September 25, 2015

Friday Round Up - 25 September, 2015

This week Friday Round Up features the 22nd Noorderlicht Photofestival in Groningen, The Netherlands with a selection of exhibitions from the festival's 2015 theme, DATA RUSH.

Festival Feature:
Noorderlicht Photofestival



DATA RUSH features more than 50 internationally renowned photographers and photo media artists whose work explores the tensions of the digital space. This year for the first time Noorderlicht presents 3D installations and work by multimedia artists in collaboration with When Art Meets Science also. One of the exhibits in DATA RUSH is Doug Meneuz's Fearless Genius, documenting the turbulent early years of the technology and Internet pioneers of Silicon Valley in California. 

Talking about this year's theme curator Wim Melis says, "We have opted for a topical and at the same time challenging theme. The data traffic, which affects all aspects of our lives and the entire virtual society, is invisible to the naked eye. How do you photograph something that is barely photographable?" 

The responses to his question span the gamut of photography from documentary to conceptual art and the questions are just as diverse - gaming addiction, anti-social social media, spam, the loss of interpersonal skills, surveillance, remote warfare and the silence of thousands of voice are just a few of the narratives. It's an interesting, and erudite, collection for a complex theme. Here’s a selection of the works included in this year’s festival. 

Bas Losekoot
In Company of Strangers 










Internet access from our mobile phones is a veritable revolution. Having all possible knowledge in the world within hand’s reach at all times, however, has also changed our bodily experience and social behaviour in the city. Whilst walking on the street, we may be physically present, but mentally absent. In Hong Kong, Bas Losekoot witnessed the way in which people on the street use their phones as masks, resulting in dismal shields of indifference. Paradoxically, the smartphone thus seems to disconnect us from one another and from reality. Hong Kong is one of eight megacities in the world, which Losekoot is visiting for his work in progress, In Company of Strangers

Fernando Moleres 
Internet Gaming Addicts 










There are more Internet users in China than anywhere else – 600 million. This prosperity, however, has a dark side. Thousands of Chinese, particularly youths, are addicted to Internet gaming. They isolate themselves in their rooms or in Internet cafés, where they can sometimes play online games for days on end, with disastrous consequences for their social and family life. Some gamers have even died in front of the computer from exhaustion and lack of movement. Fernando Moleres followed addicted youths who are trying to kick the habit at a clinic run by psychiatrist Tao Ran, a colonel in the People’s Liberation Army. Many parents even allow themselves to be admitted into the clinic together with their child. 

Lisa Barnard
Whiplash Transition 








Many American soldiers spend their days in front of a screen controlling an RPA (Remotely Piloted Aircraft), which destroys military targets in a far away country and then rushing home to take their children to football training. This abrupt transition, from the brutal reality of operating a drone in a war zone back to family life, is often referred to by the soldiers as whiplash transition. The lack of separation between the theatre of war and the home contributes to the rise of work stress and burnout. In her series Whiplash Transition, Lisa Barnard examines these complex relations, using images from both the US and Pakistan.

Christopher Baker
Hello World! 






New media such as YouTube have made it possible, at an almost alarming rate, for people to express themselves. The promise of contemporary, democratic, participative media fits seamlessly with the human desire for attention. However, no new technologies have emerged that enable us to listen to all these new public speakers. The installation Hello World! by Christopher Baker shows how thousands of people are able to address a potential public of billions – alone, and from their kitchen, bedroom or other private retreat. Are they heard, or is their voice lost in a cacophony of other voices?

Catherine Balet
Strangers in the Light 






In her series Strangers in the Light, Catherine Balet examines the complicated relationship between humans and their technology. Her photographs show the new posture of the ever-reachable, contemporary human, absorbed in the white, digital light of his device. The individuals she has photographed are solely illuminated by the light on their smartphone, laptop or tablet, thus creating a 21st century chiaroscuro effect which seems to refer to classical paintings and the old masters. At the same time, it refers to the historical break with the past, brought about by modern means of communication.

Max Colson
Friendly Proposals for Highly Controlling Environments 




Many public places in Great Britain are being privatised, in the course of which surveillance is put in place as a means of control. The latest hi-tech equipment is able to respond ‘smartly’ to events in the vicinity – lampposts can record sound and switch on whenever they ‘hear’ upheaval, dustbins can follow passing smartphones and register movements in a marked out area. In his series Friendly Proposals for Highly Controlling Environments, Max Colson shows the potential of a more playful and therefore less threatening manner of surveillance.

