All Posts (28)

Sort by

T12201003065?profile=originalhe State of Photography symposium will take place at the Library of Birmingham on 23 January 2015. It will explore, debate and review how photographers and photography practice develops, responds and thrives in the current challenging times. During the Symposium we will hear from the perspective of the photographer,  Artist, curator, festival director, agent and publisher. With a focus on innovation and sustainability speakers will convey what it takes to not only survive but to expand and thrive. The day will explore and celebrate self-initiated projects and entrepreneurialism by hearing from a range of photographic projects that are current and at the cutting edge of photography now.

The State of Photography Symposium will form the culmination of 2 years of the GRAIN project and will bring together practitioners and professionals from the sector to talk about the artform and current climate, to present questions and challenging new ideas, as well as offering advice and talking about positive approaches to influence change, encourage leadership and growth.     

Speakers include:
- Adam Broomberg & Oliver Chanarin
- David Birkett
- Tim Clark
- Ángel Luis González
- Louise Clements
- Uncertain States Magazine
- Lara Ratnaraja 
- Karen Newman
- Paul Herrmann
- Faye Claridge
- Peta Murphy-Burke  

Prices
Early Bird Concession (until 31 December): £15 / Early Bird Standard: £18
Concession: £18 / Standard: £22

Tickets are available through eventbrite for more details click here

Image: Martin Parr at DMB, Magnum

Read more…

12201002464?profile=originalOriginally planned to be Media Space's opening show in June 2013 Revelations will finally open on 20 March 2015 after the its exhibition programme was reviewed and revised. The ambitious exhibition will show the influence of early scientific photography on modern and contemporary art - the first time a British exhibition has done so.

Showcasing some of the first and rarest examples of scientific photography, Revelations explores how the incidental aesthetics of ground-breaking techniques pioneered by figures like William Henry Fox Talbot, Eadweard Muybridge and Harold Edgerton have inspired diverse artistic responses.

From the 1840s, scientists were using photography to record phenomena too large, too small or too fast for the human eye to see. William Henry Fox Talbot’s experiments with microphotography, some of the earliest scientific photographs ever made, will be on show alongside striking works by contemporary artists including Hiroshi Sugimoto.

Co-curated by Greg Hobson, Curator of Photographs at the National Media Museum, and Dr Benedict Burbridge of the University of Sussex, the exhibition will explore how art and science have been used to show phenomena which, thanks to the limits of human physiology, were previously invisible.

REVELATIONS: EXPERIMENTS IN PHOTOGRAPHY

20 March – 13 September 2015 

and then at National Media Museum, Bradford. from 19 November 2015–7 February 2016. 

Image: Calotype negative of Insect wings, as seen in a solar microscope, c.1840 by William Henry Fox Talbot. National Media Museum Collection

Read more…

12200998696?profile=originalMedia Space is set to host the Kraszna-Krausz Book Awards 2015, a celebration of the very best in photography and moving image publishing from the last year.

At an awards ceremony on 18 May 2015, a £10,000 prize will be split between the winners in the Best Photography Book and Best Moving Image Book categories. The judging panel for the Best Photography Book Award comprises photographer Hannah Starkey, author Geoff Dyer and Chair Mark Sealy MBE, Director, Autograph ABP. Meanwhile, Francine Stock, presenter of BBC Radio 4’s The Film Programme will chair the Best Moving Image Book Award judging panel, joined by Janet Harbord, Professor of Film Studies at Queen Mary University of London and Elisabetta Fabrizi, Curator of Screen Media, Tyneside Cinema.

The First Book Award is a photography publishing prize open to photographers who have not previously had a book published by a third party publishing house. It was established in 2012 to support emerging photographers. The panel of judges – Michael Mack, Polly Fleury from the Wilson Centre for Photography and Greg Hobson of the National Media Museum along with guest judges Simon Baker of Tate and Lucy Moore of Claire de Rouen Books – will assess submitted dummies, shortlisting 10 works. From this shortlist, one project will be chosen as the winner to be published by MACK.

The fourth winner of the First Book Award will be announced alongside the Kraszna-Krausz Book Awards at a ceremony on 18 May 2015.

The shortlists for the awards will be announced in February 2015. Details of how to submit work for consideration can be found at www.sciencemuseum.org.uk and www.kraszna-krausz.org.uk.

A display will accompany the awards in the Virgin Media Studio.

THE KRASZNA-KRAUSZ BOOK AWARDS AND THE FIRST BOOK AWARD 2015

Display: 20 April – 28 June 2015
Virgin Media Studio
Award winners announced: 18 May 2015

Read more…

Library of Birmingham cuts threat

12201000679?profile=originalThe Library of Birmingham Europe's largest public library and widely acclaimed for its building and public programmes is threatened as the city council looks to save money as government cuts bite. The library is planning to slash opening hours from 73 to 40 per week, cut staff numbers by 100 and will spend less on books and its activities. The Library will no longer produce exhibitions unless they are externally funded. 

This matters to photographic historians and those interested in photography as the Library houses one of the UK's national collections of photography and has produced a series of widely acclaimed historical exhibitions and worked with contemporary photographers under the leadership of Pete James. 

BPH will follow this as matters unfold. 

Read more…

12201000486?profile=originalEdited by Tanya Sheehan (Colby College, USA) and Andrés Mario Zervigón (Rutgers University, USA), Photography and Its Origins is a collection of 16 original essays published by Routledge. It showcases both prominent and emerging voices in the field of photography studies, including Jessica McDonald, Hans Rooseboom, Stephen Pinson, Dan Estabrook, Geoffrey Batchen, Douglas Nickel, Stephen Bann, Heather Shannon, Marcy Dinius, Francois Brunet, Beth Saunders, Yi Gu, Jurg Schneider, Jordan Bear, Laura Saltz, and Kelley Wilder. 

