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This is a London Photography Exhibitions post from our archives. Click link to see the latest London Photography Exhibitions.
With both spring and the ramp up to Photo London 2018 starting, there is plenty of top photography on show now. In brief, two new exhibitions: The American Document and PJGX. The American Document at Huxley-Parlour significantly includes over forty major works. Meanwhile British documentary photography features at TJ Boulting. Notably, this show marks the tenth anniversary of the passing of British photojournalist Philip Jones Griffiths.
While those shows have just opened, a few are coming to an end. Anthony McCall as well as John Stezaker: Love will end soon. There is also Hiro at Hamiltons which ends this weekend. The big hitters continue across the capital: Andreas Gursky, Victorian Giants and Another Kind of Life. Read on for further details, lower down.
See the regularly updated London Photography Galleries list. The London Photography Galleries list compliments this post on London Photography Exhibitions. It contains information such as opening times and maps for the London photography exhibitions.
Just opened.
Free admission.
The American Document, in brief, is a show of over 40 major American works. Walker Evans and Dorothea Lange feature in work from as far back as 1931. Alongside, is more recent work from Robert Frank, Winogrand and Arbus.
Although Evans was a major influence for Frank, the contrast in styles is clear. Robert Frank’s book, ‘The Americans‘ marked a turning point in American documentary photography. The Americans showed Americans “as they were”, in real life. In addition this was a show of artistic independence: his work appeared in his own book, not a magazine, as was more common.
Later, a new trend emerged, this time highlighted by a New York MoMA show called ‘New Documents‘. New Documents introduced Diane Arbus along with Friedlander. Gary Winogrand’s work also featured in the show though this was not his first at MoMA. Winogrand appeared in ‘Five Unrelated Photographers‘ at MoMA in 1963. Again, in contrast to Evans and Lange, New Documents was not centred around a social cause. Instead they wanted to show life as it is rather than reform it. This is a marked departure from Lange and Evans’ work commissioned to win backing for a policy to reduce poverty.
You can also see Diane Arbus work at the current Barbican exhibition. There are more details on ‘Another Kind of Life’ further down.
Huxley-Parlour is just off Piccadilly. With Fortnum & Mason and the Royal Academy of Arts nearby, it is a short walk from Regent’s Street.
Just opened.
Free admission.
Where: Huxley-Parlour.
Ends: Saturday, 14th April.
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Philip Jones Griffiths, Welsh photojournalist, is chiefly known for his work during the Vietnam War. Significantly, this exhibition marks the tenth anniversary of his passing. Notably the Philip Jones Griffiths Foundation and Magnum Photos made the show possible. The foundation was established in 2000 to further education in the art and science of photography.
Although Griffiths’ Vietnam work is his most recognised, the show does not just focus on that body of work. In fact additionally, there is British documentary work from the 1950s to 70s.
TJ Boulting is in Fitzrovia and a quite short walk from Oxford street. If you are looking for a bar to visit after the show, try the Long Bar on Berners Street.
Just opened.
Free admission.
Where: TJ Boulting.
Ends: Saturday, 21st April.
See the London Photography Galleries. That list compliments this London Photography Exhibitions post. We regularly update the list with information on opening times and maps as well as other useful details.
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Closing soon.
Free admission.
Anthony McCall is a British-born artist. He is known particularly for his ‘solid light‘ installations. In essence, these are light projections in haze-filled spaces. Despite simply being made up of just light, the works appear solid and three-dimensional. Sprüth Magers present a solid light work in the basement gallery. Visitors to this exhibition are invited to interact with with the installation ‘navigating the shifting environment‘.
As well as the solid light installation “Meet you Halfway II (2009), Sprüth Magers present five gelatin prints. These photographs are new, from the 2017 series ‘Smoke Screen’. McCalls newest series are meditations on smoke. Significantly, the solid light works became invisible when moved from smoke-filled rooms to sterile galleries. With no dust or smoke in the air, haze machines had to be used to catch the light, making it ‘solid’. For this reason it seems poignant that a smoke study accompanies the installation.
Sprüth Magers is in Mayfair, a short walk from Green Park tube station and also Bond Street. Sushi fans might want to get lunch at nearby Nobu on Berkeley Street after seeing the exhibition.
