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Photographica 2019 / London, 19 May 2019

12201107252?profile=originalPhotographic 2019 will soon be here, as usual it will take place at the regular venue The Royal Horticultural Society's Lindley Hall, 80 Vincent Square, London SW1P 2PB on the 19 May 2019. Public entry is from 10am-4.00pm and admission is £8 on the door from 10am to 12 noon and £5 noon to the close. This year there will be up to 135 stalls selling user and collectable cameras, consumables, lenses, literature and images. It is not a trade show for new equipment. If you fancy a table to clear that build up of photographic equipment phone 01684 594526 . Early buyers tickets can be obtained from the same phone number.

 Any late updates and more information can be found at https://www.facebook.com/photographicafair

Thanks

 Nigel

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12201112897?profile=originalSpecial Auction Services is offering an auction of Fine Photographica on 30 April which comprises over 600 lots, including 67 lots from the John Hannavy Collection of photography.

On 26 April Flints is offering Fine Photographica in its auction.

The SAS online auction catalogue can be found here: http://www.sas-auctions.com/catalogues/2018/cm300419/index.html

The Flints auction catalogue can be found here: https://www.the-saleroom.com/en-gb/auction-catalogues/flintsauction/catalogue-id-flints10015

Image: lot 143 from the SAS auction.

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12201105255?profile=originalThe Museums and Galleries History Group's annual lecture will be given by Professor Elizabeth Edwards who will discuss the question 'What do photographs ‘do’ in museums?' Her paper considers the presence of photographs in museums as an ecosystem. This ecosystem is characterised, I suggest, by shifting relationships between formal ‘collections of photographs’ and the museum’s photographic ‘non-collections’ which saturate its practices. In tracing the history of these relationships I shall consider how hierarchies of photographic value have been established, maintained and challenged over time. Drawing on my recent work on the history of photographic cultures at the Victoria and Albert Museum, I consider the dynamic institutional performance of photographs across four key overlapping spaces of gathering and dissemination - the ‘guard-book’ albums, the library, the curatorial departments and through illustrated publications for the public. The V&A provides a particularly pertinent set of ‘case notes’, having developed an extensive relationship with photographs since the 1850s, one of the first museums to do so. Using anthropological concepts and methods to interrogate the matrix of photographic practice, accumulation and purpose, I suggest how thinking about what photographs ‘did ‘and are ’doing’ in museums can illuminate the epistemic values that shape them, and as such, constitute a vital yet overlooked strand in the histories of museums.

London: Dana Centre, 
Free for MGHG Members, £10 for non-members, £7 for student non-members and staff of the Victoria and Albert Museum and Science Museum Group.
5.00pm Refreshments
5.30pm MGHG Lecture

Click here to book tickets.

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12201112501?profile=originalEdinburgh's Stills Gallery which has operated since 1977 is under threat from a trebling of its rent from £16,000 to £47,000 over five years. The Gallery occupies premises in the city centre and it is a centre for photography offering exhibitions and production facilities as well as a range of engagement opportunities for anyone to discover, enjoy and understand photography. Stills may be forced to relocate but its central location is crucial to its successes.

It said: "Our city centre location is crucial to making our work as accessible as possible – people travel from all over Scotland and further afield to access what we do, whether that's our exhibitions programme (which is always free), public-access photography production facilities, creative learning work or artist-led photography courses. Our work is unique and vital to Scotland’s cultural ecology. Stills makes a vital contribution to what makes Edinburgh and Scotland such a great place to live, work and visit." 

Stills has launched a petition against the rent rise which supporters are encouraged to sign: https://you.38degrees.org.uk/petitions/oppose-the-city-of-edinburgh-council-s-proposed-rent-increase-for-stills

See more here: https://www.heraldscotland.com/news/17568106.photographic-gallerys-fears-over-future-after-city-councils-dramatic-rise-in-rent/?fbclid=IwAR05YLcXr4_oiaa_dOhpQIxMMfb_rRt8fQj010cA_OBEQ7OQeT-6kQ56mNw

and the Stills Gallery website: http://www.stills.org/

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12201103665?profile=originalFollowing an extensive digitisation project commissioned by NATO, over 2000 titles of official footage are now available for licensing via IWM Film. This project is part of an exclusive global licensing distribution partnership between IWM and NATO, marking the 70th anniversary of the creation of NATO, the world’s strongest political-military alliance, on 4 April 2019.

