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All I Ever Wanted | Solo van Hester Scheurwater in Galerie Frank Taal. adres Van Speykstraat 129 3014 VH Rotterdam

Loring Knoblauch about the book:

“While this photobook may be more sexually explicit than some readers will be comfortable with, it’s a natural extension of Kim Kardashian’s Selfish, but seen with the acerbic and questioning eye of an artist. She’s hyperbolized and hypercharged the kind of female objectification and fake identity we have become accustomed to seeing, and yet it somehow passes for almost normal; its satire is so convincing that it persuasively stands in for the real thing, and that dissonance is powerful. For those who have been waiting for a photographer to critically engage the wider phenomenon of the selfie,  Scheurwater’s bluntly audacious photobook is memorably biting. She’s given us the mannered freedom and sexiness we’re supposed to want (or want to be), incisively exposing the two poles of exhibitionism and voyeurism that now dominate the Facebook-age.”

From the review by Loring Knoblaub for Collector Daily

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Boekpresentatie All I Ever Wanted Nieuwste boek All I Ever Wanted gepubliceerd door Editions Bessard opening 11 december 17.00 | Solo Hester Scheurwater | Galerie Frank Taal‏

UITNODIGING

Opening | 11 December 2015 | 17.00 – 21.00 uur
Galerie Frank Taal |
Solo Hester Scheurwater 

Boekpresentatie
All I Ever Wanted

Nieuwste boek  All I Ever Wanted gepubliceerd door  Editions Bessard

Na de boekpresentatie en lancering van All I Ever Wanted in Rencontres Arles, en op de  Fotofever Photograpy Art Fair in het Carrousel du Louvre, Frankrijk is dit de Nederlandse boeklancering. Hester Scheurwater signeert boeken op de opening in  galerie Frank Taal.

All I Ever Wanted van Hester Scheurwater
uitgeverij Éditions Bessard Parijs
Limited Edition oplage van 500
€ 75,-

11.12.2015 – 29.01.2015
private viewing 10 december 2015 16.00 – 19.30 uur

Frank Taal heet u van harte welkom op vrijdag 11 december om 17.00 uur op de opening van All I Ever Wanted | Solo van Hester Scheurwater in Galerie Frank Taal.

Na de boekpresentatie afgelopen juni in Rencontres Arles Frankrijk en na de (roerige) presentatie op de Fotofever in het Carroussel du Louvre Paris wordt het werk en het boek nu gepresenteerd in Galerie Frank Taal.

Loring Knoblauch about the book:

“While this photobook may be more sexually explicit than some readers will be comfortable with, it’s a natural extension of Kim Kardashian’s Selfish, but seen with the acerbic and questioning eye of an artist. She’s hyperbolized and hypercharged the kind of female objectification and fake identity we have become accustomed to seeing, and yet it somehow passes for almost normal; its satire is so convincing that it persuasively stands in for the real thing, and that dissonance is powerful. For those who have been waiting for a photographer to critically engage the wider phenomenon of the selfie, Scheurwater’s bluntly audacious photobook is memorably biting. She’s given us the mannered freedom and sexiness we’re supposed to want (or want to be), incisively exposing the two poles of exhibitionism and voyeurism that now dominate the Facebook-age.”

From the review by Loring Knoblaub for Collector Daily

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You are very welcome to the opening friday 11 december at 17.00 at Frank Taal Galerie Rotterdam for the solo show All I Ever Wanted | Hester Scheurwater.

During Les Rencontres d’Arles, last June I presented my newest photobook All I Ever Wanted, published by Editions Bessard,  Half november the work was shown at Fotofever Paris . Both a selection from the book and other work were exhibited in the Carroussel du Louvre Paris. Now the work will be presented at Galerie Frank Taal,

Galerie Frank Taal
http://www.franktaal.nl/

Adres:

Van Speykstraat 129
3014 VH Rotterdam
T +3110 436 63 33
M Frank Taal +316 41400927
M Leo de Bie +316 30175783

Mail

[email protected]
[email protected]

open wo–vrij 12.00 tot 18.00 uur
Zaterdag en elke laatste zondag van de maand 13.00 tot 17.00 uur en op afspraak

