Showing posts with label ballarat international foto biennale. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ballarat international foto biennale. Show all posts

August 25, 2017

Photojournalism Now: Friday Round Up - 25 August, 2017

This week on Photojournalism Now: Friday Round Up - my musings on the 2017 Ballarat International Foto Biennale which opened last week and FotoEvidence and World Press Photo join forces.

Musings:
Ballarat International Foto Biennale

Last Friday I headed to Ballarat for the launch of the 2017 Ballarat International Foto Biennale. The festivities kicked off on Friday night with the opening of the blockbuster David LaChapelle exhibition at the Art Galley of Ballarat. The festival has clearly pinned its hopes on this show with the city's mayor revealing they hoped to attract 50,000 this year to the festival when the last one in 2015 drew an audience of 15,000. You have to admire their ambition and I hope it is a success. But with pretensions to such grandeur, there are some concerns with the festival that need to be aired.

In general I was underwhelmed by the core program, and thought the use of venues could have been better. In particular the Tell exhibition in the Mining Exchange seemed swamped by the size of the venue. And the exhibitions in the little ante rooms or alcoves in the Exchange were so poorly lit and presented that they might as well have been hung in the bathroom - in fact the lighting was better in there! There are some highlights of course. Ich Werde Deutsch (I become German) is an interesting show, and the Post Office Gallery is one of the better venues. Also the group show Rearranging Boundaries has an impressive international line up of documentary photographers, but the lighting of the show was disappointing and I was particularly irritated by lamps clamped to the top of photographs.

So let's cut to the chase. The biggest problem I have with this year's festival is that it promotes a facade of international standing, but underneath is wracked by amateur practices. There, the elephant in the room is now visible!




This is especially evident in the hanging of the Martin Kantor prize (above a photo I took of one of the finalists). With a first prize of $15,000, it's no measly photo comp. It was revealed to me today that 18 of the 27 finalists have penned a letter to the festival organisers to complain about the way their work was treated. Hung on industrial wire fencing, without any covering, you could see the backs of images, as above. The lighting was awful, and there was no information about the photographs save for a few scrappy pieces of paper marking the numbers and names, which we were told to give back as they didn't have enough. It was amateur hour! And knowing the efforts and expense photographers went to in order to put forward their best work, framed and delivered, it is no wonder the majority of entrants were furious.

This amateur approach is also evident in the lighting of the fashion retrospective Reverie Revelry which featured the amazing work of the late Robyn Beeche and Bruno Benini amongst others. I was horrified at how badly lit this show was, the high ceiling fluorescent lights throwing an awful, flat cast over the dim room. I've seen Beeche's work before and it is transformational when handled properly. I was also one of the last to interview her before her untimely death and know she would have been incredibly disappointed.

It is difficult enough for photography to hold its head up in the art world without these kinds of impediments. For all the bluster of the festival and its new direction, some money should be spent on curators who have training and know how to hang and light a show. Curating is an art in itself.

And lastly, there is the trend for festivals to charge photographers several hundred dollars to enter the Fringe. These photographers pay for the privilege of hanging their works in cafes and businesses where it is virtually impossible to view them with any semblance of sophistication or respect and that is infuriating. This grab for money at the expense of the artist is an age old rort and quite frankly photographers deserve better.

One Fringe exhibitor confided that the venue where their work was to be exhibited was less than cooperative, charged them the full rate for catering (they were encouraged by the festival to hold an opening), plus there was no hanging system and no lights. After the festival had taken their money there was no help forthcoming either. It's no wonder that after that experience, this unnamed photographer won’t be exhibiting at the next festival.

I'm always hopeful that things can change. Let's see a festival in the future that is more about celebrating the actual photographs and showing respect to the photographers, than talking a good game and coming up short.

News:
FotoEvidence and World Press Photo join forces


It was announced yesterday that FotoEvidence and World Press Photo Foundation will collaborate on the annual FotoEvidence Book Award which will be known as the FotoEvidence Book Award with World Press Photo.

As a previous jury member for the FotoEvidence Book Award I am very excited about this collaboration and the opportunity for even more people to see this important work. It's great news!

The annual FotoEvidence Book Award recognises one photographer whose work demonstrates courage and commitment in the pursuit of social justice. From 2018 the newly named award will see the winner and two other selected finalists also exhibit their work during the World Press Photo (WPP) exhibition in Amsterdam where the winner’s book will be featured. Additionally, the book will be shown at various other WPP events around the world.