The NATO film collection comprises approximately 350 hours of film material taken in the late 1940s through to the 1990s, including documentaries, newsreel, and record footage in both colour and black and white film. Providing a unique insight into the Cold War era, early films depict the rush to create economic, political and military stability in post-war Europe, whilst later films encourage international unity and concepts of shared peace and security.

Hidden gems include colour footage of a divided Berlin in the 1960s and Humphrey Jennings’ final film. Other highlights from the over 2000 titles include the signing of the North Atlantic Treaty on 4 April 1949, intervention in the Bosnian war (1992-1995), as well as a documentary film about how the alliance works. 

View NATO films currently available on the IWM Film site. The sub-sections include:

Marshall Plan Films (1949-1954)
SHAPE Film Library (1944-1964)
NATO Documentaries (1952-1990)
NATO Log Collection (1965-1994)

David Walsh, Digitisation Preservation Consultant at IWM says: "The digitisation of this important collection was the result of a four-year effort by a dedicated team to sift, sort and catalogue the nearly 17,000 reels of film originally deposited with IWM by NATO. The work has not only resulted in the creation of high-quality 2K digital access files of the films, but also facilitated the storage of original film masters in suitable archival conditions for their long-term preservation."  Ineke Deserno, Head of Archives at NATO says: “It is very timely this film collection is available at the moment of NATO’s 70th Anniversary, with so much reflection now taking place on the long history since the beginning of that transatlantic bond. The materials digitized by IWM represent some of the key moments in time, with some very rare footage, for telling the story of the Alliance to the world. NATO is grateful for the invaluable expertise from IWM to help the Alliance preserve this important collection and make it available for a new generation of storytellers to share NATO’s history.”

See more here.

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12201101486?profile=originalBusiness’ can have many meanings. In the most straightforward sense, it refers to the photographic marketplace, its industry and the commercial relations established among different agents. Some of these actors, such as studios and companies of the like of Kodak and Ilford, are specifically photographic and have featured prominently in histories of photography. But the photographic business also depends on other social, cultural and economic agents like chemical supply companies, image brokers, content providers, commissioning editors, advertising campaign managers and digitization officers, among others.

Especially since the beginning of the 21st century, historians have begun to pay attention to the broader implications of what one might call ‘the business of photography’. In this sense, it is not only about commerce and trade, but also about visual and material economies, where photography and the many worlds and people it affects directly or indirectly negotiate, define or transform social, cultural, political, scientific, and other ideological environments as well as values.

In this 7th annual conference of the PHRC, we intend to stretch the notion of ‘the business of photography’. While not neglecting the transformative role of photographic companies and that of photographers as businessmen and women, we wish to diversify our understanding of ‘business’ to include the circulation of and the impact exerted by photographic images, objects and raw materials.

The conference will feature seven panels – Influencing Taste; Business-Education / Education-Business; Bureaucratic Record Economies; New Markets; Distribution; Business Administration; Causes and Costs – and the selected papers will think outside of the box while addressing themes such as:

  • Photographic recycling
  • The life of photographic raw materials
  • Gender and photographic businesses
  • The marketization of individual and collective identities
  • Photographic image banks
  • Photography in political and financial economies
  • Photography in the heritage industry

Registration costs:

DMU students and Staff/ Conference Speakers, one or both days £35

Standard Day, Monday £50

Standard Day, Tuesday £50

Standard, Monday and Tuesday £90

Non-DMU Student or Unwaged, Monday £40

Non-DMU Student or Unwaged, Tuesday £40

Non-DMU Student or Unwaged, Monday and Tuesday £50

Conference Dinner £35

Registration now open until 3 June 2019, Click here

For any queries please email: phrc@dmu.ac.uk

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12201102477?profile=originalThe Paul Mellon Centre for British Art has announced a series of grants and awards which include photography. Of particular interest are: 

