Monthly Archives: September 2010

Leighton House…

Welcome to Leighton House Museum

Located on the edge of Holland Park in Kensington London, the house is one of the most remarkable buildings of the 19th century.

The house was the former home and studio of the leading Victorian artist, Frederic, Lord Leighton (1830-1896). Built to designs by George Aitchison, it was extended and embellished over a period of 30 years to create a private palace of art.

The opulence continues through the other richly decorated interiors, with gilded ceilings and walls lined with peacock blue tiles by the ceramic artist William De Morgan. On the first floor is Leighton’s grand painting studio with its great north window, dome and apse.

Glow… Santa Monica Beach

Glow is returning to the splendor of Santa Monica beach on September 25, 2010.  Building on the extraordinary success of Glow 2008, the free dusk-to-dawn biannual event features the work of international, national and local artists.  Glow is the only all-night art event in the United States that emphasizes the commissioning of original artwork. Glow projects invite active audience engagement and exploration and constantly surprise in their unexpected placement in spaces and times not normally reserved for fine art.  Santa Monica joins such cities as Paris, Toronto, Montreal, Rome, Brussels, Madrid and Riga as part of a global movement producing “white night” or “nuit blanche” events.

GLOW – Dusk and Beyond… on the Santa Monica Beach, California, USA. September 25th 2010… For ONE NIGHT only…

Interesting London from The Past…

Radio Presenter Steve Allen has also found us this rare Police call box, still in use by the Met. London’s Metropolitan Police force is among the most respected in the world today.

Standing alongside is the LBC presenter himself.

Interesting London from The Past…

Radio Presenter Steve Allen found this lovely old 1950′s London bus right on his doorstep, Ah’ my heart just misses a beat… Such past times Steve! Thanks for the photo. Patrick.

Beyond COLOR…

September 16 – October 23, 2010, New York, USA

Beyond COLOR: Color in American Photography, 1950-1970

Bruce Silverstein Gallery is pleased to present, Beyond COLOR: Color in American Photography, 1950-1970, a re-examination of a pivotal period in photography’s short history, when the artistic relevance of color in fine art photography had yet to be determined. The exhibition unites works for the first time by many of the “first generation” practitioners of color photography including artists Marie Cosindas, Arthur Seigel, Harry Callahan, Eliot Porter, Saul Leiter, Marvin E. Newman, Pete Turner, Ruth Orkin and Ernst Haas. Other highlights include images exhibited for the first time by Magnum’s first female member, Inge Morath, as well as a special slide projection of color images by Garry Winogrand, images that were never printed by the artist. Beyond COLOR attempts to reclaim this moment of photographic history that only today has begun to receive critical attention.

After the conclusion of World War II, innovations in technology combined with the public’s desire to “see the world as it is” resulted in an explosion in the usage of color imagery by the mass media. By 1951, commercial color television broadcasting had begun, and in 1954, half of all American films were made in color. In the early 1960’s color imagery was so prevalent that National Geographic magazine introduced a new era when it became the first major American periodical to print an all-color issue. While color photography during this period was widely embraced by mass culture—advertising and journalism– it continued to suffer from second-class status in the fine art world when compared with images in black & white. For most in the fine art establishment, black & white photography represented the medium of choice, steeped in a century-old tradition it was easily accessible and affordable to artists, and possessed known archival stability. For this reason, few artists chose to work in color and even fewer produced finished prints. Although color works had begun to selectively appear in museum exhibitions, most notably at the Museum of Modern Art, where single artist exhibitions of works by Eliot Porter (1943), Ernst Haas (1962) and Marie Cosindas (1966) were displayed, academic and institutional attention and support for this new technology was scant.

Over the past forty years, work in color created by artists during this formative period has received little attention. Most critical analysis through writings and exhibitions have focused on color work created during the 1970’s and 1980’s after the now famous Museum of Modern Art exhibition, Photographs by William Eggleston (1976), curated by John Szarkowski. This MoMA exhibition set the groundwork for defining a new purpose for color photography – one that focused more on the conceptual implications of the photograph and its creation, and away from the formalistic attributes of the image as well as the attention to color itself. The effects of Eggleston’s exhibition and Szarkowski’s essay reverberate to this day.

With a certain distance from this era when color photography was new– its place in the art world no longer a question–this exhibition offers a crucial consideration of works created during this period and encourages a new perspective on the significance of these artists’ contributions to the history of photography.

The Bruce Silverstein Gallery is situated at 535 W 24th Street, New York. NY 10011 USA.

Goodnight Sweetheart…

With “Goodnight Sweetheart” just finishing its worthwhile run on Freeview television, it could almost be D’eja’ vu when you walk into The Royal Oak public house at Columbia road in the East End of London. It was as if I had time travelled through the time portal with Gary Sparrow into Ducketts Passage and wartime London. I half expected to find Pheobe serving behind the bar, Gary at his piano, and Reg supping a pint at a table. Could this wonderful setting have been a seed in the minds of writers Laurence Marks and Maurice Gran? Had they visited The Royal Oak all those years ago? I would like to think that perhaps they did. This lovely old London pub can be found @ http://www.royaloaklondon.com

Martine Franck, photographer…

August 26 – September 14, 2010, Tokyo , Japan

In Celebration of Women

“All through my life as a photographer I have made a point of photographing women whom I admire, who have done something special with their lives, who have protested against their fate, also those close to me like my daughter and grand daughter and intimate friends all of whom appear in this collection.” Martine Franck

Martine Franck born in Belgium, grew up in the States and in England before studying Art History at the University of Madrid and the Ecole du Louvre in Paris. Growing up amongst a family dedicated to the Arts, Martine had a passion for painting, sculpture and architecture from which she acquired a distinctive eye for composition. It was almost by chance photography came into her life. Having received a visa to visit China in the early 1960s, she borrowed a camera to record her experiences. With her insatiable curiosity, Martine then traveled the globe photographing the social landscape. Her deep interest in the diversified cultures and social classes of everyday life is complimented by her compassion and empathy for her subject matter. Portraiture became the focus of her work.

This exhibition brings together photographs of women, from factory workers in Bucharest to geishas in Kyoto, film stars, artists, writers and performers Martine has photographed since the 1960s. It is both a celebration of women and a testament to the unique vision and empathy of a great photographer.

Martine Franck’s exhibition takes place between August 26th and September 14th 2010, 12-8pm, at the Chane Nexus Hall, Chanel, Ginza Building 4f 5-3 Ginza 3-Chrome, Tokyo 1040061, Japan.

Taslim Martin…