Niet op zondag geopend tussen exposities

Galerie Frank Taal is een geregistreerde handelsnaam van vof De Kunstsuper KvK24384089

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Ed Templeton, ADVENTURES IN THE NEARBY FAR AWAY the best photobook of the year by…

Ed Templeton (né en 1972) est un skateboarder professionnel californien de renommée internationale qui a fondé sa propre compagnie de skateboard nommée Toy Machine. Il est aussi un artiste connu pour ses peintures, ses portraits et des photographies de scènes de rue. Il a publié plusieurs livres sur la jeunesse ou qui documentent sa vie quotidienne et ses déplacements dans des publications telles que Teenage Kissers, Teenage Smokers, The Seconds Pass, Deformer, et bien plus encore… Ce nouveau livre est présenté dans une couverture enveloppant la moitié du livre, les pages forment un accordéon et couvrent 8,40 mètres de longueur lorsque déplié, présentant un collage impressionnant réalisé par Templeton. Les images sont imprimées en recto-verso. Édition de 1000 exemplaires.

Ed Templeton ADVENTURES IN THE NEARBY FAR AWAY

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Chez Colette lieu le +POP de Paris notre livre Ed Templeton ADVENTURES IN THE NEARBY FAR AWAY

Ed Templeton (né en 1972) est un skateboarder professionnel californien de renommée internationale qui a fondé sa propre compagnie de skateboard nommée Toy Machine. Il est aussi un artiste connu pour ses peintures, ses portraits et des photographies de scènes de rue. Il a publié plusieurs livres sur la jeunesse ou qui documentent sa vie quotidienne et ses déplacements dans des publications telles que Teenage Kissers, Teenage Smokers, The Seconds Pass, Deformer, et bien plus encore… Ce nouveau livre est présenté dans une couverture enveloppant la moitié du livre, les pages forment un accordéon et couvrent 8,40 mètres de longueur lorsque déplié, présentant un collage impressionnant réalisé par Templeton. Les images sont imprimées en recto-verso. Édition de 1000 exemplaires.

Ed Templeton ADVENTURES IN THE NEARBY FAR AWAY

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Hester Scheurwater last book: “All I Ever Wanted” limited edition of 500 copies.

The Self-obsessed photo series, which explores Hester Scheurwater’s desires, obsessions and fears sparked media hype in the Netherlands. The explicit imagery shocked many and fueled debate on the sexualization of society. Zurich-based curator, writer and contemporary photography specialist Walter Keller compares it to Rober Mapplethorpe’s sexually-charged imagery or Francesca Woodman’s erotic mise-en-scene.”Scheurwater’s visual self-explorations extend the boundaries of another main topic in art history and photography – the pose. But in her pictures, model and artist are one,” says Keller. “Yes, this is sexually explicit work, but even more, it is a curious and smart research about herself, where the artist looks at herself from both sides of the mirror.”

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All I Ever Wanted’ by Hester Lisa Scheurwaterr Limited Edition of 500 copies. Introduction by Patrick Remy.

DAZED Blog, Text Ashleigh Kane: Can women regain power through the self-portrait? Photographer Hester Scheurwater’s unflinching self-portraits raise much-needed questions about sex, the self and how social media controls us

Our ‘self’ is one of the most fascinating things that we have the privilege of exploring, and, arguably, the camera is the best tool in order to do so. While the #selfie might be an in-recent-years social media phenomenon, women have been pioneering the self-portrait for decades. Dutch artist Hester Scheurwater uses the medium of the image to challenge the role of the woman as mere sex object, through the use of props like mirrors – which she uses to juxtapose her inner monologue with her outer appearance.

“I have always felt the urge to stage the self, or myself,” she says. “By staging myself as a sex object, not in a way as seen by others but in a self-directed and a self-chosen pose, I shoot back at the way women are shown as sex objects in a fake way. I want to use a rawness and realness in the images by using my own body and ‘kinks’. Like Sacha Grey liked to say, ‘In our society, we use sex to sell everything’. Everything! We use it to sell sneakers, and microwave meals. It’s okay to show your tits, but it’s not okay to talk about what your ‘kinks’ are when you’re a woman.’ I try, almost obsessively, to comply with this image through self-portraiture. These fantasy images are reminiscent of desires, fears, temptation, seduction, violence and sex – self-images as sex objects, devoid of any commercial frills; knowing full well that I can never compete or live up to the image.”