  • Steve Edwards British daguerreotypes - Antoine Claudet
  • Sarah James, for the project The Militant & The Mainstream: Remaking British Photographic Culture - a mid-career Fellowship
  • Impressions Gallery of Photography to support the Feed Your Mind lecture series
  • Association for Art History to support the Photography & Printed Matter Summer Symposium 
  • Shijia Yu Amusing, Interesting and Curious: A Study of English Paper Peepshows, 1825-1851 

See the full list here: https://www.paul-mellon-centre.ac.uk/fellowships-and-grants/awarded/spring-2019/page/1

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12201102689?profile=originalThe Association of Leading Visitor Attractions (ALVA) has published numbers for 2018. The National Science+Media Musuem, Bradford, has seen numbers fall by 6.8 per cent to 459,808. The V&A Museum saw numbers grow 5 per cent to 3.7 million. 

The NS+MM numbers for 2017 were boosted by the presence of the Tim Peake's space capsule and new gallery launches and a year-on-year decline was anticipated.

Full details for all the UK's leading museums and galleries and historical numbers back to 2004 are available here: http://www.alva.org.uk/details.cfm?p=423

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Peter E. Palmquist award recipients

12201101473?profile=originalThe Peter E. Palmquist Memorial Fund for Historical Photographic Research provides financial support to independent researchers who are studying either Western American photographers before 1900 or women photographers past and present. The Humboldt Area Foundation in Bayside, California, administers this fund, which solicits applications for grants once a year in the fall and awards the grants the following January. A small panel of outside consultants with professional expertise in the field of photohistory and/or grant reviewing determines each year’s awards.

The list of past recipients with their projects has been updated with details from: Stella Jungmann, Josephine Givodan, and a second project by Pippa Oldfield (No Man’s Land: Women’s Photography and the First World War.)  In addition, other recipients have contributed updates to their projects.

Read them here:http://www.palmquistgrants.com/index.html

With thanks to Pam Roberts for the information. 

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12201101692?profile=originalCoinciding with an exhibition of the same name Anthony Hamber will be talking on the origins of photography in Salisbury 1839-1918 at the Salisbury Museum on Thursday, 2 May at 1830. 

Tickets available online at £8 (members) and £10 (non-members). 


Thursday, 2 May at 1830
The Salisbury Museum, The King’s House, 65 The Close, Salisbury SP1 2EN

t: 01722 332151
www.salisburymuseum.org.uk

Image: Harnham Mill by William Russell Sedgfield c. 1858.
Collection of Anthony Hamber

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The end of museum image fees?

12201112274?profile=originalArt History News reports that the European Parliament has voted in favour of a new Copyright Directive. It seeks to create common law on copyright matters across the EU. Many aspects of it are controversial. But one element is extremely important for art historians; Article 14. It prevents new copyright being claimed in reproductions of artworks which are themselves out of copyright (also referred to as being in the public domain.) This new ruling effectively heralds the end of image reproduction fees, because copyright is the glue which holds the whole image fees system in place. The new directive therefore represents an important victory for art historians.Photographs of historic artworks taken with the intention of faithfully reproducing them will not be covered by copyright across the EU. Member states have two years to implement the directive into domestic law.

Read the full report here: https://www.arthistorynews.com/articles/5362_The_end_of_museum_image_fees

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12201105055?profile=originalThe Somerset Rural Life Museum in Glastonbury is presenting a celebration of photography in Somerset, from the early nineteenth century to the present day. It will feature experts in historic Somerset photography. The day will conclude with a talk from artist Matilda Temperley, who will discuss her subjects and how she approaches her practice. An exhibition of new images by the award-winning photographer is on now at Somerset Rural Life Museum.

See more here.

