Wednesday, 24 August 2011

David Maisel: History's Shadow






















































































All images © David Maisel

As we gear up for the launch of our next issue, 1000 Words new Editorial assistant, Sean Stoker, takes some time out from prepping to peruse this recently released title from Nazraeli Press and is impressed with the spectral qualities of the photographs within.

While working at the Getty Research Institute in LA, David Maisel was confronted by a 12 foot high x-ray pinned to a window, rear-lit from outside. The subject of that x-ray, a small, drab painting, was left in the wake of its copy, overshadowed by the blown up x-ray. Inspired by this discovery, Maisel trawled through the archives of x-rays of old museum artefacts, uncovering these ghostly emanations of light, and then scanning, re-photographing and digitally manipulating the images earmarked for the project.

Those images now grace the pages of Maisel's latest book History's Shadow which, like many of his previous projects, illustrates a keen interest in the manner in which photography can combine art, science and a sense of humanity. While the work is also about the processes of memory, excavation and transformation it is really photography itself that is arguably the main focus of this project, and Maisel uses the x-ray to examine its inherent flaws with issues of space, depth and scale. Some images seem to emerge from the page itself, while others float in their black surroundings, yet they transcend mere images of objects, and become sculptural in their own right; a truly convincing illusion of three-dimensional space rendered on the two-dimensional page. In Maisel's words,"they becomes a vast nether world, and in others becomes the velvety ground of some kind of brain scan/portrait." Some are more successful at this than others, yet together, the images manage to reference the history of photographic practice – recalling the mysterious long exposures and amateur scientific studies of the medium's early years – and the history of art (x-rays have historically been used by art conservators for structural examination of art and artefacts), which is not just limited to icons of Western art.

The x-ray empowers us with an all-seeing, piercing gaze that distorts our perception while it transports us to a ghostly, ephemeral world in which everything appears too delicate to touch, that we may extinguish these glowing forms. Here, inside becomes out, and out becomes in. We are confronted with everything simultaneously, overwhelmed by fragile veils of light and plunging depths of darkness as space and time collapse and compound. It is within these objects that we see traces of the artist's hand, suggestions of a human presence and structural details that invoke a curiosity within us, not only to understand the vestiges and indicators of past societies, but to also comprehend ourselves and our future.

What I most enjoy about this book is also what I most enjoy in photography as a whole; despite its apparent complexity and tendency to over-theorise itself, it is often its simplest aspects that are the most interesting. History's Shadow, while intricate and well considered, represents the essense of photography: the presence and absence of light, the shape-shifting nature of time and the curiosity to see what cannot be seen with the naked eye.

Sean Stoker

Monday, 22 August 2011

Haunting the Chapel: Photography and Dissolution @ Daniel Blau Gallery, London























We are getting very excited here in the studio about this upcoming exhibition of vintage, anonymous, vernacular and spirit photography,also including works by Fratelli Alinari,Cecil Beaton, René Barthélemy, Emil Cadoo,Arthur Conan Doyle, JH Engstrom, Walker Evans, Michael Grieve, Bill Jacobson, Fritz Lang, Rut Blees Luxemburg, Floris Neusüss, Arnold Newman, Diane Pernet, Leni Riefenstahl, Jeffrey Silverthorne, Edmund Teske, U.S. Army Picture Corps et al.

"They are moving because of their phantom condition; every act they execute may be their last; there is not a face that is not on the verge of dissolving like a face in a dream." Jorge Luis Borges

Daniel Blau Gallery, London will be presenting a unique set of images that embody a theme particularly relevant to current artistic and cultural practice: that of the haunted, the blurred and the dissolved. To exemplify these themes this exhibition will feature vintage prints as well as more recent explorations in photography and its often-dissolute processes. In homage to the alchemy and chemistry of photography, this show will illustrate fire, smoke, the spirit, the x-ray, blur and motion, decay and the photogram. Like a series of dark objects and entities trapped behind the framing of glass, the gallery space becomes a chapel to the haunted history of the photographic medium.

Haunting the Chapel: Photography and Dissolution
2 September – 8 October 2011
Opening: 1 Sept, 6-10pm
Daniel Blau Gallery, London


To coincide with this, the gallery will be hosting talks and lectures that relate to the concept of the exhibition. If you would like to attend one or all of the following events, please RSVP to: london(at)danielblau(dot)com Tickets are £5, payable on arrival at the gallery. All the events open at 7pm for a 7:30pm start. 51 Hoxton Square, London N16PB.