Inspired by artists like Claude Cahun, Cindy Sherman, Francesca Woodman and Egon Schiele, Scheurwater explains, “From my early years I have always had a special interest and curiosity in work of artists using sexually loaded themes or artists working with self-portrait, but also by the pornographic poses and commercial images that surround us.”

On the question of what differentiates porn from art, she muses, “It’s a difficult question because everything can be art and as soon as a conceptual artist says porn is art, it is art. For me, the difference is that porn is made for sexual stimulation, and, from a commercial point of view, while art and in particular my art, is not. I am aware that the poses in my work have a strong connection to porn poses.”

“Facebook is all about looking and being looked at. You are given access to the lives of others and, in turn, you are encouraged to share details of your own private life. But it is also very much about what is permitted and what is not” – Hester Scheurwater

Using Facebook as a key platform, in 2009 she began to upload daily self-portraits of herself as ‘a sex object’, raising issues and concerns with the infiltration of social media in our lives. “It was an ongoing art project in the digital public space – the word selfie did not yet exist,” she reveals. “Facebook is all about looking and being looked at. You are given access to the lives of others and, in turn, you are encouraged to share details of your own private life. But it is also very much about what is permitted and what is not. You have to comply to standards of behaviour in order to remain part of the community. People present themselves in a way that’s socially acceptable – they stage themselves. In this sense, it gives the illusion of truth and openness while it involves a great deal of coercion and performance. And this was the very reason that I chose Facebook, I was publicising a set of overtly exhibitionistic self-portraits on a platform that was all about voyeurism and exhibitionism as forms of social control. By doing so, I was testing the boundaries of the new medium and its users. I wanted to explore the voyeuristic and exhibitionistic nature of the social media. Besides, I was interested in the issue of online social control. I find it very comparable to traditional forms of social control.”

Ultimately, through her work, Scheurwater wants to showcase the extent of a woman’s power, alongside herself as a woman of such power. “The questions of who is looking and how a woman has to present herself in order to be seen as one, has been a recurring issue in my work. In the self-portrait series, I was trying in an almost compulsive way to question the contemporary codes of femininity as we a see them in all sorts of advertisements. These codes define women as fake sex objects and link a woman’s identity with a male point of view of sexuality. I try to appropriate these clichés of the ‘sensual, seductive’ woman and flip them on their head. I take them in, chew them, and spit them out again. In that sense I hope my work can make people aware of the gender related issues about sexuality. Sex is the woman’s domain, we have to gain it back. I have difficulties with art criticism that deals with art made today using criteria and ways of looking from the past. Women artists working nowadays seem to keep on being judged on the basis of ideas that were popular in the 1970s, but that are now obsolete. It puts women in the role of the victims. The emphasis shouldn’t be put on women’s oppression but rather on their strength.”

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Les Filles De Tourgueniev, the Artist Edition (limited 25 copies) by the writer & photographer Philippe Herbet