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12201113482?profile=originalAn AHRC Collaborative Doctoral Partnership between University of Brighton and the Science Museum Group. This studentship is offered under the AHRC Collaborative Doctoral Partnership scheme. The partner institutions are the University of Brighton and National Science and Media Museum. This studentship is fully funded for three years (or part-time equivalent) at standard AHRC rates. The project is due to begin October 2019.

In the wake of radical disruptions to former photographic centres of power in industry practice and in scholarly viewpoint, and with the exemplary Kodak collection at National Science and Media Museum at its core, this collaborative doctoral project reappraises the history of popular photography in the museum and the academy. It asks how museum collections can tell the story of popular photography practice in an age of dramatic technological and industrial change; and it contributes to new histories of photography that put everyday practices front and centre.

12201114465?profile=originalTraditional photographic histories, particularly those that have followed an art historical model, have marginalised popular photography as a form and a practice despite its evident dominance in terms of the sheer volume of images produced and circulated, and its commercial impact, for well over a hundred years. Although recent scholarship has attempted to correct this bias, and to reposition popular photography in its rightful position at the front and centre of photography studies, it remains an under-theorised area. At the same time, 'the photographic industry' – once constituted as a network of commercial organisations – has been transformed fundamentally by information and communication infrastructures not specifically designed for photography. Key players who once played such a dominant role, as comprehensive, vertically-integrated companies covering all aspects of film, processing and equipment, have failed to keep up with the dramatic changes, and in some cases, such as Kodak, have been declared bankrupt. With radical disruptions to former photographic centres of power – both in industry practice and in scholarly viewpoint – the time is right for a historical reappraisal of popular photographic practice, supported by an exemplary collection.

12201114880?profile=originalThe Kodak Collection at National Science and Media Museum is one of the largest and most diverse museum collections of cameras, images, and photographic ephemera from the nineteenth and twentieth centuries in the world. The collection came to Bradford in the late 1980s from the Kodak Museum in Harrow, and it has played a major role in communicating the history of photography to National Science and Media Museum's audiences through the permanent Kodak Gallery. The collection represents not just a significant set of objects that inform the history of photography, but a body of material that has been critical to the way that National Science and Media Museum has been communicating this history to a broad public.

The PhD student will investigate the changing role of photographic collections as tools for communicating shifting notions of popular photographic practice. Building on the scholarship on popular photography that has developed in recent years, this project will examine how its histories have been told through this unique collection and examine the opportunities it presents for new scholarly approaches to the medium; this includes examining its contemporary cultural significance. The challenges to the telling of popular photographic histories that emerge from new scholarship will inform National Science and Media Museum's strategy for the Kodak Gallery as it moves towards the second stage of its master plan in 2022.

Details here. Applications by 27 May 2019.

Image (left): The Kodak Museum, Harrow (courtesy Michael Pritchard); (right): Kodak Gallery at the NS+MM. 

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12201111255?profile=originalApplications are welcome for a generous four year, fully-funded PhD fellowship, based in the School of Art History and Cultural Policy at University College Dublin, on the theme of Poverty, Welfare, and Visual Culture in the Long 19th Century. The award includes a stipend of €15,000 per annum, full fee waiver (EU or non-EU), a travel allowance, archival research and publication allowance, and funding for a laptop.

Candidates are encouraged to submit a proposal on a subject of their choosing, within the broad area of poverty, visual culture, mass media, and the emergence of the modern welfare state from the 19th-early 20th century. It is anticipated the PhD project will be situated within some of the following themes:

  • The rapid and coterminous development of the illustrated press, photography, stereoscopy, magic lanterns, optical devices, and early cinema as new forms of visualisation and encounter
  • Discourses concerning representations of the ‘real’, the conditions of modern life, and physical/optical perception; debates on the nature of photography and new media and their relationship to verisimilitude and truth; etc.
  • Moral, political, and economic philosophies which informed the transition from 19th c. poor laws and methods of public relief to the establishment of 20th c. modern welfare states and the non-governmental sector

12201111255?profile=originalResearch proposals may also choose to address one or more of the following (or similar):

  • homelessness (urban and rural)
  • hunger (both severe and episodic)
  • migration and diaspora
  • benevolence (eg the rise of of modern non-governmental philanthropic organisations and activism)
  • welfare institutions (eg the development of state-controlled instruments of relief)
  • representations of empire

Irish, European, or comparative projects are especially encouraged, but any colonial or global topic is welcome. Demonstrable experience working with visual media is required.