Tuesday 6 September: Talks

Jeffrey Silverthorne in conversation with Brad Feuerhelm / Michael Grieve in conversation with Aaron Schuman.

Tuesday 20 September: Lecture

David Bate presents some ideas related to the exhibition with a following discussion.

Not to be missed!


Wednesday, 3 August 2011

'Thereness'

Get ready for issue 12 of 1000 Words, 'Thereness', out 1 October.

"[...] More often than not, a direct, 'simple' record of the subject in hand - the way of the 'quiet' photographer - produces a result that is more profoundly fresh than any attempt at visual novelty made by utilising the many tricks of the trade. If photography deals directly and honesty with life, it has every chance to be fresh and 'new', for the surface of life itself is infinitely variable, renewable and renewing. [...] The concreteness of photography, its awkward specificity, *must* surely be its glory, for can we ever tire of looking at a tree, the sky, a human face?

[...]'Thereness' is a sense of the subject's reality, a heightened sense of its physicality, etched sharply into the image. It is a sense that we are looking at the world directly, without mediation. Or rather, that something other than a mere photographer is mediating. [...] Such a feeling, such alertness, when present in the photograph, can of course conceal the greatest photographic art. 'Thereness' is seen at the opposite ends of the photographic spectra, in the humblest holiday enprint as much as the most serious art photograph, in the snapshot-inspired, dynamic small camera candid as much as the calm, meditative, large camera view. Those photographs which conjure up a compelling desire to touch the subject, to walk into the picture, to know the photographed person, display 'thereness'. Those photographs which tend towards impressionism, expressionism or abstraction can be in danger of losing it, or never finding it [...]. 'Thereness', in short, is a quality that has everything to do with reality and little to do with art, yet is, I would reiterate, the essence of the art of photography"

From The Art That Hides Itself - Notes on Photography's Quiet Genius by Gerry Badger

Noorderlicht International Photography Festival 2011






















© Michael Wolf

The press release for the 18th Noorderlicht International Photo Festival in Groningen (18 September-9 October 2011) has just landed on our desks here at 1000 Words and looks very promising.

Since the beginning of the 21st century, more than half of the world's population live in urban areas. In two successive exhibitions Noorderlicht is examining the consequences of this development for both the countryside and the city. After Land – Country Life in the Urban Age in 2010, from 11 September through 9 October 2011 the photo festival Metropolis – City Life in the Urban Age will be seen in Groningen. This multifaceted and innovative exhibition will provide insight into a process that touches everyone, directly or indirectly.

“The” city doesn't exist. Although cities are at the heart of modern society – certainly now that 3.3 billion people are packed onto 3 percent of the earth's surface – they are not all exactly the same in nature. The city is an feverish economic, cultural and social nerve centre; it is the place where the dreams of architects and urban planners come to life or collide with recalcitrant reality. Cities grow wildly, sometimes anarchically, and swallow up everything in the vicinity. They suck in people who – successfully, or in vain – are in search of a better life. In the midst of an oppressive massiveness, people are still able to carve out a small space for themselves and find their own fulfilment. The city is a place that offers opportunities and dashes hopes, where you can be seen everywhere and at all times but where you can equally well be completely alone.

From Michael Wolf's traumatised faces in the Tokyo subway to Michael Najjar's sterile futuristic urban landscapes, on the basis of work by more than eighty photographers from The Netherlands and other countries, in Metropolis Noorderlicht exposes the many sides of the city. To do this, Noorderlicht breaks new ground, both in terms of content and design. The six 'chapters' and the unusual arrangement in the main locations offer space to the city, and bring across Noorderlicht's view of the city in an insightful and perceptive manner.

Metropolis is a city of images, an exhibition about the soul of urban society.

Click on the links for more information on the participating photographers, the Metropolis - City Life in the Urban Age exhibition and to read an interview with the curator Wim Mellis.

Monday, 25 July 2011

Vivian Maier @ PHOTOFUSION GALLERY

Those of you who missed out on the much-feted Vivian Maier show at the German Gymnasium as part of the London Street Photography Festival, fear not, for it is now on display south of the river at Photofusion Gallery in Brixton.

From 29 July - 16 September, Photofusion will bring together 48 black and white and colour prints from the Chicago-based nanny who in her spare time wandered the streets with her Rolleiflex, obsessively taking snapshots of life as it unfolded around her. The exhibition includes spontaneous street scenes, street portraiture and more abstract compositions reminiscent of some of the greatest photographers working in the genre. Through her unique style of candid street photography and an aesthetic that is by turns raw and unflinching yet always brimming with a dark formal beauty, Vivian Maier incidentally recorded some of the most interesting marvels and peculiarities of urban America in the latter half of the twentieth century.





































