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PHOTOGRAPHY INTERNATIONAL | | 10 — 17 January 2018 | |
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| | | Over the last thirty years, London Art Fair presenting leading British and international galleries alongside curated spaces Art Projects and Photo50. This year’s edition of Photo50, titled Resolution is not the point., is curated by Hemera Collective, the first collective to curate London Art Fair’s annual exhibition of photography. |
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| (Detail) © Marc de Groot | | | | 12 January – 16 February 2018 | | Opening: Friday, January 12, 18:00 - 21:00 RVSP | | | | | | | | For over 30 years, Marc de Groot has been working as an energetic, engaging and authentic fashion photographer. In honor of his excellent oeuvre, MAG + Kahmann Gallery present his most remarkable portraits of leading figures in entertainment, exploring the relationship between fashion and personality. MARC DE GROOT (NL, 1964) Marc de Groot’s fashion and portrait photography seeks to capture the spontaneous vitality in people. His images have helped define major Dutch fashion magazines including Vogue, Glamour, Linda, l’Homo and Elle. His international advertising work has enhanced campaigns for Tommy Hilfiger, Scotch & Soda, Levi’s and Calvin Klein. He lives with his wife, son and daughter in Amsterdam. MAG | The art of magazine photography World’s defining style and fashion magazines are brimming with stunning photography. Shot by prominent photographers, many of these luminous images are of the highest quality and of timeless art value. Online gallery mag recognises and magnifies these outstanding editorial works as such. MAG exclusively offers magazine photographs of exquisite quality in limited editions. www.magphoto.nl | |
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| | | | (e.) Twin Gabriel PROSOCHE (15:36 Uhr) Fotoperformance, Berlin 2005/2006 |
| | | Processes of transformation through examples of contemporary photography in Germany | | | | Thu 11 Jan 19:00 12 Jan – 29 Mar 2018 | | | |
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| Herbert Bayer, Kurz vor der Dämmerung, 1936, späterer Abzug, Silbergelatine © VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2018. Courtesy Galerie Kicken Berlin | | | | Snails, Mussels, and Other Mollusks in Photography | | Herbert Bayer » Imogen Cunningham » Alfred Ehrhardt » Andreas Feininger » Florence Henri » Fred Koch » Herbert List » Man Ray » Lee Miller » Aenne Mosbacher » Walter Peterhans » Edward Steichen » Otto Steinert » Josef Sudek » Edward Weston » Wols » | | 13 January – 15 April 2018 | | Opening: Friday, 12 January, 7-9pm | | | | | | | | In addition to plants and crystals, snails, shells, and other mollusks (conchs) are among the "structural forms in nature" that particularly fascinated the photographers of the modern era. The Alfred Ehrhardt Foundation is presenting the first exhibition dedicated exclusively to this photographic subject matter along with an accompanying catalogue. The starting point of the exhibition is the collection of photographs from the estate of Alfred Ehrhardt, which the photographer published in his photo books Muscheln und Schnecken (Shells and Snails, 1941) and Geprägte Form (Shaped Form, 1968). The invention of photography in the second half of the 19th century brought new possibilities for scientific documentation, for which the shells of snails and sea animals served as popular motifs. X-ray photography was especially important in this context, providing a view into the inner structure of these natural forms. In the 1920s shells became a subject matter in autonomous, artistic photography. Both natural philosophy and the influence of New Objectivity played a role in this newfound interest, as did the notion of using such "structural forms in nature" as inspiration for design and architecture. Marking the beginning of this interest was the highly acclaimed thematic issue of the Dutch avant-garde magazine Wendingen, which was published in 1923 with shell and snail photographs by Bernard Eilers and J. B. Polak. Somewhat later in the US, Edward Weston created iconic images of modern photography with his photographs of shells, which were shown in 1929 in the influential exhibition Film und Foto in Stuttgart. His photograph Nautilus Shell (1927) is to… | |
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| Bernhard Fuchs "David" aus der Serie "Lot" | | Bernhard Fuchs » Lot / Fathom | | 13 January – 10 March 2018 | | Opening reception: Friday 12 January 19:00 | | | | | | | | "Fathom” ("Lot” in it’s German Titel) is a photographic series by Austrian artist Bernhard Fuchs (born 1971) and comprises 39 portraits. This is his second series of portraits, produced over several years - like all of his previous series. In the photographs we see people, captured in the given light of interior spaces and entering into dialogue with the photographer. According to art historian Gottfried Boehm, "the series is not about outlining the collective image of certain people or living conditions in the present. Instead we see a sounding out in motion, a fathoming that poses a wordless question with the means of the camera and iconic intelligence.” Bernhard Fuchs lives and works in Düsseldorf. His work is found in important collections, both public and private, and is exhibited internationally. The book to the series was published by Koenig Books, London. | |
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| Vincent Munier, Kaiserpinguine, 2015 | | Vincent Munier » In the Frosty White | | 16 January – 21 March 2018 | | Opening reception: Saturday 13 January 19:00 | | | | | | | | In the most extreme conditions, and mostly completely alone, French photographer Vincent Munier travels the Arctic and Antarctic. For several hundred kilometers he wanders through the snow-swept and barren landscapes of the Arctic Circle to meet their inhabitants at close range. He has made numerous expeditions to the White Wolves, to the "Spirits of the Tundra", as the Inuit call them, which particularly captivate him. The in focus gallery now presents a spectacular selection of his pictures designed in incomparable aesthetics. The visitor is invited to discover the rough world of these icy expanses, to get to know the animals living here and to perceive the fragility of this world. Vincent Munier (born 1976) has specialized in animal and landscape photography since early youth. His reportages were written on many trips around the globe. He has published numerous books - including in 2008 at Knesebeck "Kamchatka - Unspoiled Wilderness" or 2016 "In the Frosty White". He was the only photographer to receive the Eric Hosking Award of the BBC Wildlife Photographer of the Year three times in a row. His works have been shown in many exhibitions worldwide. | |