Anita Cruz-Eberhard & David Howe
Security Blankets 




In the series Security Blankets by Anita Cruz-Eberhard and David Howe, security is a warm blanket, not only in the figurative but also in the literal sense. Their security blankets, of incredibly soft fleece, are printed with images that were found on the Internet and refer to the notion of ‘security’. The softness and warmth of the fleece, however, form a sharp contrast with the disquieting imprints on the blankets; Cruz-Eberhard and Howe thereby evoke the confusing positive and negative emotional connotations of the word ‘security’.

Anita Cruz-Eberhard
Watch the Watchers! #02 



After the attacks on 11 September 2001, Anita Cruz-Eberhard saw a rapid increase in the number of surveillance cameras in her place of residence, New York. But do all those cameras make our lives safer? Doesn’t our right to privacy disappear just as quickly as the technology emerges? Has it not transformed us into a police state? And doesn’t our obsession with cameras have just as much to do with our culture of voyeurism as it does with safety? By converting the technology that watches over us into art, Cruz-Eberhard examines the global, surveillance-saturated culture with an aesthetic dimension.
For her continuing series Watch the Watchers! #02, she created patterns using images of surveillance cameras which she pulled from shops and catalogues on the Internet.

Arantxa Gonlag
Data Diary 








Dutch-born Arantxa Gonlag went in search of the physical locations of her digital data. Her quest brought her, amongst other places, to beaches where intercontinental Internet cables reach the shores, and to the almost invisible data centres of Facebook and other Internet giants. At the same time, Gonlag endeavours to obtain an answer to her questions concerning our digital identity and the importance of privacy. Who has control over this, and how secure is that control? Her diary in text and image, Data Diary, is a tangible reflection on her search in a virtual world.

Andrew Hammerand
The New Town










In order to portray the construction of a new community, the project developer installed a camera on top of an antenna for mobile phones; the images of which were made public. It is just one example of the many non-secured devices which actively and haphazardly pump information onto the Internet. For his series The New Town, Andrew Hammerand uses images from this camera as though it were his own. Because he had full access to non-secured controls, he could point the camera himself, zoom in with it and focus. The result is a voyeuristic gaze on the village, a play with the visual language of surveillance, amateur footage and insinuation.

Hannes Hepp
Not So Alone – Lost in Chat Room 






Hannes Hepp’s photomontages portray the invisible, global, digital espionage activities of the NSA and other security forces, but also the continuous alienation and isolation of ordinary citizens in the virtual world. The portraits in the series come from public chat rooms, where the persons depicted tempt visitors with the prospect of more explicit sexual images so as to entice them to pay for ‘private time’. The viewer is therefore simultaneously a voyeur and an object of voyeurism. Just as the photographer may have been spied on by security forces whilst making the photomontages in his studio.

Simon Høgsberg
The Grocery Store Project 






On an April day in 2010, Simon Høgsberg sat by a supermarket entrance to take photographs of people approaching and walking away from him. He kept returning the following eighteen months, taking a total of around 97,000 shots. With the aid of basic facial recognition software, he was able to identify 1,100 faces. Many faces turned out to be the same – hundreds of people turned out to appear on several photographs spread out over a period of time. Høgsberg placed the photo sequences of 457 people into a matrix, providing insights into how they pass through one another’s lives. The result is a study into the way in which humanity consciously and unconsciously presents itself, and, at the same time, an artwork full of emerging and fading patterns.

Cristina de Middel
Poly Spam 








An old woman looking for someone to share out her immense fortune among charities, a girl who wants to marry you in order to fulfil the requirements to collect the large sum of money her father left her, or just the message that you’ve won a new car – everyone with an email account receives these kinds of appeals and other messages that are too good to be true. Under the guise of mercy, they appeal to our greed. In Poly Spam, Cristina de Middel creates portraits of the senders, in which she translates every detail from the emails into dramatic images of the moment in which they were sent.

Mintio
The Hall of Hyperdelic Youths 






The virtual world of gamers has infinite possibilities. As though in a trance, gamers detach themselves from their vulnerable bodies and enter into a world with barely any rules. Mintio combines this virtual world with images of those who move through it. Using only the light emitting from the screens behind which the gamers take cover, Mintio captured the teenagers’ limited movements – or even the complete lack of them, because in the three to ten minutes of the shoot, they barely moved. Turned 180 degrees, through the eyes of the gamer, she subsequently captured different layers of the endless matrix of the game.