All images courtesy of John Maloof ©Maloof Collection Ltd

Prior to the exhibition officially opening, it seems like a perfect opportunity to revisit this interview with Aaron Schuman and John Maloof, originally published in #11 of 1000 Words.

AS: There’s been quite a bit of coverage of Vivian Maier’s own mysterious biography, as well as of the incredible story of how you found, acquired and are in the process of archiving her work, and the discovery of this collection. But for the purposes of this interview, I’d like to focus on the photographs themselves. Firstly, why do you think Maier’s work is particularly interesting and important?

JM: I must say that, at first, I didn’t know that her work was as good as I now understand it to be. When I found Vivian’s archive, I was not a photographer, so what caught my eye were the more nostalgic images of Chicago and New York in the 1950s and 60s. Over time, I began to realise that the work was better than I’d first thought. What I now find to be so interesting and important is the fact that she was not formally trained, and yet she was ahead of her time; purely by coincidence, she was taking photographs similar to those of Diane Arbus, but she was doing so a decade earlier than Arbus.

AS: I understand that you initially bought her negatives hoping that they might serve historical purposes, but they’ve since been positioned within an “Art”, or at least, “Art Photography”, context - how did that happen? Do you think Maier was interested in photography – and understood her own photography – as “Art”?

JM: As I mentioned earlier, I originally purchased her work because it contained images of Chicago in the mid-twentieth century, and at the time I was researching and co-authoring a book about my local Chicago neighbourhood. But I do think that she was photographing as a form of art, and that she understood photography well. In fact, when she died she left behind many books by photographers, which means that she must have appreciated the work of others.

AS: Judging by what you’ve seen so far, how would you generally describe Maier as a photographer?

JM: I would describe her as one of those photographers that simply follows their own curiosities, wherever they lead. She didn’t have assignments or a specific agenda to promote; she was doing this for herself. That is the most interesting aspect about her intentions as a photographer.

AS: In the process of archiving her work, have you noticed any particular themes developing?

JM: The themes within her work changed over time. In the first few years, she was still very much an amateur, taking controlled photographs – mostly landscapes and portraits – with a Kodak Brownie box camera. She then got into street photography, primarily honing in on women, children, and the poor. After that, in the mid-1970s, she switched to colour and became more abstract, taking pictures of garbage on the curbside, racial and political graffiti, and so on.

AS: In the past, you’ve speculated that Maier may have studied under Lisette Model in the early-1950s, and might have been in touch with – or at least aware of – a number of other prominent photographers working at that time. Is there any hard evidence to support a direct connection?

JM: I did speculate that there was the possibility of a connection to Lisette Model, however it was clearly a speculation based on coincidences. I recently received the class roster of Model’s class from the New School of Social Research, and unfortunately Vivian wasn’t on there. So I can’t say for sure who her influences were. The only evidence of any direct influence on Maier is from Jeanne Bertrand, a portrait photographer whom Vivian boarded with in her early years. There’s no hard evidence to support any other direct connections, but within her work there’s definitely a sense that she was aware of the photographers who were becoming known in her time, such as those from the Photo League and the Institute of Design in Chicago.

AS: I understand that there is another collector, Jeff Goldstein, who possesses quite a bit of Maier’s work as well – in particular, her earlier work. What is your relationship with him, and how do your collections differ?

JM: Just to clarify things, Vivian started taking pictures in 1949/1950, and it is mostly amateur quality work at that time. The work in my collection is from 1949-1999. To date, it is largely un-scanned, so only a small portion of it has been posted on the website. We’re scanning it in chronological order, so that’s why there are only images from the 1950s and 60s up on the website; it will take some time to get to the later years, but so far we’ve found several hundred undeveloped colour rolls, and around thirty-thousand color slides that have already been developed. I’m not exactly sure how much Jeff has, or what years his collection represents. But from what I know, his collection is weighted more in the early work, and the later work (late-60s - early-70s). He purchased this collection somewhat recently, in the summer of last year. We have a friendly relationship, we’ve opened up our archives to one another for research purposes, and have since been talking about working on this immense archival project quite a bit.

AS: I’ve often seen Maier described as “an equal of” or “as good as” some of most celebrated photographers of her time - Robert Frank, Helen Levitt, Harry Callahan, Lisette Model, Diane Arbus, William Klein, Roy DeCarava, and so on. But I worry that her work might only be seen, understood, and celebrated through the prism of our contemporary version of photo-history, rather than recognised for itself in its own right. Each of the photographers mentioned above have a distinct aesthetic and very personal approach to photography – in your opinion, what do you think is particularly unique or special about Maier’s work?

