursday, November 12, 2020

Norberto Fernández Soriano joins anti-fracking activists as they collectively fight for an alternative future

Reading Time: 2 minutes

“The effects of fracking have long-term consequences: I wasn’t going to be able to document them in a traditional way”

Spanish photographer Norberto Fernández Soriano’s project, Hythloday, began with the landscape. Studying for a master’s in photography at UWE Bristol, he planned to make work about land and the psychological impact it has on its people. “I come from Extremadura, where the landscape is really different, really harsh,” he explains. “I started looking into these ideas of nature and human activity: how one affects the other, how the landscape changes our view of nature, how it shapes our behaviour.” It was this early research that led him to the controversial issue of fracking, a subject which turned his interest on its head: society directly impacting the landscape, rather than the other way around.

In early 2019 he made contact with a group of activists, located near the UK’s fracking trial site, who were dedicating their lives to protesting the site and the environmentally harmful drilling taking place there. When initial messages felt too distant, he took his van, drove to the camp, and introduced himself in person. He proceeded to stay with the group several times throughout the year, attending protests and learning about their work. However he soon realised that a simple documentary approach would not suffice: the substance of the project Soriano was beginning to conceive was something invisible. “The effects of fracking have long-term consequences: I wasn’t going to be able to document them in a traditional way,” he says. “I didn’t know how to give voice to this impact that doesn’t exist on the surface.”

Picture© Norberto Fernández Soriano. 038
© Norberto Fernández Soriano.

While researching, he learned of Thomas More’s Utopia, a satirical novel depicting a fictional island society, whose title (translated from Greek) means ‘nowhere’. Soriano began to see parallels between More’s text, which used fiction to reflect on the real social problems of his time, and the path of his own work. In the book, a sailor called Raphael Hythloday returns from Utopia to tell Thomas More’s character about his experiences. Soriano felt himself to be occupying a similar role, an explorer returning with tidings of an unknown place, and hence the project got its name. “I’m playing with this idea of fiction to portray a problem in the future that is happening in the present,” he says. Hythloday became a means of exploring and experimenting, visualising different future realities; the name hints at an attitude of discovery, of reflection on alternative possibilities for a life.

Soriano took his visual cues from magical realism, using different film stock, in both colour and black-and-white, to create a hazy, fractured portrait of a community, emphasising an atmosphere of uncertainty, moods flitting between hope and despair. His subjects have their eyes downcast, their backs turned, their gaze facing away. Soriano offers an outsider perspective of a community absorbed by their work, “their fight, their belief, their fears, and what fracking means for society”. They seem to be looking around towards different possible futures until, in the last image of the work, a man looks towards us, light and shadow dappling across his face, his eyes wary.

The post Norberto Fernández Soriano joins anti-fracking activists as they collectively fight for an alternative future appeared first on 1854 Photography.



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Photo Vogue 2020: A new festival for a new world

Reading Time: 2 minutes

The fifth edition of Vogue Italia’s annual photography festival moves online due to Covid-19 while maintaining its commitment to exploring ethics, aesthetics and photographic futures

Returning in November, the fifth instalment of Vogue Italia’s Photo Vogue Festival sees events and exhibitions move beyond their regular home of Milan into a new digital space. The festival shifts online to prioritise safety and accessibility, however, its central themes of community, solidarity and empathy reflect and explore the current social and cultural landscape impacted by Covid-19. 

The full programme will be accessible to a far wider audience than in previous years due to the online nature, with viewers able to attend exhibitions digitally from 12 November. “I’ve been imagining something really creative, magical,” reveals Alessia Glaviano, senior photo editor of Vogue Italia and director of the festival, ahead of its opening. “On the web, we can do anything. I mean, why would I want to just [show] a white room to viewers?” The digital platform will host two online exhibitions, live digital events, talks, Zoom parties, portfolio reviews and projections. “The good part is that it’s not just us at a location,” continues Glaviano. “We’re here, it’s free, and it’s open to everyone.” Select exhibition highlights are also on show outdoors in the Giardini di Porta Venezia, Milan. 

“I do believe that fashion photography can be a tool to change perception”

Alessia Glaviano, director of Photo Vogue

From the series ​GrandMaMa​ © Miloushka Bokma.
From the series ​GrandMaMa​ © Miloushka Bokma.

The theme of community runs through All in This Together, an exhibition showcasing 30 photographers chosen from the online initiative Photo Vogue Open Call. All in This Together explores universal and individual interpretations of communities and togetherness, while simultaneously reflecting on themes of isolation and loneliness. The 30 selected works reflect a range of perspectives and artistic visions. A jury of experts, including Alfedro De Stefano and Azu Nwagbogu, selected the exhibiting photographers who include Amber Pinkerton, Cécile Smetana Baudier and Julia Fullerton-Batten.