The successful candidate will have a strong academic background in art history, visual culture, and/or history, and will work under the supervision of Associate Professor Emily Mark-FitzGerald. Dr Mark-FitzGerald is the primary expert on the visual culture of the Irish Famine from the 19th century-present; a former Director of the Irish Museums Association (2009-18); and current co-PI of the funded research series Media, Encounter, Witness: Troubling Pasts at the Humanities Institute at University College Dublin. UCD’s School of Art History and Cultural Policy is the largest art history department in Ireland, and the successful candidate will join a thriving research community closely connected with a range of national and international museums and cultural institutions.

In order to apply, please submit a cover letter, CV, writing sample, two letters of reference, and a proposal (1000-1500 words plus indicative bibliography) via email to Dr Emily Mark-FitzGerald (emily.mark@ucd.ie) by 30th April 2019. Applications will be reviewed by a committee at School level, and applicants will be informed by the end of May, at which time the successful applicant may formally apply for admission to UCD. Preliminary enquiries by email are welcome.

This PhD is funded under UCD's new ADVANCE PhD scheme; more info here: https://www.ucd.ie/artshumanities/newsandevents/fivenewphdscholarships

Image:

Vandeleur evictions: Mathias Magrath's house, Moyasta, Co.Clare after destruction by the Battering Ram (1880s). William Lawrence studio, photographic negative on glass. National Library of Ireland

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12201103465?profile=originalDominic Winter auctions are to offer six lots, including a camera, from Christine Lynch, the daughter of Frances Griffiths, the younger of the two cousins who first perpetrated the hoax back in 1917. The material is expected to realise over £50,000.  The consignment includes photographs of the fairies, a Cameo camera. 

12201104463?profile=originalIt can be seen here: https://www.dominicwinter.co.uk/Auction/Search?st=cottingley&sto=0&au=671&w=False&pn=1

Two other cameras are in the collection of the National Science and Media Museum, Bradford. 

The auction includes other vintage and collectable photographs, stereoscopy and photographic equipment. The catalogue can be seen here: https://www.dominicwinter.co.uk/Auction/Search?au=671

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12201115900?profile=originalFor its second survey of photography, the Barnes Foundation is presenting nearly 250 early photographs—most of which have never been exhibited before—created by British and French photographers between the 1840s and 1880s. Curated by Thom Collins, Neubauer Family Executive Director and President of the Barnes, From Today, Painting Is Dead: Early Photography in Britain and France is drawn from the private collection of Michael Mattis and Judy Hochberg and spans the invention of the daguerreotype to photography on paper and beyond. The show is on view in the Barnes’s Roberts Gallery from February 24 through May 12, 2019.

From Today, Painting Is Dead: Early Photography in Britain and France is sponsored by Comcast NBCUniversal.

Following the production of the first photographs in the 1830s, and before the advent of Kodak’s point-and-shoot camera in 1888 and the industrialization of photography, artists experimented with photography, creating innovative processes and uniquely compelling representational tropes.

“When the influential French painter Paul Delaroche saw a photograph for the first time, he proclaimed, ‘From today, painting is dead!’ This sentiment captures the anxiety with which photography was greeted by artists, though it would be nearly 50 years before technology evolved enough to approximate the work Delaroche and his fellow painters were already doing,” says Collins. “This exhibition explores the very fertile period in the early history of photography, when the medium’s pioneers were grappling with the complex inheritance of official, state-sponsored visual culture.”

For the better part of the 19th century—before rebellious groups like the impressionists challenged the status quo—powerful fine arts academies in Paris and London governed the official style for painting and even guided what subjects artists should depict. Some themes were considered more important than others, based on their cultural significance and the skill required to render them. Moralizing historical subjects were generally the most valued; next came portraiture, then genre (or scenes of daily life), then landscape, and finally still life.

