During a visit to London this month, in between catching up with my new family in-law and sightseeing, I was able to see a few photography exhibits. Here are some of the most memorable:
March 8, 2010 - Victoria & Albert Museum
Pass the marble busts of British, French and Roman aristocracy I was pleasantly surprised to find the V&A museum's photography collection featuring prints by:
Philip-Lorca diCorcia
A portrait from his well-known series, "Hollywood 1990 - 1992" during which the photographer used NEA grant money to pay prostitutes, hustlers, drifters and others hanging in the streets of Los Angeles, CA to let him take their respective pictures.
To distinguish his subjects from their environment and other people in it, diCorcia would often illuminate them by placing lights on the ground. The theatrical impact of his signature lighting is strongest felt when standing close up to one of these vivid prints.
Maud Sulter
Larger than life was Maud Sulter's portrait of performance artist Delta Street as Terpsichore from the series "Zabat". Sulter (pictured in this post) is a self-described "black-woman artist" of Scottish and Ghanaian descent. This quote from Sulter struck a chord within my heart as it relates to what I try to do with Dodge & Burn:
"This whole notion of the disappeared, I think, is something that runs through my work. I'm very interested in absence and presence in the way that particularly black women’s experience and black women’s contribution to culture is so often erased and marginalised."
Wang Quingsong
A panoramic color photograph titled the "Night Revelers of Lao Li" depicts a 21st century recreation of a Chinese traditional painting from the post-Tang dynasty. Typically reserved for landscapes, I was fascinated by Quingsong's use of the panoramic format as a form of visual storytelling.
Shadi Ghadirian
Iranian photographer Shadi Ghadrian's black and white print from the series "Qajar" depicts a woman dressed in 19th-century Qajar style holding a Pespi-cola can. It takes a while to notice the can, which I think is the beauty of this perfectly stylized studio portrait.
March 11, 2010 - Tate Modern
Robert Frank
Out of the 28,000 images Frank shot during his 1955 road trip across the USA, only 83 were selected for publish in Frank's most notable work "The Americans". During this small exhibit at the Tate Modern, you actually see Frank's contact sheets (remember them from the pre-digital days?).
These contact sheets show his subject's environment, the events and give context to the iconic images that are so often a part of a photography student's introduction to documentary work. Ironically, the contact sheets reveal more and even lessen the shock originally felt from these gritty images of urban and rural life in 1950's America.
PHOTO: Maud Sulter
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