'Zaina', 2019 © Ruth Ossai
'Zaina', 2019 © Ruth Ossai
'Artemis Duffy', 2020 © Camila Falquez.
'Artemis Duffy', 2020 © Camila Falquez.

Staying true to the festival’s commitment to championing socially conscious photography, the second exhibition, In the Picture – Shifting Perspectives in Fashion Photography, sees Photo Vogue Festival collaborate with four contemporary fashion photographers: Alexandra von Fuerst, Camila Falquez, Nadine Ijewere and Ruth Ossai. The four practitioners explore the current landscape of fashion photography and employ explorations of gender, race and womanhood to facilitate important conversations within the festival and beyond it. “I do believe that fashion photography can be a tool to change perception,” says Glaviano, referencing the genre’s ability to subvert the often problematic aesthetics associated with it. Along with exhibiting their work, the four artists have also self-curated a collective exhibition space, encouraging dialogues across new digital environments. 

With two free exhibitions and various events open to the public, the latest Photo Vogue will be its biggest to date; the event still maintains its philosophy of championing conscious contemporary photography, but this time anyone can attend.

Both exhibitions are open online from 12 November 2020, with outdoor displays across Milan running until 22 November. Online events run from 19 to 22 November.

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Thursday, October 29, 2020

12 Hz by Ron Jude

Cooling lava, tidal currents and glacial ice cascade through Ron Jude’s latest photobook, 12 Hz. “A lot of things are said, in a lot of places, a lot of words cluster about, and thoughts buzz around them in clouds like flies, and ideas clot within them like disease,” says a short text that accompanies the images. “And beneath all the ideas and thoughts… Beneath all of this is Rock.”

A professor of art at the University of Oregon, Jude’s work often explores the relationship between people, place, nature and memory. Made between 2017 and 2020 around mainland US, Hawaii and Iceland, the images in 12 Hz depict rocks, glaciers and volcanoes – vast, living entities, captured in stark black-and-white. But there is a patience to the landscapes that Jude captures – a sense that they are not moving in any timescale set by humanity. The title of the work refers to the lowest sound threshold of human hearing, alluding to forces of ungraspable scale, operating independently of our anthropocentric experiences.

During a time of ecological and political crisis, Jude’s work is a reminder that these forces have been erupting, collapsing and growing, billions of years before us, and will do so for billions of years to come. We are merely its temporary guardians, and it will endure, even if we do not.

12 Hz by Ron Jude is published by Mack



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Photoworks’ festival in a box: “It’s giving the audience the opportunity to become a curator”

The coronavirus pandemic has brought about many challenges for festivals, galleries and publications, most of which have migrated online, or postponed until next year and beyond. But, for Photoworks, this time of crisis has been an opportunity to reflect and rethink. This year, the organisation rebranded its two-yearly event, the Brighton Photo Biennial, presenting a new outdoor festival installed across the city, as well as the option for it to be experienced at home, through a limited-edition ‘festival in a box’. 

Containing prints that fold out in varying sizes, as well as wall labels and texts to supplement them, the “portable festival” enables viewers to take on the role of the curator, deciding where and how to install it. Designed by Swiss artists Gilliane Cachin and Joshua Schenkel, the box includes artworks by all of the artists participating in the outdoor festival: Farah Al Qasimi, Lotte Andersen, Poulomi Basu, Roger Eberhard, Ivars Gravlejs, Pixy Liao, Alix Marie, Ronan Mckenzie, Sethembile Msezane, Alberta Whittle and Guanyu Xu.

Shoair Mavlian, director of Photoworks, explains: ​“Each of the artworks can be installed on your own walls: at home, in your office, in a gallery, in your classroom or within your community. Use nails, tape or clips to hang it in your preferred space. Or keep it folded, as a special object on your bookcase.”

Photoworks’ approach to their programming this year has centered around access and power. The boxes have been sent to schools, universities, institutions and artists across the UK and internationally, alongside an online programme of talks and events. “There’s a lot of conversations around hierarchy that have become more apparent over the last few months. This is something we were thinking about a lot last year, about how we can share this power and give other people opportunities,” says Mavlian. “This year’s festival is about asking what the possibilities are for photography in the future, and showing exciting artists that are making photography at this moment.”

Photoworks’ festival in a box can be purchased here




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Tuesday, October 27, 2020

Female in Focus 2020: The winners

Female in Focus 2020 is exhibiting at El Barrio’s Artspace, New York, between 2-21 November 2020. View the full list of winning images here.

From 1854 Media and British Journal of Photography, the Female in Focus award was conceived in response to staggering gender imbalance in photography. An open call to female-identifying photographers around the world, it is an annual initiative to promote and reward women’s work in an industry that disproportionately favours men’s.