Photography developed amid this stringent artistic climate. Between 1840 and 1870, photographers of all stripes—both amateurs and an emergent class of professionals, makers of vernacular pictures and those aspiring to create fine art—experimented with the new medium, not only its mechanics and chemistry, but also its representational potentials. In doing so, they inevitably absorbed—and transformed—the well-established tropes of the dominant academic painting tradition.

12201116495?profile=originalFrom Today, Painting Is Dead: Early Photography in Britain and France features over 60 photographers, including such masters as William Henry Fox Talbot—the scientist and inventor credited with developing the first photographic prints on paper; Félix Nadar, the great portraitist of Paris high society; Roger Fenton, the English painter turned celebrated photographer who achieved widespread recognition for his photographs of the Crimean War in 1855; Gustave Le Gray, the leader of 1850s French art photography; and Julia Margaret Cameron, whose literary and biblical-themed figure studies and captivating portraits were unprecedented in her time.

Exhibition highlights include:

  • Original calotypes from 1840 to 1845 by William Henry Fox Talbot, including still lifes, portraits, landscapes, and street scenes from both England and France.
  • The earliest war photographs, taken of the Crimean War by Roger Fenton, including his iconic Valley of the Shadow of Death as well as the 11-plate panorama of Sebastopol.
  • An 1844 daguerreotype of Jerusalem—one of the first of the city—by Joseph-Philibert Girault de Prangey.
  • A full-plate daguerreotype of the Fontaine des Innocents in Paris by Baron Jean-Baptiste-Louis Gros from 1850.
  • Some of the earliest existing travel photographs of the Middle East, Southern Europe, Africa, India, Burma, Ecuador, Mexico, and New Zealand.
  • Portraits by Félix Nadar, Napoleonic Paris’s great portraitist and larger-than-life personality, with subjects ranging from literary legends—including an oversize 1885 deathbed portrait of Victor Hugo—to the first official Japanese delegation to France (1864). Also included are Nadar’s 1860s photographs of the Paris catacombs and sewers, which represent one of the first uses of artificial lighting in photography.
  • Pre-Raphaelite allegorical portraiture by Julia Margaret Cameron.
  • French physiologist Étienne-Jules Marey’s 1880s motion studies of athletes, which prefigure the development of motion pictures, much like Eadweard Muybridge’s motion studies in the US.
  • Seascapes, landscapes, photographs of military maneuvers, and other works by Gustave Le Gray, the leader of the 1850s French movement of fine art photography. 

All works are from the collection of Michael Mattis and Judy Hochberg. This exhibition was organized by the Barnes Foundation in association with art2art Circulating Exhibitions. The presentation at the Barnes Foundation is curated by Thom Collins, Neubauer Family Executive Director and President of the Barnes.

This exhibition was produced as part of a new educational venture between the Barnes and the University of Pennsylvania led by Thom Collins and professor Aaron Levy, with curatorial contributions from students in the 2018 Spiegel-Wilks Curatorial Seminar “Ars Moriendi: Life and Death in Early Photography.”

See more here: https://www.barnesfoundation.org/whats-on/early-photography

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12201112901?profile=originalBruce Castle Museum presents an exhibition dedicated to British film pioneer Robert W. Paul, who founded an innovative studio on Muswell Hill in the late 19th century. Celebrating Paul's 150th anniversary, the show includes fascinating early cinema technology, historical photographs and a look into Paul's early popular films, many of which were made in Haringey and which set the template for the earliest film genres.

Haringey residents will be surprised to know that Paul’s company even recreated scenes from the Anglo-Boer War (1899-1902) on the Muswell golf course, in the North London district where he would create an innovative studio and produce close to 800 pictures.

Paul’s cameras aimed to show the world: the roaring sea at Dover, the mysterious landscapes of Portugal and Spain, and the first screen drama made in Britain ('The Soldier’s Courtship', 1896) were only a few of the influential moving picture shows he produced.