This is a great achievement for Svetlana Bachevanova the publisher of FotoEvidence who has worked tirelessly to bring these important stories to publication.

She says: “We at FotoEvidence are excited about our partnership with the World Press Photo Foundation because of our shared commitment to excellence and new initiatives in documentary photography and photojournalism. After seven years and sixteen FotoEvidence books, we expect the FotoEvidence Book Award with World Press Photo to expand our reach to a worldwide audience, strengthen our mission promoting social justice, and increase our support for photographers who demonstrate courage and commitment in the pursuit of human rights.”

Lars Boering, managing director of the World Press Photo Foundation also commented: "We’re delighted to be working closely together with FotoEvidence on the book award. The World Press Photo Foundation is expanding all areas of its activities, and as part of that we’re more committed than ever to promoting visual journalism that addresses social justice. We understand that photo books which address these topics occupy a special but challenging place in the photo book market, and we want to bring this work to our large global audience. The FotoEvidence Book Award with World Press Photo will build on the commitment of Svetlana and her team and help to further our joint mission.”

August 18, 2017

Photojournalism Now: Friday Round Up - 18th August, 2017

This week on Photojournalism Now: Friday Round Up it's all about the 2017 Ballarat International Foto Biennale.

Special Feature:
2017 Ballarat International Foto Biennale


(C) Meg Hewitt Tokyo is Yours - Fringe

Opening tomorrow in the Victorian regional centre of Ballarat, an hour's drive from Melbourne, the 2017 Ballarat International Foto Biennale (BIFB) runs for four weeks. Its expansive program promises to showcase work that appeals to a broad audience and the success of the festival is largely pinned on its major drawcard, the blockbuster David LaChapelle exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ballarat.

This exhibition, which is ticketed (a first for the festival), has received considerable publicity and is advertised on billboards, trains and in the media showing a new level of promotion for this regional event.

LaChapelle's celebrity profile is clearly a great asset for the festival, and his works, some of which you can see in this post, are larger than life, drawing on religious art history tropes and celebrity tackiness. His photographs are lauded in the art world and if nothing else, are most definitely eye-catching, although this type of photography doesn't interest me, as my readers know! Nor does some of the more conceptual photography on show, much of which leaves me cold.

But there are most definitely exhibitions which have caught my attention and for those documentary lovers you won't be disappointed having made the trek to Ballarat. From the Core program my top pick is Rearranging Boundaries, a group show curated by Australian documentary photographer Aaron Bradbrook and featuring the work of Zanele Muholi (South Africa), Tanya Habjouqa (Jordan), Abbas Kowsari (Iran), Wei Leng Tay (China) and Remissa Mak (Cambodia). You can read my feature article on this exhibition in Saturday's Australian Financial Review Weekend.

There are also a number of exhibitions in the large Fringe program which are worth checking out - Lloyd Williams Rustic Remnants, MAP Group's Beyond Borders 2017, Meg Hewitt's Tokyo is Yours and Helga Leunig's Three Weeks in Havana, Tony Evans' The Faces of Sovereign Hill - to name a few. In fact, the Fringe has more appeal for me than the Core this time around.

This year's BIFB is headed by new festival director Fiona Sweet, who has swept into the job, and Ballarat, after a successful career in design and I suspect her background is reflected in the choice of some of the exhibitions such as Reverie Revelry: Fashion Through Photography and LaChapelle. Sweet's agenda, to take the festival from its regional roots and elevate it on the national arts calendar, is ambitious as it is hard enough to get audiences to galleries in the capital cities let alone country towns. Let's hope the program with its stars and its breadth heralds success.

If you're in Melbourne, then it's an easy drive down the highway. For those interstaters, make a weekend of it. I'm sure you won't be disappointed by the program, or by Ballarat, which is one of the most beautiful Victorian country towns, its Gold Rush architecture a visual treat in itself. There's good coffee and food to be found too. So do your bit and support the Arts, because they are vital to the health of our society and shouldn't be undervalued or ignored.

BIFB in pictures - a random selection

Core Program

Rearranging Boundaries
Ballarat Trades Hall


(C) Abbas Kowsari


(C) Remissa Mak


(C) Tanya Habjouqa


(C) Wei Leng Tay


(C) Zanele Muholi


Reverie Revelry: Fashion Through Photography
Ballarat Mechanics Institute

This group show features the work of Robyn Beeche, NoĆ© Sendas, Prue Stent and Honey Long, Nancy de Holl and Matthew Linde.  


