Posts tagged as:

exhibition

Christopher-JonassenPhoto: Christopher Jonassen

I am thrilled to have teamed up with United Photo Industries to curate Anew, a group exhibition featuring nine photographers who unearth beauty in the seemingly irrelevant, everyday objects that most people disregard, revealing that unnoticed and banal items can sometimes be quite magical.

By concentrating more on light, color, form and texture, rather than on the item itself, the photographers in the show render these items somewhat unrecognizable even though the object has not changed form: it’s simply been re-imagined and has taken on a new life.

From Klaus Pichler’s surprisingly beautiful photographs of dust collected around Vienna to Christopher Johanessen’s “investigation” of used frying pans that look similar to planets to George Benson’s anonymous record sleeves carefully arranged by color, these photographers recognize that something special lies within mundane items. They also have the talent to elevate, transform and breathe new life into these entities so that they can be appreciated and admired where previously they were ignored.

Anew opens at United Photo Industries in DUMBO, Brooklyn on December 6, 2012 (6 – 9pm) and runs through December 30, 2012.

Barry-RosenthalPhoto: Barry Rosenthal

Francois-DelfossePhoto: François Delfosse

Stephan-TillmansPhoto: Stephan Tillmans

Klaus-PichlerPhoto: Klaus Pichler

George-BensonPhoto: George Benson

Wendy-Van-SantenPhoto: Wendy Van Santen

Jean-Paul-GomezPhoto: Jean Paul Gomez

Robert-KamandPhoto: Robert Kamand

happiness is a warm gunHappiness is a Warm Gun: (L) Brandon Juhasz; (R) Peter Andrew

When planning for this exhibition, Come Together (opening tomorrow at FotoWeekDC), co-curator Amanda Gorence and I knew it would be showing at a time when the nation would be divided: half of us breathing a sigh of relief in reaction to the election results, with the other half wanting to leave the country. [Click on images to bring them up at a larger size.]

With this in mind, we wanted the theme of the show to be fun and lighthearted with a universal appeal: our attempt to make viewers forget about politics, Syria, Iran, the economy and impending holiday madness, if only for a few minutes. Randomly, we came up with the idea of doing a Beatles-themed exhibition with the reasoning that The Beatles, a band still relevant and popular after all these years, bridges generations and political parties.

For the exhibition, we’ve taken photos from 18 different photographers (hailing everywhere from Singapore to Dallas) and paired them up in order to make up a well known song title from The Beatles. There are no titles at the exhibition, so the challenge lies with the viewer to try and figure out what song title each photo set corresponds to (there is a key at the very end).

In order to cover all bases, some of the song titles are easier to figure out than others, as we all have varying degrees of Beatles knowledge. One of the easier ones (we think) is “Rocky Raccoon” (pictured below). But when testing them out, we find that even Beatles walking encyclopedias are stumped on a few.

All work in the exhibition is for sale. If you are unable to make the show and are interested in seeing the entire exhibition and a price list, please contact me for details (alison@featureshoot.com).

FEATURING: Sarah Wilmer, Brandon Juhasz, Rogier Houwen, Burcu Avsar, Peter Andrew, François Trézin, Jamie Chung, Kathryn Parker Almanas, Jess Gough, Noah Sheldon, Jesseca Davis, Parsley Steinweiss, Jonathon Kambouris, Andrew Querner, Laurisa Galvan, Matt Henry, Steven Paneccasio and Andrew Hall.


Rocky Raccoon: (L) Andrew Hall; (R) Jesseca Davis

Golden Slumbers: (L) Laurisa Galvan; (R) François Trézin

Octopus’s Garden: (L) Burcu Avsar; (R) Sarah Wilmer

Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds: (L) Rogier Houwen; (R) Parsley Steinweiss

Photo by Jacqueline Di Milia

Photo by Jacqueline Di Milia

New York-area photographers are invited to submit work for inclusion in ‘Sea Change’, a group show curated by Feature Shoot’s Alison Zavos as part of The Wassaic Project Summer Festival, to be held in Upstate New York between August 13-15. Through portraits, landscapes and still life imagery, ‘Sea Change’ aims to examine our relationship with nature, animals and our surroundings in light of the greatest environmental disaster ever in the US — the BP Oil spill. To submit, please send up to 5 photos at 700 pixels wide, along with a brief bio and explanation of your work to: submissions@featureshoot.com. Put ‘Sea Change’ in the subject line. Deadline for submissions is July 19. [click to read…]