The exhibition is curated by Ian Christie, noted Birkbeck, University of London film scholar and broadcaster, and will travel to other venues later in the year. As part of the exhibition, visitors will also find the graphic novel Time Traveller: Robert Paul and the Invention of Cinema, by Christie and the artists ILYA.

Animatograph! How cinema was born in Haringey
5 April - late July 2019 / Wednesday to Sunday, 1pm to 5pm
Price details: Free
Venue: Bruce Castle Museum, Lordship Lane, Tottenham, N17 8NU
See: https://www.haringey.gov.uk/events/34237-animatograph-how-cinema-was-born-haringey

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The David Bailey SUMO

12201112854?profile=originalIn 1965, portrait and fashion photographer David Bailey released his groundbreaking book Box Of Pin-Ups, securing him as the hip tastemaker for 1960s London cool. With Mick Jagger his best man at his wedding to Catherine Deneuve, Bailey was also the inspiration for the classic movie Blow-Up. From the Swinging ’60s to the present day, Bailey has never stopped pushing the boundaries of his signature in-your-face portraiture and is widely regarded as one of the great postwar photographers.

This big book of Bailey is the culmination of an incredible career, the result of two years’ worth of research into his personal archives. Through penetrating pictures of the beautiful and the notorious, the idolized and the powerful, friends and family, writers, artists, and fellow photographers, Bailey presents a sweeping cultural history of the last 60 years. Featured subjects include: Andy Warhol, Salvador Dalí, Kate Moss, Nelson Mandela, Francis Bacon, Zaha Hadid, the Rolling Stones, Jack Nicholson, Brigitte Bardot, Margaret Thatcher, and hundreds more.

As his friend Damien Hirst writes in the foreword: “He’s the master of his art and he’s created a mind-blowing visual language.”

Limited to a total of 3,000 numbered and signed copies, each edition comes with a bookstand designed by Marc Newson and a set of of four book jackets featuring John Lennon and Paul McCartney, Jean Shrimpton, Mick Jagger, and Andy Warhol.

The Collector’s Edition (No. 301–3,000) is limited to 2,700 copies. The four Art Editions of 75 copies each (No. 1–300) all come with separate prints signed by David Bailey.

“Big book. Small club.”

— David Bailey

12201112854?profile=originalThe artist:

London-born David Bailey (b. 1938) is widely acknowledged as one of the founding fathers of contemporary photography, having shot some of the most iconic portraits of the last five decades. Bailey’s early work helped both define and capture 1960s London, when he made stars of a new generation of models, including Jean Shrimpton and Penelope Tree. Bailey channeled the energy of London’s informal street culture to create a new style of casual coolness. Drawing inspiration from Modernism, he injected movement and immediacy into his work by using a very direct, cropped perspective. Bailey’s interests extend to commercials, film, painting, and sculpture.

The author:

Francis Hodgson is Professor in the Culture of Photography at the University of Brighton. For many years until 2015, he was the critic for The Financial Times and former head of photographs at Sotheby’s. In 2017, Hodgson received the J. Dudley Johnston Award from the Royal Photographic Society, given for photography criticism.

David Bailey, Francis Hodgson, Benedikt Taschen

Limited SUMO Edition. Hardcover, numbered and signed by David Bailey, 50 x 70 cm, 440 pages, with a bookstand designed by Marc Newson. Each edition comes with a set of four book jackets featuring John Lennon and Paul McCartney, Jean Shrimpton, Mick Jagger, and Andy Warhol.

Edition of 2,700. £ 2,250. ISBN 978-3-8365-5810-5 (English)

The editor:

Benedikt Taschen is the founder and managing director of TASCHEN. He started his professional life at age 18 in a 25-square-foot store in his native Cologne, Germany, which he named TASCHEN COMICS. By the end of the 1980s, TASCHEN titles were available in over a dozen languages at prices that finally made art books affordable for students and collectors alike—still the publishing house’s credo to this day. Other SUMO titles he has published include: Helmut Newton, Salgado’s Genesis, David Hockney, The Greatest of All Time, The Rolling Stones and Annie Leibovitz. He lives in Los Angeles and Berlin.

