| | | | Peluquería, Limones, 1979 © Ouka Leele | | Feast for the Eyes - The Story of Food in Photography | | | | 21 December 2018 – 6 March 2019 | | | | 21 December 2018 – 10 February 2019 | | Openings: Thursday 20 December 17:30 | | | | Foam Fotografiemuseum Amsterdam Keizersgracht 609, 1017 DS Amsterdam T +31 (0)20-5516500 [email protected] www.foam.org Wed-Sun 10am-6pm; Thu, Fri 10am-9pm | |
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| | | | | | | | | #fishy #donut #divers #thingsarequeer, December 1, 2015 © Joseph Maida | | Feast for the Eyes - The Story of Food in Photography | | | | 21 December 2018 – 6 March 2019 | | In December Foam will present the exhibition Feast for the Eyes - The Story of Food in Photography. This exhibition shows the rich history of food photography - not only in the visual arts, but also in commercial and scientific photography and photojournalism. From the banality of the diner-breakfast special of Stephen Shore to the allegorical still life of Laura Letinsky, from Roger Fenton's extensive nineteenth-century displays of food to the cookbooks of the sixties. The extensive exhibition, Feast for the Eyes - The Story of Food in Photography, explores the most important figures and movements in food photography.
Due to the complexity of the form, the meaning of food, and the fact that it is often available, it has become a much-photographed subject through the history of photography. Interest in both food photography and food as a subject has increased in the recent years. By sharing photos on social media platforms such as Instagram, Snapchat, Facebook and Twitter, photography has become part of the dining experience itself. Photos of food are rarely just about food, food can represent a lifestyle or a nation, hope or despair, hunger or excess. | | | | | | New Brighton, England, 1983 - 85 © Martin Parr / Magnum Photos | | | | The exhibition explores how food is represented and what its significance can be by means of three themes. For Still Life one of the most popular genres in painting is taken as the starting point. The photographs show how the artists have been inspired by the genre and how it has changed in the course of time. Around the Table looks at the ritual that takes place around food. In addition, this section also deals with cultural identity that is reflected in food. Finally, Playing with your Food shows what happens when humor, fun and irony are combined with food. In addition to the photos there will be a number of cookbooks on display. The books provide an additional visual history and supply context to the photos on the wall. | | | | | | Phillip J. Stazzone is on WPA and Enjoys His Favorite Food as He's Heard That the Army Doesn' t Go in Very Strong for Serving Spaghetti, 1940 © Weegee / International Centre of Photography, Courtesy of Ira and Suzanne Richer | | | | Feast for the Eyes – The Story of Food in Photography is organised by the Aperture Foundation, New York and curated by Susan Bright and Denise Wolff.
The exhibition is made possible by the Blockbusterfonds. | | | |
| | | | | | | | | Artefact #1: Polyresin (USA/China), 1981 © Daan Paans | | | | 21 December 2018 – 10 February 2019 | | This winter Foam shows the work of Dutch artist Daan Paans in his first solo museum exhibition Panta Rhei. Comprising photography, sculptures and a video piece, in this exhibition the artist plays with the way in which we assign value to artworks and historical artefacts, and how our interpretations change imperceptibly over time. | | | | | | Artefact #1: Polyresin (USA/China), 1981 © Daan Paans | | | | In the opening scene of Indiana Jones – Raiders of the Lost Ark (Steven Spielberg, 1981), the fictional archaeologist Indiana Jones manages to obtain the coveted Golden Idol from a hidden temple deep in the Peruvian jungle. This magical film prop is based on a pre-Columbian statuette – Dumbarton Oaks’ Birthing Figure – that allegedly represents the Aztec goddess Tlazolteotl. Research has revealed, however, that this figurine in the collection of the Dumbarton Oaks Museum in Washington is not pre-Columbian after all, but was most likely produced in Europe or Asia in the nineteenth century.
Paans was captivated by the confusion between replica and original, and how the museum assigned value to an object that is in no way related to any original effigy of Tlazolteotl. The artist continued this cultural mutation. He bought a plastic replica of the Golden Idol, photographed it, and sent the photograph to an artisan. Based on the photo – which shows only one side of the figurine and gives no indication of the object’s size – this artisan then created a replica of his own, which he sent back to Paans. Paans photographed this new version, sending the photograph to yet another maker, and so on; but each maker only saw the photographed version of the previous maker’s figurine. The artisans belonged to different countries, including Mexico, China, Uganda, Greece, Italy and the Netherlands. Through differences in interpretation, the statue gradually transforms from a screeching woman giving birth into a dignified woman who appears to be peacefully meditating in a half-clothed state, without any birthing or baby involved. A cultural evolution caused by the makers’ cultural background, ideology, commerce, personal taste or available technology.
How do our interpretations change throughout history? This is a recurring question in Paans’s projects. With Panta Rhei, Paans seeks to understand how certain cultures and their relics change over time, without anyone noticing. In fact he is constantly studying the interpretation-forming processes that have evolved throughout history, in order to show how our view of the world has been shaped and moulded. | | | | | | Artefact #4: PLA/plastic (Utrecht, The Netherlands), 2017 © Daan Paans | | | | Daan Paans (1985, NL) graduated in Photography at the Academie St. Joost in Breda. In his artistic practice, Paans studies processes of imaging that have evolved throughout history in an original way, to clarify how our view of the world has been moulded and formed. His projects often require long-term artistic research, with the end result varying in different media, but always with an emphasis on photography. His earlier project Rhinoceros (2016) was published in Foam Magazine #45 (Talent Issue). His work was therefore part of the traveling exhibition Foam Talent in London (2016) and New York (2017). Paans’ work has recently appeared in Gallery LUMC in Leiden, Cobra Museum in Amstelveen, Museum Belvedere Heerenveen, Erarta Museum of Contemporary Art in St. Petersburg, Tokyo Institute of Photography and the Müncher Stadtmuseum in München. Daan Paans is represented by LhGWR, The Hague (NL).
Visit and revisit Daan Paans - Panta Rhei, other exhibitions and events as a Foam Member.
The project by Daan Paans was developed with support from the Mondriaan Fund.
The Foam 3h exhibitions are made possible with support from the Gieskes-Strijbis Fund, the Van Bijlevelt Foundation and Kleurgamma Fine-Art Photolab.
Foam is supported by the BankGiro Loterij, De Brauw Blackstone Westbroek, Gemeente Amsterdam, Olympus and the VandenEnde Foundation. | | | | | | Artefact #4: PLA/plastic (Utrecht, The Netherlands), 2017 © Daan Paans | | | | unsubscribe here Newsletter was sent to [email protected]
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