(C) Bruno Bernini

(C) Robyn Beeche

(C) Honey Long and Prue Stent, Wind Form 2014

David LaChapelle
Art Gallery of Ballarat

(C) David LaChapelle

(C) David LaChapelle

Fringe Program - a selection
(C) Meg Hewitt Tokyo is Yours

(C) Helga Leunig Three Weeks in Havana

(C) Helga Leunig Three Weeks in Havana

(C) Lloyd Williams Rustic Remnants

(C) Lloyd Williams Rustic Remnants

(C) Tony Evans The Faces of Sovereign Hill

Ballarat International Foto Biennale
19 August - 17 September

August 28, 2015

Friday Round Up - 28 August, 2015

This week the 27th edition of Visa Pour l'Image opens in Perpignan, France, Murray Frederick's exhibitions open in Melbourne and Sydney and Ballarat International Foto Biennale hosts In Conversation with Sam Harris and Alison Stieven-Taylor.


Feature Festival:
Visa Pour l'Image

29 August - 13 September



The 27th edition of the world's longest standing, and most respected, photojournalism festival opens in Perpignan France with another impressive program of international exhibitions. Visa attracts professionals from around the world, and last year 2800 descended on the picturesque town of Perpignan near the Spanish border. Visa is not just for professionals and over the festival 187,000 people visited the exhibitions and more than 30,000 attended the evening screenings. This year 30 exhibitions and six screenings will showcase the diversity that is photojournalism in 2015. Here's a preview of some of the amazing work on show plus FotoEvidence Press launches three new books.

Exhibitions:

Somalia
Mohamed Abdiwahab 

A mother and child walking past the wreckage of a car bomb that killed one 
person and injured another. Wardhigley District, south of Mogadishu, February 27, 2015.
© Mohamed Abdiwahab / AFP


Syrian Refugees in the Middle East
Lynsey Addario

A Syrian man and his two daughters after entering Jordan at an unofficial border crossing. 
Sharjarh, Jordan, April 10, 2013.
© Lynsey Addario for The New York Times / Getty Images Reportage


The Ebola Epidemic
Daniel Berehulak

Monrovia, Liberia, August 31, 2014.
Esther Doryen (5) being carried to an ambulance prior to being taken to the
Ebola Treatment Center run by Doctors Without Borders. One week later she passed away.
© Daniel Berehulak for The New York Times / Getty Images Reportage


The Unravelling…Central African Republic
Marcus Bleasdale

Muslims waiting for trucks at PK12 after fleeing their homes. Christian anti-balaka 
forces were systematically attacking Muslim communities in the region.
January 23, 2014.
© Marcus Bleasdale / Human Rights Watch / National Geographic Magazine


Juan Manuel Castro Prieto

Nazaria AlpƩrez & Alejandra Checia. Santo TomƔs, Chumbivilcas, Peru, 2009.
© Juan Manuel Castro Prieto / Agence VU’


Living with the Legacy of Hugo Chavez
Alejandro Cegarra

Caracas, Venezuela, November 19, 2013. Women shouting at opposition party 
supporters during a political demonstration outside the Venezuelan Parliament.
© Alejandro Cegarra / Getty Images Reportage


Facing Reality
Manoocher Deghati

Kunduz, Afghanistan, 2002. Two women on a horse-drawn taxi.
© Manoocher Deghati


Winner French of the Ville de Perpignan 
RƩmi Ochlik Award 2015
Edouard Elias

Foreign Legion troops recently arrived and awaiting instructions.
Bria, Central African Republic, MISCA base (International Support Mission to the CAR), 
August 23, 2014
© Edouard Elias / Getty Images Reportage


From Kiev to Kobani
Bülent Kiliç

Near the southeastern town of Suruc, Sanliurfa province, Turkey, October 2, 2014. 
A Kurdish woman and her daughter wait after crossing from Syria into Turkey, 
with mortar fire on both sides.
© Bülent KiliƧ / AFP

Spain's Housing Crisis
Andres Kudacki 
Carmen Martinez Ayuso (85) lost her apartment under foreclosure when her son 
lost his job and she could not pay the mortgage and high interest rates. Activists 
protested and clashed with riot police, but she was still evicted. 
Madrid, Spain, Friday, November 21, 2014.
© Andres Kudacki / AP