Closing soon.
Free admission.
Where: Sprüth Magers.
Ends: Saturday, 31st March.
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Closing soon.
Free admission.
John Stezaker is a British collage artist whose work challenged the predominance of Pop art. He had a major influence on artists such as Damien Hirst and Tracey Emin of the Young British Artists. Stezaker’s work re-examines the roles the photograph plays. That is to say the balance between a factual document, purveyor of memory and symbol of modern culture.
Solo Stezaker exhibitions are rare, between the 1979 Luzern Kunst Museum display ‘Werker 1973-1978’ and the early 2000s there were only a handful. His work gained renewed recognition in 2012 though, when he won the Deutsche Börse Photography Prize. Love includes work dating back from the 1970s as well as more recent work.
The Approach is in Bethnal Green, between the underground station and Victoria Park.
Closing soon.
Free admission.
Where: The Approach.
Ends: Sunday, 25th March.
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Victorian Giants unites early photographers such as Julia Margaret Cameron and Oscar Rejlander. Also included in the list of giants are Lewis Carroll and Lady Clementina Hawarden. Rejlander was initially a painter – he turned to photographer after moving to England. The pioneer mastered the complicated wet-colloidion process for negatives after a three-and-a-half hour crash course in London. Later, he became a teacher to Cameron, Carroll and Lady Hawarden. In fact the four stayed in touch throughout their careers. In spite of this there was some rivalry; Lewis Carroll wrote that ‘he
did not admire Mrs Cameron’s large heads taken out of focus‘.
The art on show is raw, edgy and experimental. This is a ‘jewel-like show of photographs’ – The Telegraph.
The National Portrait Gallery is on St. Martin’s Place. It is near to Leicester Square tube station. Charing Cross station is also just a short walk.
Adult: £13.85 (including £2 donation and £1.85 online transaction fee).
Where: National Portrait Gallery.
Ends: Sunday, 20th May.
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Just opened.
Another Kind of Life, in short, explores the lives of people who have rejected the mainstream. The works touch on gender and sexuality together with countercultures and subcultures. Twenty photographers are featured including Daido Moriyama, Bruce Davidson and Larry Clark. The range of genres and period covered are also broad. There is not just classic documentary photography; street photography and portraiture also feature. The images date from the 1950s up until present day. This is a blockbuster curation reflecting a more diverse view of the world.
The Barbican Centre is just a couple of minutes’ walk from Barbican tube station. Liverpool Street and Moorgate are also quite close.
Just opened.
Standard Ticket: £13.50 (added donation optional, no booking fee applies).
Where: Barbican Centre.
Ends: Sunday, 27th May.
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Under Cover is a reflection on gender non-conformity. The Photographers’ Gallery display 200 images from Sébastien Lifshitz’s private collection. Interestingly, the images on display are from as far back as the 1880s. They show people from different classes, genders, professions and nationalities.
“Many of these are very ordinary portraits… How unremarkable these pictures are, until we realise how precise they are in their studied ordinariness.” The Guardian
The Photographers’ Gallery is by Liberty of London, not far from either Oxford Street or Regent Street. The gallery has a great café as well as a print shop.
Free admission before noon every day.
Where: The Photographers’ Gallery.
Ends: Sunday, 3rd June.
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Andreas Gursky is a German photographer, formerly a student of influential photographers Hilla and Bernd Becher at the Kunstakademie Düsseldorf. Gursky is now a professor at the Kunstakademie. That hallowed institution was attended by a long list of notable photographers including Thomas Ruff, Thomas Struth and Candida Höfer. Gursky is undoubtedly one of the most successful modern photographers with no fewer than six of his photographs featuring in the list of 20 Most Expensive Photos Sold at Auction. Of course, he also has the top spot with ‘Rhein II, 1999‘ which went for £2.7 million at auction in November, 2011.
First of all the prints are huge; Rhein II is almost 12 feet (16 metres) wide. He uses medium format cameras to capture pictures and then manipulate them digitally, creating abstracts. The purpose of the digital manipulation is not to create fictions, instead to heighten the image of something that exists in the world. Andreas Gursky photographs and a social commentary which reveal “how do we order the world around around us“. It is not just Andreas Gursky’s artistic vision which makes his work so valuable. In addition, his works are rare; of the edition of six which made up Rhein II, four are in museums and only two are in private collections.