Recent decades have seen a flourishing interest in and speculation about the origins of photography. Spurred by rediscoveries of ‘first’ photographs and proclamations of photography’s death in the digital age, scholars have been rethinking who and what invented the medium. Photography and Its Origins reflects on this interest in photography’s beginnings by reframing it in critical and specifically historiographical terms. How and why do we write about the origins of the medium? Whom or what do we rely on to construct those narratives? What’s at stake in choosing to tell stories of photography’s genesis in one way or another? And what kind of work can those stories do?

For more information about the book, including a full table of contents, go to: http://www.routledge.com/books/details/9780415722902. Questions may be directed to tsheehan@colby.edu. 

Roger Taylor, Emeritus Professor of Photographic History, De Montfort University, Leicester says: 

"This collection of essays significantly advances our understanding of the prehistory and origins of photography. Expanding the intellectual and geographic boundaries has allowed new narratives to emerge and challenge the traditional chronicles that have previously dominated the field. An important contribution and persuasive testimony to the emerging interdisciplinary nature of photographic history. "

Read more…

12201002259?profile=originalBPH member Pam Roberts has curated a ground-breaking exhibition on A L Coburn. Despite the key role that he occupies in the history of avant-garde photography, Alvin Langdon Coburn (Boston, 1882 - Wales, 1966) remains one of the least known artists of his time. This is principally due to the fact that from 1920 onwards, after he was obliged to leave London during World War I, Coburn embarked on a new life and increasingly focused on mysticism. Deliberately moving away from the world of photography, he made art, music and religion his only interests, although never totally abandoned the practice of photography.

A Pictorialist, a Symbolist and an innovator, Coburn was one of the leading photographers of the first half of the 20th century. Notably influenced by Alfred Stieglitz and Fred Holland Day, two of the most important names in photography of his generation, Coburn can be located at the intersection between late 19th-century Symbolism and a photographic aesthetic associated with the early 20th-century avant-garde movements.

The present exhibition comprises a selection of 180 photographs – most of them vintage prints – which reveal the tenacity and coherence of Coburn’s artistic evolution. Particularly important among the institutions that have collaborated with this event are the George Eastman House in Rochester (USA) and the National Media Museum in Bradford (UK), which possess the most important holdings of the artist’s work. In addition, the exhibition includes images loaned from the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Museum of Modern Art, both in New York, and from 31 Studio, London, as well as from an important private collection in New York. As a result, this is the first occasion on which Coburn’s most important photographs from a range of different collections have been brought together.

Read more here: http://www.exposicionesmapfrearte.com/coburn/en/

Sala BÁRBARA DE BRAGANZA

Barbara de Braganza, 13   

28004 Madrid 
Teléfono: (+34) 91 581 46 09

See: http://www.fundacionmapfre.org/fundacion/es_es/cultura-historia/exposiciones/prepara-la-visita/

Image: MOMA, New York

Read more…

12201001292?profile=originalWest Dean College is running two workshops in 2015 dealing with photograph identification and conservation. Both are led by respected conservator Susie Clark.

Preserving historic photographs will take place on Wednesday, 4 March 2015 at the British Library. Photographic collections are found in libraries, archives and museums all over the world. Their sensitivity to environmental conditions, and the speed with which images can deteriorate present special challenges. This one day training session is led by Susie Clark, accredited photographic conservator. It is aimed at those with responsibility for the care of photographic collections regardless of institutional context.

The day provides an introduction to understanding and identifying photographic processes and their vulnerability, information on common conservation problems and solutions, and the preservation measures that can be taken to prolong the life and accessibility of photographic collections.  See more here: http://www.westdean.org.uk/BL

Professional Conservators in Practice / Conservation of Photographs. 9-12 November 2015. A wide choice of primary training is available in this country in aspects of object care.  However, there are relatively few opportunities for conservation professionals to find specialist training in traditional skills and enhance their knowledge of materials and techniques. West Dean College has developed a series of short courses aimed at meeting this training need.

Photographs are found in large numbers in many institutions. These include museums, art galleries, libraries, universities, businesses and newspapers. They are also found in the collections of private individuals. They are a valuable historic, artistic and scientific resource made from many diverse materials and it is easy to damage them by inappropriate conservation and care.

This course will describe the processes and photographic materials which have been commonly used and how to recognise them. It will also examine the problems caused by different processes and the appropriate methods and materials for their conservation and care. The course will include the opportunity to look at practical examples of processes and deterioration. The roles of the environment, biological deterioration, health and safety, storage and handling will also be covered. Download the course programme and a booking form

Read more…

12200999882?profile=originalThe National Media Museum's new exhibition Drawn by Light: The Royal Photographic Society Collection opened at Media Space last night to great acclaim from the press and those attending the opening reception.

The exhibition of some 200 photographs plus cameras and manuscript material includes photographs and images from 1826 to 2014.

See more images from the show here: https://www.facebook.com/media/set/edit/a.10153466791704465.1073741827.579159464/

Read more here: http://www.sciencemuseum.org.uk/visitmuseum/Plan_your_visit/exhibitions/drawn_by_light

The Royal Photographic Society has copies of the exhibition catalogue available at a reduced rate here: http://www.rps.org/shop/publications/drawn-by-light-book 

Read more…

Blog Topics by Tags

Monthly Archives