Waltraut Tänzler
Eyes on Borders 








In 2007, the world’s first public online surveillance programme was launched in Texas under the name of TBSC BlueServo Virtual Community Watch. The programme consists of a network of sensors and cameras installed along the border between Texas and Mexico. Internet users around the world can register as Virtual Texas Deputies to participate in border control. If these virtual assistant sheriffs see something suspicious, they simply send an email to the local authorities. Waltraut Tänzler uses the screenshots of the videos streamed, which were made as a virtual deputy, to protest against this dubious tactic to increase border security.

Doug Menuez
Fearless Genius: The Digital Revolution in Silicon Valley 
1985-2000 










During a period of 15 years, Doug Menuez captured the efforts of a select group of engineers, designers, entrepreneurs and investors in Silicon Valley. He began in 1985, when Apple laid off Steve Jobs. Menuez followed his path to rehabilitation and this example gradually won him the trust of more than seventy companies and numerous investors. He witnessed how highly-gifted and fearless programmers had put everything on the line to realise their ideas – health, fortune and family. With this uncompromising approach and the technology they developed, they unleashed a digital revolution that has transformed every aspect of our lives. But the price was high: marriages broke down, several programmers went insane, and millions of dollars were lost. Behind this harsh reality, Menuez discovered the playful, primary need to invent tools that provided the progress of humanity with a new momentum. Uncontrollable, hungry and wild – which ultimately makes the digital revolution into something human. In 1999, Menuez decided to bring the project to a close; greed and shares had pushed aside the idealism, the Internet bubble was about to burst. Fearless Genius is both a document of historical interest and an example with which Menuez wants to inspire a new generation.

Nooderlicht Photofestival 2015
Until 11 October
Old Sugar Factory
Groningen

September 18, 2015

Friday Round Up - 18 September, 2015

This week on Friday Round Up - Timothy Fadek, Unseen Amsterdam, Getty Legacy Collection, Mick Rock's David Bowie & Co, and exhibitions in Melbourne at Counihan and RMIT and last chance to see Ballarat International Foto Biennale.

Photo Essay:
Timothy Fadek - Requiem for a Dive Bar









American photographer Timothy Fadek's long term project captures the last days of trading for one of New York's iconic dive bars The Subway Inn, which closed at the end of 2014 to make way for a new apartment development.

The Subway Inn on East 60th Street and Lexington Avenue opened in 1937 and for 77 years the bar was a fixture of the neighbourhood. Fadek's classic black and white photographs take us into what he calls "a real-deal New York City bar" where a disparate clientele gather - some come for a quick drink before heading home, others to catch up with old friends, make new ones or to dance to jukebox tunes. 









Fadek's images are rich with atmosphere. Here the stale smoke, cheap aftershave and perfume assail the nostrils, split beer sticks to the soles of shoes and pitted tables scarred by the decades make impromptu head rests. Fadek says The Subway Inn has been an "after-work haven to construction workers, sales clerks and executives. This is representative of everything that depresses me about New York City. The loss of Times Square, all the great bars, CBGB’s, independent diners. All gone and replaced by chains. Like all things that gave this city character, The Subway Inn fell victim to a hot real estate market".













(C) All images Timothy Fadek

Collection:
Getty Legacy 


In celebration of its 20th anniversary year, Getty Images has unveiled its Legacy Collection – an expertly curated retrospective of Getty Images’ most ground-breaking, significant and memorable imagery. The Collection will be released weekly in sets of 15-20 images available on the Getty Images app, which features behind-the-scenes interviews and videos with internationally renowned photographers.

“Over the last 20 years I have been privileged to bear witness to the defining images featured in the Legacy Collection, and to work with the remarkable photographers responsible for documenting the world’s most important moments. Many of them have contributed to this collection - and had an opinion about it!” said Jonathan Klein, Co-founder and CEO of Getty Images.

“All moments, whether painful, joyful, serious or entertaining, are reflective of the human experience. I am extremely proud to launch this milestone collection in our 20th anniversary year, a collection that, at its core, reflects the world back to itself through the very best imagery. I am grateful to the photographers who have created this extraordinary work and who are the true heroes of our company.”