In a elegant clamshell box with a numbered and signed C Print 23cm X 23cm, only 25 copies
My maternal grandfather lives on the other side of the lake, she says. At 85, he still lives in his house, a typical isba of our Russia. In his house, after crossing the doorstep, I feel as if in another era: a carved shelf covered with the works of the great Russian authors, an antique chest of drawers, a Singer sewing machine, a huge wooden radio receiver with white keys similar to those of a piano and two big knobs on either side.
I remember being alone with him one afternoon, it was during a Easter holiday, there was a rainbow. He was listening to the radio, sitting in his armchair, not saying a word. At some point, he dozed off and I dared turn the big knob to the wavelengths of faraway cities, Berlin, Vilnius, Prague, Hilversum, Tashkent… Crackles, snatches of music, speech, words. I had had the feeling that they were ghosts, wandering souls that wanted to pass on some messages to me.
(5) Colourful zakuskis brighten up a flower napkin placed on the bare ground. Julia asks me to open the bottle of Саперави she brought with her and which she seems to look after carefully. She pours the wine in cups from the Soviet era. A thick liquid, an intense red. Julia tells me, somewhat solemnly, that the bottle dates back to fifteen years ago, her husband was then living his last days …
Wine revives memories and hearts, they say. We drink a toast to love. Julia drinks it bottom up, in the Russian style. As for me, the acidity of the wine, and above all its Itxassou cherry flavour takes me by surprise. So the Basque country comes to visit me on the quiet on the shore of this isolated Northern lake. I tell her so and we start laughing.
(6) During one month in Magadan, Ira squats a flat on the other side of the river. She invites me for tea and blinis with sugar or jam; and even for dinner with simple and delicious dishes. I feel a bit like her “man” … or her father.
I leave at 10 p.m. at the latest, mixing with stray dogs until I reach my hotel room. Magadan hotel. Everything is Magadan in Magadan.
(7) There is tropical heat in the apartment where we drink hot tea, waiting for the storm to blow away. The bright spell came rather fast, we leave for a walk in this small isolated town in the Russian Far east: Oussouriisk.
Irina and Irina, Irina’s best friend, had lived the turbulent – yet very well-behaved as far as they were concerned – years of adolescence together. These Turgenev girls, as they like to call themselves, are fond of little polka-dot dresses.

Les Filles de Tourguéniev par Philippe Herbet

L’écrivain russe Ivan Sergueïevitch Tourguéniev a créé dans ses romans et nouvelles des personnages de jeunes femmes que l’on pourrait facilement qualifier de « romantiques ». Ses héroïnes sont introverties, très sensibles, elles ont grandi dans des domaines éloignés de la ville, loin de la haute société ou en marge. Elles ont entre 17 et 25 ans, elle sont volontiers capricieuses, indépendantes, rebelles, dans la mesure où les femmes pouvaient l’être au XIXe siècle. Rebelles car elles suivent toujours leurs idées : elles aiment qui elles aiment et suivent l’inclinaison de leurs coeurs, en dépit des avis défavorables de leurs familles ou de leurs tuteurs, certaines sont des enfants naturels.
Elles sont remarquables et remarquées, pas toujours belles au sens plastique du terme, elles peuvent être considérées comme des laiderons, mais elles sont toujours très charmantes, désarmantes, imprévisibles; insaisissables. Idéalistes, en recherche d’elles-mêmes, en quête du vrai, du beau, du haut, d’une certaine forme de pureté ; elles ont en elles beaucoup de volonté. Entêtées, elles se fixent des objectifs et, avec beaucoup de détermination, elles n’hésitent pas à se sacrifier pour l’accomplissement de leurs idées. Oui, sentimentales, mais aussi plus, un engagement envers leurs sentiments.
Ainsi, les premières femmes « émancipées » de la Russie de la fin du XIXe siècle s’étaient mises à « imiter » ces héroïnes, ces personnages de papier et d’encre. Elles sont tombées en désuétude au temps de la Révolution de 1917. Jusqu’au début des années trente, elles sont considérées comme des « reliques » du XIXe siècle, mais au cours de la seconde guerre mondiale, elles reviennent au devant de la scène, elles sont alors vues comme des héroïnes et le personnage de Fille de Tourguéniev devient une sorte d’idéal.
Le temps passant, leurs caractères se sont donc peu à peu éloignés des romans et nouvelles de Tourguéniev, pour devenir des femmes émancipées, des héroïnes, des personnages liés au passé, voire passéistes, avec une dimension soit péjorative, soit affirmative d’une identité. On les désigne comme étant des filles romantiques, idéalistes, tendres, pleurnicheuses, sentimentales, poétiques, fines, touchantes, qui ne savent ou ne veulent pas s’adapter au monde contemporain, modestes, démodées, elles ne se teignent pas les cheveux, se maquillent très discrètement – lorsqu’elles se maquillent -, dansent la valse, rougissent lorsqu’elles entendent des impolitesses, elles ont des principes moraux bien établis et solides, dévouées, elles appartiennent à différentes couches sociales, elles ne sont pas réunies en réseau.
Je suis allé à leur découverte à Saint-Pétersbourg, à Moscou, à Minsk et dans les campagnes de la Russie profonde, là où étaient sis les domaines de Tourguéniev, de Tolstoï, d’Ivan Bounine et de Bakounine. Et je les ai photographiées chez elles, dans les rues et j’ai associé à leurs photos des éléments symboliques liés à leurs existences comme le lait, la pomme, l’arbre, les icônes… J’avais en tête toute une iconographie liée à la Renaissance italienne et au XVIIe siècle hollandais qui m’a nourri lors de mes prises de vues.
J’ai observé deux tendances à l’heure actuelle, l’une concerne plutôt des jeunes femmes vraiment démodées, ternes, pas très ouvertes sur le monde contemporain, voire alternatives, plus « intègres » par rapport au caractère original. Elles cousent des robes, tricotent, ne lisent que de la littérature classique, n’écoutent que de la musique classique, mènent une vie saine, s’alimentent de produits naturels, elles tournent le dos à l’agitation. Une autre tendance, plus à l’opposé, s’accommode beaucoup plus du monde d’aujourd’hui, il s’agit plutôt de femmes adeptes d’une mode néo-rétro, vintage, s’accompagnant parfois d’un retour à des valeurs solides, aux spécificités ultra locales, voire nationalisantes. Une mode ? Une marque de luxe russe a ouvert des boutiques à Moscou dont les collections sont inspirées du XIXe siècle et des filles de Tourguéniev : villaturgenev.ru.
Les Filles de Tourguéniev du XXI siècle sont, comme nous l’avons deviné plurielles, elles sont de plus en plus populaires et font partie d’un paysage culturel russe – au sens large – en pleine redéfinition. Il est parfois difficile de déceler celles qui suivent une mode vintage, comme un peu partout dans le monde, et si cette mode est un reflet de valeurs traditionnelles ou d’une nostalgie de temps meilleurs, plus doux ; de celles, plus originales, plus originelles, des personnages créés par Tourguéniev. Il y a, certes, des gradations qui dépendent, naturellement, de leur environnement social (étant donné, je le qu’elles appartiennent à différentes couches sociales et qu’elles ne sont pas en « réseau »).
Les filles de Tourguéniev sont dans le temps et hors du temps, dans le monde et hors du monde. S’extraire du monde dans son mouvement superficiel, du monde des « apparences », du monde de l’actualité, de l’agitation, du faux, du brillant où, finalement, rien ne brûle, c’est prendre une position, c’est un acte, et même un engagement. Peut-être sont-elles des résistantes, du moins certaines d’entre elles.
Je les sens aussi très proches de ces femmes de Vermeer, dans leurs maisons monde, qui traversent les siècles pour nous ravir et toujours nous parler de notre humanité.
Peut-être que ces filles n’existent pas, elles ne sont qu’un idéal, un cliché, des images, une image, une image collective récupérée par la mode dans certains cas et, dans d’autres, par ce désir de s’identifier, de se singulariser. Rêves, utopie. Je n’en sais rien.