Amalio Barrul Gimenez and his family have been evicted. Amalio Barrul 
Gimenez (41), his pregnant wife Isabel Morales Bachiller (35) and their three 
children live on a low income, selling goods on the street and receiving benefits. 
For 18 months they lived in an apartment owned by Bankia Bank; they tried to 
negotiate a low rent, but the bank insisted on them being evicted. Madrid, Spain, 
Tuesday, June 24, 2014
© Andres Kudacki / AP

Nuclear Tourism
Gerd Ludwig

On a one-day visit to the Exclusion Zone, tourists have a few minutes for snapshots 
in front of the sarcophagus encasing Reactor 4. “This is as close as you can get, hurry up,”
says the tour guide who asks visitors to stay on the paved paths “as radiation is
substantially higher on the grass." Pripyat, Ukraine, 2013
© Gerd Ludwig / National Geographic Creative / National Geographic Magazine


In the Exclusion Zone, a park commemorating the homes abandoned was opened 
in 2011. The signs are the names of all the villages evacuated. Chernobyl, September 21, 2013.
© Gerd Ludwig / National Geographic Creative / National Geographic Magazine

The Congo River - Exploring a Legend
Pascal Maitre

The Congo River at Maluku where a giant barge transporting timber and passengers 
has just arrived from Kisangani. February, 2013.
© Pascal Maitre / Cosmos / National Geographic Magazine 



A JCM-Services boat (Jesus Christ Marvelous Services). Life on board and on 
the banks of the river downstream from Mbandaka and 100 km before Lissala. 
Villagers come to sell crocodiles (for $25 each) and poultry, and also to buy goods.
© Pascal Maitre / Cosmos / National Geographic Magazine

Assad's Syria
Sergey Ponomarev

Khalidiya district, Homs, Syria, Sunday June 15, 2014
Abu Hisham Abdel Karim and his family load their belongings into a taxi.
Taxis incongruously drive along deserted streets in ruins, bringing families to 
inspect what remains of their homes.
© Sergey Ponomarev for The New York Times



Homs, Syria, Saturday June 14, 2014. A family walking through the rubble on 
the way to their apartment abandoned two years earlier, to see whether it is habitable. 
© Sergey Ponomarev for The New York Times
A Long Walk Home
Eli Reed
Joy Sohn and friend. Harlem, New York, early 2000s.
© Eli Reed / Magnum Photos

2015 Winner of the Canon Female Photojournalist Award supported by ELLE Magazine
Anastasia Rudenko

At the neuropsychiatric boarding center for girls.
Summer of 2012, Elatma, Ryazan region, Russia.
© Anastasia Rudenko


In the village church, a patient who assists the priest every weekend. 
Summer of 2012, Elatma, Ryazan region, Russia.
© Anastasia Rudenko


Book Launches at Visa Pour l'Image:

Now in its fifth year, FotoEvidence Press will release three books at Visa on 3rd September at La Poudriere, rue Francois Rabelais, Perpignan

The Unravelling: Central African Republics
Marcus Bleasdale (Winner 2015 FotoEvidence Book Award)

Marcus Bleasdale (Winner 2015 FotoEvidence Book Award)

Occupied Pleasures
Tanya Habjouqa



Urban Cave
Andrea Star Reese



Exhibitions: Melbourne and Sydney

Murray Fredericks - Origins
New work from one of the world's most innovative photographers is on show at Melbourne's Arc One Gallery. These epic images, in both scale and majesty, are something to behold in real life. Murray's work is truly transformative. If you're in Melbourne put this on your must see list. 

 


45 Flinders Lane
Melbourne
Until 26 September

DYE 2


Between 2010 and 2013, Murray Fredericks and composer Tom Schutzinger explored the Greenland Icecap. The collaborative video work DYE 2, filmed inside an abandoned Cold War radar station, delivers an immersive and breathtaking video installation that takes the viewer to the edge of the world, space and time. 

Until 18 October
In Conversation with Murray, Tom and Alasdair Foster 5th September.

Ballarat International Foto Biennale
In Conversation 
Sam Harris with Alison Stieven-Taylor







© All photos Sam Harris

Come along to listen to Sam talk about his journey to The Middle of Somewhere, his new body of work and book, in a lively conversation with photography journalist and commentator Alison Stieven-Taylor.

Saturday 29th August 7.30pm 
Mr. Rede 
Geraldine's Room
203 Dana Street
Ballarat