Courtesy, Press Release: TASCHEN.

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12201110088?profile=originalThe magazine print sector has been hit extremely hard over the last ten years, with closures and cutbacks, but it's not all doom and gloom. Small, specialist magazines have found a way of surviving independently of the media giants. Most of the new photography magazines that are starting up are however, devoted to contemporary work and are focused on aesthetics, ideology and critical theory.  

The Classic is different, the only magazine of its kind. It's devoted to the market for classic photography. The term used to be applied to certain styles of photography and the venerated names in the history of the medium. These days, it's used as a moniker for just about everything that isn't contemporary photography. The Classic is also free, available at photography fairs and selected distribution points in the major cities and through subscription.

The magazine was founded on the 17th of December 2018, by Bruno Tartarin, the French dealer and promoter of the biannual fair Photos Discovery, and Michael Diemar, the London-based collector, consultant and writer. Tartarin explains, "I felt that the classic photography market needed a real boost, something substantial. Having thought about it for a while, I decided to start a magazine. While the web is very useful, there is nothing like holding a beautiful magazine in your hands."

12201110854?profile=originalSo why does the classic photography market need a boost? Tartarin says, "When the modern photography market as we know it today was established around 1970, the focus was very much on works from the past, the 19th century, the Avant Garde of the interwar years. Around 2000, the focus changed and contemporary photography became increasingly dominant, at fairs, auctions and in the press. But as a photography dealer with over 20 years experience, I can tell you that it's still the classic photography, the Man Rays and the Gustave Le Grays, that underpins the whole of the photography market and gives it credibility."

 It seems somewhat extravagant to make it a free magazine but as Tartarin explains, "My ambition is to bring new people to the market, as well as rekindle enthusiasm among established collectors. There is no entrance fee at my fair, Photos Discovery, and I felt that the same spirit should be applied to the magazine."

Tartarin asked Michael Diemar to create the new magazine from scratch. Diemar says, "Bruno gave me a completely free hand, with regards to both its name and contents. I decided to call it The Classic, it described what it was about and was also memorable.  There were a number of things I wanted to avoid. I didn't want it to be an academic journal, nor did I want it to be a promotion brochure, full of articles about "golden investment opportunities" and graphs showing market expansion and price increases for individual artists. Because it wasn't the investment opportunities that turned me into a photography collector many years ago. It was the images, the prints, the Polaroids, the cased images, the wonder of the photographic object. And while books and museum exhibitions taught me a lot, they didn't provide me with nearly enough of the information I needed to operate as a collector. That information came from all the conversations I had with dealers, collectors, curators, auction experts, conservators, archivists, editors etc. And it's those kinds of conversations I have tried to replicate in the magazine."

12201110501?profile=originalThe first issue of The Classic has lengthy interviews with leading names in classic photography, Martin Barnes, Senior Curator of Photography at The Victoria & Albert Museum, David Fahey of Fahey/Klein Gallery about The Dennis Hopper Archive, the 19th century photography dealer Robert Hershkowitz about his career and his exhibition "The Essential Roger Fenton", Alex Novak about his collection of early negatives and Christophe Goeury, the French independent auction specialist. In addition, there are articles about exhibitions, processes, conservation issues, book reviews and more.

Getting the content right was a balancing act Diemar says, "The magazine had to be of interest to experienced collectors as well as first-time buyers. With regards to the latter, I didn't want to clog up the pages with basic but essential information, explaining the difference between "vintage print", "printed later" and "posthumous", supplying mounting and framing advice etc. I would have had to include that information in every issue. Instead, all that information will be supplied under "resources" on our website."

The Classic will be launched in the US at AIPAD, New York City 3-7 April
In France at Photos Discovery, Paris 13 April
In the UK at The Special Edition of The London Photograph Fair, 18-19 May

For more information: www.theclassicphotomag.com

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