Philippe Herbet

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Updated: National Gallery gets $10M gift to launch ‘unprecedented’ photography institute by Peter Simpson – The Big Beat

The biggest corporate donation the National Gallery of Canada has ever received, and the biggest gift that Scotiabank has ever given, will establish “one of the world’s most comprehensive collections of photographs and related materials.”

Scotiabank’s $10-million gift, announced Friday during a news conference in Ottawa, will support the new Canadian Photography Institute, which will be among “the very deepest, most comprehensive and broadly useful public collections of photographs in the world,” said National Gallery director Marc Mayer. The

gallery’s existing collection of 200,000-odd photographs and negatives will be bolstered by thousands of images, equipment and ephemera donated by David Thomson, the chairman of Thomson Reuters Corporation and a renowned collector of art. Thomson has donated 12,000 objects in the past year alone, and his earlier donations to the gallery are valued at more than $40 million.

The latest Thomson and Scotiabank gifts are “unprecedented,” and the institute will be “revolutionary,” said a plainly chuffed Mayer during an event in the gallery’s Great Hall — that soaring atrium that has now been renamed as the Scotiabank Great Hall, with the title in silver letters on a high wall overlooking the space.

The institute, which will occupy a yet-to-be-revealed physical space in the gallery to open in late 2016, will also be “fully digitized” and “accessible to audiences around the world,” said a news release.