Amongst the Collection are iconic photojournalist images from the late Chris Hondros (below)



John Moore's photograph of Mary McHugh mourning the death of her fiancé Sgt. James Regan who was killed in Iraq (below)


and Brent Stirton's deceased silverback gorilla being carried out of the jungle by an Anti-Poaching unit, an image which has helped raise over US$50 million for gorilla conservation (below).



The Legacy Collection also features entertainment, sport and historic archival imagery and will be reviewed annually with those images which are memorable, significant and ground-breaking added to the collection over time. To find out more visit the Getty Legacy Collection or download the app.

Fairs & Festivals:
Unseen Amsterdam

All About Me, Nicknamed Beauty Queen Maker, 2014
© Tahmineh Monzavi/Francis Boeske Projects


Naked Light #1, from the series 'Najima', 2013 
© Akiko Takizawa/SAGE Paris

Digitalis Ambigua i.a. - Normandy, France, 2015 
© Laurence Aëgerter/Seelevel Gallery

An initiative by Foam Fotografiemuseum Amsterdam, Platform A and Vandejong Creative Agency, Unseen Photo Fair brings together 54 galleries presenting the most recent developments from the world of contemporary photography. Dedicated to embracing emerging talent and unseen work by established artists, Unseen presents more than 80 world premieres of photographic works that have never been exhibited before at an art gallery, art institution or art fair. The galleries are complemented by artist-run initiatives in the Unseen Niches, and the Unseen Collection.

This year in addition to the Unseen Photo Fair is the 10-day Unseen Festival which celebrates photography in all its forms. Billed as a place for the exchange of dialogue, artistic expression, knowledge and ideas, the Festival is held in various venues across the city.  

Unseen Photo Fair
Westergasfabriek
18-20 September

Unseen Festival
Various venues
Until 27 September

Last Chance:
Ballarat International Foto Biennale


(C) Boryana Katsarova Freezing


(C) Sam Harris Middle of Somewhere

If you haven't made the trip to Ballarat, an hour's drive from Melbourne, this is the last weekend for the Festival. There's some great shows to see. Visit the Ballarat International Foto Biennale site for details.

Book & Exhibition:
Mick Rock - Shooting for Stardust: 
The rise of David Bowie & Co







UK photographer Mick Rock is known as “The Man who shot the seventies.” As well as David Bowie, he has photographed Lou Reed, Queen, Iggy Pop, Roxy Music and Blondie amongst others. He also produced and directed music videos for the classic Bowie songs: “John, I’m Only Dancing”, “The Jean Genie”, “Space Oddity” and “Life On Mars?” The exhibition Shooting for Stardust coincides with the release of a limited edition book The Rise of David Bowie: 1972–1973, with only 1972 copies, each signed by David Bowie and Mick Rock. If you're in LA and you love rock music - and who doesn't - then get down to the Taschen Gallery.

Until 11 October
Taschen Gallery
8070 Beverly Blvd
Los Angeles, CA

Exhibitions: In brief

Melbourne
Group Show - Other Side

(C) Paul Batt


(C) Paul Batt

Curated by Paul Batt and Michael Brennan, Other Side features works from the pair along with Fabrizio Biviano, Nicholas Ives and Aaron Martin. Batt says the exhibition is "based on the idea that every encounter we have is a negotiation – an exchange composed of layers, conflicts, gaps and overlaps. No matter what your position, no matter how many others agree, there will always be a view that is different to your own".

Until 4 October
Counihan Gallery
Brunswick Civic Centre
233 Sydney Road 
Brunswick
Artist talk: Saturday 19 September, 2.30 pm 

Bronek Kozka - The Politics of Remembering









In the catalogue for this exhibition by Melbourne photographer Bronek Kozka, head of RMIT’s School of Art, Associate Professor Julian Goddard writes:

"Kozka castes a critical eye over some of the recreations of particular moments from war that carry strong symbolic meaning. In capturing these symbolic recreations he emphasises how such recreations lend themselves to speak about war and violence in a manner that falls so far short of their horrific realities. By isolating and distancing these recreations through the critical power of the lens his images remind us that history is told and constructed through language which can only hope to simulate history but never be it".

Until 24 September
RMIT Design Hub
Building 100, Level 10
Long Room
Cnr. Victoria Street and Swanston Street
Melbourne