Andreas Gursky’s to large-scale photographs of landscapes, people and architecture, captures the modern world in seductive detail. He displays a methodical approach similar to that of Hilla and Bernd Becher who offered him critical training. Similarities can be noted in the use of repitition, the feature of textures, symmetry and pattern. He also counts landscape photographer John Davies and large-format colour photography pioneer Joel Sternfeld amongst those who influenced him. Gursky’s typically uses a high point of view. This is considered democratic in that it gives equal importance to every element in the composition. The result is “somewhere between photography and paintings”
The Hayward Gallery, on the South Bank has re-opened after a two-year refurbishment with a treat for photography enthusiasts; the first major UK Andreas Gursky retrospective. The gallery present 60 images from the early 80s to Gursky’s latest work. The curator definitely had to include, the most famous Gursky, Rhein II, but there is more recent work. As an example, manipulated images made using high end digital large format cameras. The images are particularly digitally manipulated. As a result the output mimics the initial inspiration; a mobile phone capture from a moving train. This is another social comment on the world around us.
If you are keen to see full scale Gursky work, but find the entrance fee a little high you might consider going to the White Cube Gallery in Bermondsey.
The Brutalist Hayward Gallery is close to Waterloo Tube Station and on the South Bank. It’s a short walk from the Strand so you might consider combining the gallery visit with a Theatreland trip.
Supporter Standard Ticket: £18.50 (including transaction fee).
Where: Hayward Gallery.
Ends: Sunday, 22nd April.
See the London Photography Galleries. That list compliments this London Photography Exhibitions post. We regularly update the list with information on opening times and maps as well as other useful details.
More information: Hayward Gallery.
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Free admission.
Daido Moriyama is one of the most influential Japanese photographers of his generation. He is probably best known for his style of black and white street photography. Moriyama’s shots can look like unintentional snapshots at first. However, a closer look reveals his social commentary. His work highlights the breakdown of traditional values in modern Japan. He counts William Klein and Eikoh Hosoe as his principal influences: he worked as an assistant to Eikoh Hosoe.
The importance of Moriyama’s work is clear from the number of displays just in London. Apart from this show at Michael Hoppen gallery, Barbican is hosting “Another Kind of Life” from the end of February. On top there is a permanent display of Moriyama work at the Tate Modern.
Michael Hoppen presents a rare set of vintage silver prints. They are based in Chelsea, just off the King’s Road. It is close to South Kensington tube station or a slightly further walk from Sloane Square.
Free admission.
Where: Michael Hoppen Gallery.
Ends: Thursday, 29th March.
See the London Photography Galleries. That list compliments this London Photography Exhibitions post. We regularly update the list with information on opening times and maps as well as other useful details.
More information: Michael Hoppen Gallery.
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Closing soon.
Free admission.
Iconic US commercial and fashion photographer Hiro is known for his bizarre yet stunning unique aesthetic. Starting out as a young fashion photographer, Hiro was inspired by Richard Avedon and Irving Penn, initially finding work as Avedon’s assistant. Hiro’s fashion work for Harper’s Bazaar, French Vogue and Mirabella was in an era when fashion photography featured great photographs instead of photographs to simply show the product. Hiro is prominently known for editorial work in Harper’s Bazaar in the 1960s and 1970s, his work featuring unusual juxtapositions continue to influence photographers today.
Hamiltons host a Hiro display featuring prints not been previously editioned, so have not been outside of magazine covers.
Hamiltons Gallery is in Mayfair, close to Grosvenor Square and a short walk from Green Park tube station. Nobu, on Berkeley street is on the way back to the tube station, if you fancy stopping off for some sushi.
Closing soon.
Free admission.
Where: Hamiltons Gallery.
Ends: Friday, 23rd March.
See the London Photography Galleries. That list compliments this London Photography Exhibitions post. We regularly update the list with information on opening times and maps as well as other useful details.
More information: Hamiltons Gallery.
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That’s it for this week’s London Photography Exhibitions, look out for next week’s list of London Photography Exhibitions!
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