“This is probably the premiere photographic collection in the world,” added Scotiabank CEO Brian Porter. “It’s the largest single gift we’ve ever done in our 183-year-history and we’re very proud to do it.”

The gift is so significant that its announcement attracted what had been, under the Harper Conservative government, the rarest of birds at the gallery — the cabinet minister responsible for federal arts funding. It may be years since such a political creature dared to set foot in a place that is perceived by some as elitist, but on Friday there was Liberal Heritage Minister Mélanie Joly, cheering the event with no apparent concern about how the optics will play in the provinces.

“It’s not the last time you’ll see one,” Joly promised, when informed of the gallery’s long drought of Heritage ministers on site. “It’s important to foster new relationships with the arts world, including the national institutions, and including artists.”

Joly had no new federal money for the gallery on Friday, but she praised the bank for its example to the private and corporate sectors.

“Scotiabank not only gave an amazing amount of money to the museum,” she said, “but they made sure to . . . show a clear signal to other companies, other great economic leaders, to make sure to give back, in order ultimately to redistribute wealth in a better way, and also to make sure we support our art and our artists.”

National Gallery Foundation chair Thomas d’Aquino called the donations “far-sighted philanthropy at its best.”

Mayer said in an interview that the changing nature of photography, and our relationship with it, makes the need for the institute urgent. It will expand upon the gallery’s existing collection of photographs — much of that absorbed from the now-defunct Canadian Museum of Contemporary Photography.

The new collection will look beyond Canada, Mayer said, with images and objects from around the world, and from the first days of photography in the early to mid 19th century, to the digital works of today.

The collection will also mark a fundamental shift and include not only art photography, but also photojournalism, documentary photography, and even vernacular photography — those images of daily life taken by amateurs or other unknowns. Conceivably, someone’s holiday snapshot could end up in the Canadian Photography Institute.

“All of it informs our knowledge of who we are, where we’ve been, and where we’re headed,” Mayer said.

“For us to expand our reach in photography, where we can be deeply knowledgable about every aspect of picture culture that is so beautifully represented by photography, is revolutionary, I think, in the context of an art museum,” he said.

One key part of it all will be the Matthew R. Isenberg Collection of 15,000 American daguerreotypes, cameras and other early objects, donated by Thomson. Thomson’s purchase of the collection in 2012, through his Archive of Modern Conflict, was hailed as “the most significant sale of photography material in 50 years,” the gallery says.

Karen Colby-Stothart, CEO of the NGC Foundation, said Thomson’s gifts allows the gallery to build the collection to a scale “that’s really unprecedented for us.”

Colby-Stothart also said that Scotiabank’s donation, to be paid out over 10 years, “will allow us to really invest in our team. It’s going to allow us to do some infrastructure changes, to do some dedicated galleries, to expand our programs.”

HERRE the link: http://ottawacitizen.com/entertainment/local-arts/national-gallery-gets-10m-gift-to-launch-photography-institute

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R.I.P. Holga: The Hit Toy Camera Comes to an End Published on November 28, 2015 by Michael Zhang

After being designed in 1981, the Holga medium format toy camera developed a cult following among photographers who valued its affordability and unique lo-fi results.

But all good things must come to an end: Holga cameras will no longer be produced from here on out.

Freestyle Photographic Services, the SoCal based company that’s the official US distributor of Holga Cameras, announced that the Holga factory has ceased operations.

“It is with a sad heart that we say goodbye to a camera that has been so popular with so many. A Holga Camera really is about creativity and unpredictability and a refreshing medium in today’s digital age,” says Freestyle CEO Gerald H. Karmele. “Holga outlived many other cameras but, as like we have seen throughout the years, is yet another casualty of the digital age.”

A Holga factory spokesperson in China tells Freestyle that “all Holga tooling has already been thrown away and there is nothing available for sale.” Existing inventory around the world is still for sale from various retailers, but once all the units sell out, that’s it.

So, if you’ve been thinking of picking up a Holga (through a reputable channel), now’s the time to do so.

