Mostrar mensagens com a etiqueta United Kingdom. Mostrar todas as mensagens
Mostrar mensagens com a etiqueta United Kingdom. Mostrar todas as mensagens

25/01/2013






Tobias Slater-Hunt

From the series Closer to God

"Closer to God is a series of anthropological fictions are part of the on going Ascension project. These are images of what Dante referred to as the virtuous pagans. Those residing on the upper most levels of Hell. Those born without the light of God and whose only sin it is, is that they lived without the faith in God. And so they spend eternity saturated by the light of human reason, eternally in the knowledge that they will be forever without God. This fragment of the series, seeks to privilege the surface of both the sitter, and the surface of the image, an inquiry into what Clement Greenberg termed ‘transparency of the photograph’. These fictions, these strange physiologies, are based on the paintings of Cranach and Grunewald, drawing a line though Da Vinci’s grotesques to the present day practice of photographic portraiture, to question what is real. By utilizing modern technologies these photographs now have the same expressive possibilities previously only afforded to paintings. By using these technologies in a subversion of the norm, i.e to disfigure, mutate and expose flaws rather than to edit them out, I seek to reference the old mechanisms of picture making; considerations of composition, use of light and finally just what the human figure should or could look like. Obviously manipulated, the hand of the Artist is exposed, a confession perhaps or a portrait?”





Venetia Dearden





Nigel Dickinson

From the series Smokey mountain

Smokey Mountain rubbish dump, at Steung Mean Chey, started as a landfill site sixty years ago, and is now part of Phnom Penh, Cambodia; the grey cloud of acrid smoke exuding from constantly burning garbage gives it its nickname. There are more than 2,000 casual workers, including some 600 children, who scavenge across the dumpsite, collecting plastic bags, metal, plastics, and paper which are then sorted, cleaned, weighed, and sold for recycling. People work, eat, and sleep amidst the rubbish and constant fumes, their strenuous labor earns them about $1 per day. Waste pickers even work night-shifts using miner’s lamps to illuminate their way. It is a place notorious for pollution, crime, and disease; medical waste is a constant hazard.

12/12/2012






Chris Coekin

From the series Altogether





Richard Learoyd

06/12/2012






Ryan Harding

From the series Street

Blog

29/11/2012






Sam Taylor-Wood

From the series Men Crying

23/11/2012






Phillip Toledano

From the series A new kind of beauty


"I’m interested in what we define as beauty, when we choose to create it ourselves.
Beauty has always been a currency, and now that we finally have the technological means to mint our own, what choices do we make?

Is beauty informed by contemporary culture? By history? Or is it defined by the surgeon’s hand?
Can we identify physical trends that vary from decade to decade, or is beauty timeless?
When we re-make ourselves, are we revealing our true character, or are we stripping away our very identity?

Perhaps we are creating a new kind of beauty. An amalgam of surgery, art, and popular culture? And if so, are the results the vanguard of human induced evolution?"  
Phillip Toledano

22/11/2012






Zed Nelson

From the series Love Me

15/11/2012