This year’s edition was judged by an international jury including Chiara Bardelli Nonino, Photo Editor of Vogue Italia and L’Uomo Vogue; Laylah Amatullah Barrayn, co-author of MFON: Women Photographers of the African Diaspora, Kate Bubacz, Photo Director at BuzzFeed News and several other leading women in photography. 

“The effects of photography on society are more far-reaching than ever before. Gender inequality in the industry is just the start of a good conversation about who gets to tell stories — and how.”

Kate Bubacz, Photo Director at BuzzFeed News and Female in Focus 2020 judge

From a pool of thousands of entries, the panel has selected two outstanding bodies of work and 20 single images to be exhibited at El Barrio’s Artspace, New York, between 2-21 November 2020. Collectively, the curation examines gender, race, sexuality and beyond, weaving delicate stories of beauty and pain; joy and injustice; resilience and reflection. 

©Valentina Sinis

Valentina Sinis’s Broken Princess, one of two winning series, tells the devastating story of women in Iraqi Kurdistan who try to escape — and protest — domestic violence by setting themselves on fire. “Our ability to manage pain is limited,” Sinis tells British Journal of Photography. “It is impossible for anyone to handle more than a certain amount of pain. These women have overcome, almost angelically, that border of possible pain. Winning Female in Focus can give them hope, confidence and energy, for they are finally seeing their story told.”

©Ada Trillo

Ada Trillo’s La Caravana Del Diablo, named this year’s second series winner, maps the calamitous human cost of President Donald Trump’s political agenda in Central America. “Trump has effectively barred asylum seekers from entering the US by threatening to impose tariffs and cut foreign aid to Central American countries,” Trillo explains. “With the series, I want people to recognize that elected officials’ decisions affect people outside of their nation. Hopefully, winning Female in Focus will expand my audience to more people who can advocate for Central American asylum seekers.”

©Sara Lorusso

In the Single Image category, Sara Lorusso’s delicate portrait of couple Gioele and Beatrice captures a quiet moment of young, queer love in Italy. “From an early age, we are suffocated by innumerable opinions about love,” says Lorusso. “What it is, where to find it, who is authorized to celebrate it, when it is or isn’t appropriate. When this happens with a person of your own sex, absolutely nothing changes — but not everyone seems to have understood this yet. Winning Female in Focus is a great incentive to keep telling these stories.”

See the full list of Female in Focus 2020 winners below. View their images here.

©Nicole Benewaah Gehle
©Carmen Daneshmandi
©Beth Knight
©Jaimy Gail
Noelle Mason


Series winners

Ada Trillo

Valentina Sinis 

Single Image winners

Ana Nance

Andrea Torrei

Beth Knight

Camilla Broadbent

Carmen Daneshmandi

Dimpy Bhalotia

Eman Ali

Eva  Watkins

Gisele Duprez

Jaimy Gail

Jennifer Garza-Cuen

Kasia Trojak

Michelle Watt

Natalia Poniatowska

Nicole Benewaah Gehle

Noelle Mason

Rita Leistner

Sara Lorusso

Yuet Yee Wong



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Inherent Beauty Opens at Sundaram Tagore Gallery in Singapore

Inherent Beauty: Photographers Who Change How We See the World
Sundaram Tagore Gallery, 9 October21 November

Head to Sundaram Tagore for an exhibition of work by six world-renowned photographers. They deeply engage with the environment and contemporary social issues. Each of them create compelling visual narratives that explore our shared humanity and convey the beauty in diversity and in the natural world.

Sebastião Salgado and Steve McCurry share a photojournalistic approach, recording human struggle and the impact of conflict and globalisation. Karen Knorr’s intricate images use ancient myths and allegories to frame issues of entrenched social constructs. Lalla Essaydi and Robert Polidori explore the human condition through intimate examinations of spaces, both real and symbolic. Edward Burtynsky photographs industrial landscapes around the world, showing the devastating impact of manufacturing and human consumption.

The post Inherent Beauty Opens at Sundaram Tagore Gallery in Singapore first appeared on Karen Knorr.



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Friday, October 23, 2020

Futures 2020: PHotoESPAÑA & Photo Romania

Don’t miss the online exhibition RESET, curated by Salvatore Vitale, investigating one of the most tumultuous years of modernity through the eyes of seven Futures artists: Julie Poly, Ela Polkowska, Eva O’Leary, Garry Loughlin, Sanne De Wilde, Dávid Biró and Ana Zibelnik

“Futures gave us the opportunity to pause and reflect on the current situation in Spain — how the pandemic is directly affecting our visual arts landscape,” says Ana Berruguete, Director of Exhibitions at PHotoESPAÑA. The Spanish festival — which has forged Madrid’s space at the forefront of photography since 1998 — returns to Futures this year, bringing five nominated artists to the fore.

