Monday 22 June 2009

rinko kawauchi





'I am often not sure why I am photographing things, but by the end of the third year I know. When the pictures provide the answer I know it is time to move on.'



Rinko Kawauchi in converstion
with Martin Parr, June 2009

Thursday 11 June 2009

hannes schüpbach





Hannes Schüpbach (b. 1965) creates meditative and lyrical film diaries that explore the power and limits of the single shot and an idea(l) of beauty grounded in a fascination with nature. An accomplished painter and expert on textile art, Schüpbach uses 16mm cinematography to explore cinema’s painterly dimensions, bringing to his films a keen attention to color and light and their effect on mood and tempo.

Schüpbach’s meticulously structured silent films, discover a multi-layered world, often using superimpositions and reflections to explore the hidden depths of the places and people evoked within them.

adam broomberg and oliver chanarin






Adam Broomberg and Oliver Chanarin have worked together for over ten years. Their unusual approach to photojournalism has earned them a place amongst the most progressive photographers working on the front-line today

The long term collaborators constantly question the responsibility of the photographer and whether the photographs made will change the situation of the protagonist in the frame. They gain access to situations by researching stories meticulously before they arrive and choose a particular aesthetic for each specific project.

Citing diverse influences, from the music of John Cage to 'The Story of my Death' by the Italian, Lauro de Bosis, who succeeded in humiliating Mussolini by distributing ant-fascist leaflets in a solo flight over Rome before disappearing at sea - Broomberg and Chanarin encourage an audience to work harder and listen more closely to the stories they are told.
'The act of photographing is complicit - you are not a neutral witness.'

Broomberg and Chanarin

Photovoice Lecture Series

Tuesday 9 June 2009

richard long




I like the simplicity of walking,
the simplicity of stones

I like the common means given
the simple twist of art.

I choose lines and circles because they do the job.

My art is about working in the wide world,
wherever, on the surface of the earth.

My work is not urban, nor is it romantic.
It is the laying down of modern ideas
in the only practical places to take them.

Richard Long, 1980