HERE the LINK: http://petapixel.com/2015/11/28/r-i-p-holga-the-hit-toy-camera-comes-to-an-end/

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Article dans BEAUX ARTS magazine, le 1er magazine de l’actualité culturelle et artistique; IDÉE CADEU DE NÔEL: BeSpoke Collection N° 1 « The mark of Time », by Eric Rondepierre

Merci Natacha Nataf!  100% PÉSIE CADEAU !

Limited edition of 250 copies with an 15,3 x 18,5 cm C Print signed by the author. Hard cover, size 210mm x 280mm, on printing!

L’empreinte du temps

Le cinéma est né en 1895. En 2015, son dispositif original n’est plus parmi nous, ainsi va le monde, une technique meurt, une autre apparaît : « la mort assurément est la jeunesse du monde »[1]. Ma recherche prend place dans un moment de transition puisque je commence mon travail sur le cinéma en 1990 et que je commence à le montrer en 1992. C’est en 1993, à Washington (USA), que j’initie une série de photographies montrant des photogrammes de film corrodées par le temps, les conditions de stockage. Deux ans après je les expose au MoMA de New-York. Depuis lors, je visionne des films dans les cinémathèques occidentales et les collections privées, prélève des images « décomposées » sans les retoucher. Je choisis celles, rares et improbables, où l’empreinte du temps dialogue avec l’image de telle façon qu’il devient parfois difficile de savoir où s’arrête l’image proprement dite et où commence le travail de sa destruction. Jean Cocteau disait que le cinéma filmait « la mort au travail ». Il m’a paru intéressant de repérer ce travail de la mort au sein même du medium, dans la couche matérielle et invisible qui nous permet d’y avoir accès : la pellicule. C’est avec une longue patience que j’ai été conduit à parcourir le cinéma en tout sens (voir un long-métrage image par image prend 15 jours à raison de 8h/Jour), à réfléchir sur la précarité des archives de film, leur support, leur conditions d’apparition, et de disparition (j’étais loin de penser que la pellicule elle-même disparaitrait !). Que des figures et des lieux filmés depuis un siècle puissent refaire surface sous un autre visage et en d’autres temps n’est pas fait pour me déplaire. Que j’ai pu fixer leur rencontre hasardeuse avec les maladies qui affectent leur support me satisfait pleinement. Que ces images aient une beauté, une étrangeté et une force est de surcroit : la grâce tombe où elle veut.

Eric Rondepierre

[1] La phrase est de Georges Bataille, L’Histoire de l’érotisme, O.C. VIII, Paris, Gallimard, 1976

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Ed Templeton it’s New book “Adventures in the Nearby Far Away” presented as an accordion-fold continuous book which spans 27 feet once extended. Housed in a clamshell box. Edition of 1000 copies.

26 miles across the Pacific Ocean from the tangled mess of humanity that is Los Angeles and Orange County sits an island paradise called Santa Catalina where time has stood still and visitors can experience what California was like before the Europeans sailed in. Adventures in the Nearby Far Away is a photographic diary of my many visits to the island over the years, a place I have been visiting since I was a boy, and been documenting photographically since the late 90¹s. All photos are shot on film. – Ed Templeton

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Kristin Trüb: “Letzte Generation Ost” an article by Alison Stieven-Taylor : An Australian in Paris for Paris Photo November 17, 2015 – France , written by Alison Stieven-Taylor

Kristin Trüb

Letzte Generation Ost

This book is unique in many aspects. Its subject matter deals with the impact of the former GDR and its collapse, on the last generation of GDR citizens. Photo-artist Kristin Trüb, who is of this generation says she and her peers “were born in the final years of the former GDR. Their families corresponded to the propagandized principles, they received socialist education in their early years, and lived in the typical tower blocks in Hagenow. Naturally, since the collapse of the former GDR, much has changed. This project is an approach to illustrate how that last generation experienced the collapse of the GDR, what they noticed consciously and how they look back on this time now”.

Kristin conducted interviews with nine of her peers, took their portraits and other photographs to illustrate and convey the impression of the memories and experiences of the last generation of the former GDR. These interviews and images appear in the book along with maps and dossiers on each person. It’s beautifully printed and packaged in a box in line with the tone of the publisher, Éditions Bessard that is known for its unique approach to book design. It’s quickly become one of my favourite books.