Among them, documentary photographer Ire Lenes examines ethnic minorities in the Baltic States. Jon Gorospe focuses on new approaches to contemporary landscape photography; Mar Saez explores the complexity of identity and biopolitics, and Ruth Montel investigates the human relationship with natural territory. Between them they span a range of practices, from documentary photography to fine art and physical installations. “Contemporary Spanish photography is rich in this way,” says Berruguete. “It stretches beyond the traditional forms of representation and focuses on a much more interdisciplinary language. Our five Futures artists are good proof of this.”

“Resistances in Solidarity”, PHotoESPAÑA’s Assembly Talk, offers a triple perspective on how different image agents are facing the impacts of COVID-19. Featuring conversations with Pia Ogea, Sandra Maunac and Nicolás Combarro, the event explores the need to establish new strategies and solidarities across artistic practice, community and government support.

Watch the live stream recording here.

Photo Romania also returns to Futures this year with five nominated artists. Combining photography alongside his career in medical research, Greek-born photographer Vassilis Triantis explores themes of isolation and identity and the collective versus the individual. Hanna Jarzabek is a Polish photojournalist whose projects address discrimination and societal dysfunctions in western society, while documentary and fine art photographer Paulina Metzscher tells intimate people-led stories. David Arribas reports on anthropological and social issues, and lastly, Alin Barbir covers a range of perspectives through fine art.

In Photo Romania’s Assembly Talk, “RESET Your Mindset and Adapt in the World of Photography”, photojournalist and Photon Festival director Tania Castro discusses the skills and competencies needed by photographers amid the current pandemic, moderated by Sebastian Vaida, artistic director of Photo Romania.

Watch the live stream recording here.



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Thursday, October 22, 2020

Jenna Westra on the subject of the body

New York-based artist Jenna Westra first became interested in photography in 2009, when she reluctantly enrolled in a history class. “I needed an art history class to graduate, and was late registering. The only option was a section on history of photography, so I signed up, despite having little interest,” she says. “I was immediately fascinated by early image-making processes… Imagining what it must have been like to create a direct visual record of the world for the first time – a way of seeing and looking that was new and different – felt really exciting to me.”

Westra began collecting old cameras, taking them apart and piecing them back together to understand the mechanics of image-making. At the beginning, she was producing self-portraits as a way to “learn how light and form are translated on film”. Eventually, she began working with female models, often dancers, because they have a good understanding of how their bodies look and move. Her images are tender and fluid, painted with limbs and torsos moving and intertwining through space. “I’ve been working in this particular way, with models as collaborators in the studio, for about seven years,” she says. 

Now, a collection of Westra’s works are gathered in an exhibition, at New York’s Lubov Gallery, as well as an accompanying photobook, titled Afternoons. “It’s the time of day I’m most productive,” says Westra, explaining that the inspiration for the title first came from one of the chapters of the 1986 film Hannah and Her Sisters. “I had also been spending a lot of my afternoons photographing people in parks around the city. The word has a certain texture that fits within the mood I try to convey in my work. It has a poetic quality.” 

Below, Westra reflects on the presence and evolution of the body in her work. 


I am forever interested in how the camera shapes ideas of the female psyche. I taught myself through self-portraiture, at a time when I was figuring out my own identity, but I didn’t like the lack of control you get by actually looking through the viewfinder at the genesis of an image. Eventually I replaced myself with other women who are somehow physically similar. 

I started working with dancers when I made my first 16mm film. It was about an injured performer who could no longer move how she once did. I liked the idea of a dancer who couldn’t move, but could pose in a specific, learned way and how that idea relates to stillness and photography in general. 

She poses and makes slow, meditative movements over the course of the sun setting in Prospect Park. Two bodies, the movie camera and the dancer, both with the capacity for movement, that when held still, vibrate together.

I have never been a photographer who works in ‘series’. I consider this collection of pictures as an ongoing investigation into how the female form can be imaged in a nuanced, feminine way that resists traditional power dynamics between genders and questions the politics of looking.  

We’re all missing human touch and contact. Maybe this work is a reminder of the tenderness in that, and that is refreshing to see again. But I also hope it’s a reminder to keep making, keep pushing, and find solace in creative work, however that may look. 

My studio and darkroom have been both sanctuary and lifeline in this trying year. I’m so grateful for these spaces and for the people who continue to support me.

Jenna Westra: Afternoons is on show at Lubov, New York, until 22 November 2020. The accompanying book is published by Hassla, pre-order a copy here.

Above: Installation shots from Afternoon, on show at Lubov, New York.


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UK-Canada trade rift: What it means for cheese, beef and cars

A pause in talks could mean tougher trading terms for the UK - but what will the impact be on consumers? from BBC News - Business https://...