JM: This is a very loaded question, and I can’t fully answer it until we’ve documented and explored more of her archive. At this point, judging from what’s been uncovered so far, I believe that she produced work that is equal to some of the well-known masters. Her interest in women (especially women with glamorous fashions), children, and the less fortunate have been common threads within the images that we’ve archived so far. She also has a well-rounded understanding of the formal elements of photography, as can be seen in the images on the website. But it will take more time to figure out her unique “fit” with the other masters of her time - she definitely had a personal style, which we expect to see more of as we move forward.

For more information on the exhibition please visit www.photofusion.org/gallery/photography/exhibitions/future/default.htm

Monday, 18 July 2011

Places still available for the Erik Kessels workshop!

There are still two places available for our workshop with Erik Kessels at riad 9 in Fez, Morocco (12-17 September 2011). Though the camera will be the tool, this workshop will appeal to creatives from all visual disciplines, not just photography.

Here is a great video of Erik giving an overview of his work as part of California College of the Arts' Photography Lecture Series; filmed on 24 February, 2011, in Timken Lecture Hall on the San Francisco campus:



For more information on the workshop or more details on how to submit click here. (Please note, the deadline for applications has been extended to 14 August.)

Finally, below is the manifesto from the groundbreaking exhibition From Here On at this year's Les Rencontres d'Arles which Erik co-curated with Clément Chéroux, Joan Fontcuberta, Martin Parr and Joachim Schmid. The conceptual approach and playful attitude that is outlined will be echoed in the workshop and push those who are open to exploring more lateral ways of image-making.

NOW, WE’RE A SPECIES OF EDITORS.
WE ALL RECYCLE, CLIP AND CUT, REMIX AND UPLOAD.
WE CAN MAKE IMAGES DO ANYTHING. ALL WE NEED IS
AN EYE, A BRAIN, A CAMERA,
A PHONE, A LAPTOP, A SCANNER, A POINT OF VIEW.
AND WHEN WE’RE NOT EDITING, WE’RE MAKING.
WE’RE MAKING MORE THAN EVER,
BECAUSE OUR RESOURCES ARE LIMITLESS AND
THE POSSIBILITIES ENDLESS.

WE HAVE AN INTERNET FULL OF INSPIRATION:
THE PROFOUND, THE BEAUTIFUL, THE DISTURBING,
THE RIDICULOUS, THE TRIVIAL, THE VERNACULAR AND THE INTIMATE.
WE HAVE NEXT-TO-NOTHING CAMERAS THAT RECORD THE LIGHTEST LIGHT, THE DARKEST DARK.
THIS TECHNOLOGICAL POTENTIAL HAS CREATIVE CONSEQUENCES.
IT CHANGES OUR SENSE OF WHAT IT MEANS TO MAKE. IT RESULTS IN
WORK THAT FEELS LIKE PLAY,
WORK THAT TURNS OLD INTO NEW, ELEVATES THE BANAL.
WORK THAT HAS A PAST BUT FEELS
ABSOLUTELY PRESENT.

WE WANT TO GIVE THIS WORK A NEW STATUS.
THINGS WILL BE DIFFERENT
FROM HERE ON...

Friday, 24 June 2011

1000 Words Portfolio Review Consultations

The more eagle-eyed of our readers will be aware that we recently started providing in-depth portfolio review consultations for photographers. In the three years since launch, 1000 Words has grown in both scale of operations and size of audience meaning that the amount of portfolios submitted to the magazine for potential publication has also increased significantly. The sheer volume is staggering. (Upon opening my emails this morning, I realised that there are currently 491 submissions sitting in my inbox from the month of June alone.)

Whilst we do take the time to look at each and every one of these we regret that we can not always respond. However, if you would like to receive specific advice and feedback on your work we have introduced frank and informal review sessions with the view to providing photographers with the following:

-Critique of creative output
-The practical and conceptual vision needed to help attain your goals and develop further photographic projects
-Assistance with self-representation, portfolio presentation and approaches to potential outlets in the editorial, publishing and gallery markets
-Resources to help enhance your work.

Portfolio reviews cost £90 and last one hour. They take place at our offices in East London or at your studio if you have one/if it is more convenient and consist of two one-on-one sessions with 1000 Words’ editors, Tim Clark and Michael Grieve.

To book a portfolio review or for more information contact: portfolio(at)1000wordsmag(dot)com