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| | | | Marco Grob: Money People Politics Verlag eNeues 2016 |
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| | | | aus "Wolfskinder. A Post-War Story" |
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| | | | Emli Bendixen, With Robin four months November 2017, 30x42cm |
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| JFK-LHR 03/26/2016 08:32:49 River Thames fading into mist, early morning, London © Scott Mead | | Scott Mead » Above The Clouds | | | An exhibition to support Great Ormond Street Hospital | | 9th - 19th January 2018 | | | | | | | | Scott Mead, an American born photographer and philanthropist living in London, will exhibit his most recent series of photographs, Above The Clouds, at Hamiltons to benefit Great Ormond Street Hospital. In this most recent body of work, Mead captures the physical, emotional and philosophical wonder of air travel with his images of the world above the clouds. All proceeds from print sales and the book are donated to Great Ormond Street Children’s Charity in London, where one of his children was cured of a life-threatening illness many years ago. Since then Mead has been a deeply involved supporter of the hospital. Above the Clouds is a portfolio of images taken from Mead’s extensive air travel on regularly scheduled flights over the last several years. During these journeys, Mead has been extremely inspired whilst gazing out of plane windows at the endless horizon, finding that the journey itself can be more meaningful than just a means to a destination. Mead’s photographic career can be seen as an expression of a deeply-lived life of exploration, reflection and discovery. The tranquil moments Mead has experienced above the clouds have helped to bring both closure and acceptance to some of life’s more difficult experiences as well as deep, spontaneous joy at the shared experiences of people on Earth. The challenge is to retain the enhanced perception and positive state of mind in the day-to-day routine of life ‘on the ground’. "I have come to find that above the clouds, while looking out the window and into oneself, these answers and insights, and a clearer view of past, present and future, may well await you.” Scott Mead | |
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| Peter MacNicol, Meryl Streep, and Kevin Kline, Sophie’s Choice New York, 1982 ©Douglas Kirkland/Photo Op | | Douglas Kirkland » BEHIND THE SCENES | | 60 years of Hollywood, Marilyn Monroe, and Coco Chanel | | January 17 – April 15, 2018 | | Private view: Tuesday, January 16, 7 p.m. | | | | | | | | The Lumiere Brothers Center for Photography is presenting the first exhibition in Russia by Douglas Kirkland, a multi-award winning American photographer, lecturer and author of several books. The exhibition Behind the Scenes spans over 60 years of Douglas Kirkland’s photography career and focuses on its highlights. The Grand Hall of The Lumiere Center will host on-set photography from major Hollywood movies during the 1960s-2010s and an iconic photoshoot of Marilyn Monroe in 1961. A series featuring 3 weeks of Coco Chanel’s life and work will become a special part of the project and will be exhibited in the White Hall of The Lumiere Center. Born in Toronto in 1934, Douglas Kirkland started his career as legendary Irving Penn’s assistant, he joined Look magazine in 1960 and soon became contract photographer. A year later he had a chance to shoot a feature on Marilyn Monroe for the 25th anniversary of the magazine. An evening of November 17, 1961 with the most beautiful woman of the time turned into a series that became iconic both for the actress and young Kirkland. He recalls their time together as if they "were in a beautiful dance” with Marilyn Monroe leading: «Marilyn, with her sweet intuitiveness, made it easy. She simply said, "Okay, I know what we need. We need a bed with white silk sheets and nothing else, and it will work. "But”, she added, "the sheets must be silk”. She had done the biggest part of my job for me: understood my ideas and articulated them better than I had been able to – bless her». | |
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| Secret Doorway, Buenos Aires, 2017 (Detail) © Michael Eastman | | Michael Eastman » Buenos Aires - Southern Light | | until 20 January 2018 | | | | | | | | Edwynn Houk Gallery is pleased to announce an exhibition of large-scale photographs by Michael Eastman (American, b. 1947). The show opens on Thursday, 16 November 2017 and runs through Saturday, 20 January 2018. The artist will be present at the opening reception on 16 November from 6-8pm. The exhibition features unexpected photographs of iconic interiors in Buenos Aires. It is natural that Michael Eastman, whose works tell stories through the details of interiors located throughout the world, found rich material and inspiration in this city. In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, Buenos Aires staged ambitious and extravagant architectural projects to brandish its wealth, its stunning architecture helping the city earn its nickname "the Paris of South America.” Latin America’s tallest building and a series of neoclassical palaces were amongst the feats the city boasted. While Buenos Aires proudly retains this legacy today, still teeming with examples of architectural achievement from its belle époque, many of its buildings show signs of the country’s recent political and economic hardships. Eastman’s series illuminates how these interiors, captured a century after their heyday, have not dimmed with time but rather become more intriguing in their age. At the heart of each photograph is an essential element of surprise: an electric blue light illuminating the doorway of a classic palace, the psychedelic twist of a spiral staircase, the blazing reflection of light in an entirely golden theater. These details dazzle, but equally important is what is absent from these photographs. Each interior is largely devoid of contemporary design, technology, and, somewhat hauntingly, inhabitants. A college stairwell transport… | |
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| | | | peter campus, at rest, 2016. 4K sequence of videographs. |
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| | | | | | | | | | King in New York Commemorating the 50th anniversary of the death of Martin Luther King Jr. | | 13 Jan – 1 Jun 2018 | | | | | | |
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Aspergill (Aspergillum), 2013 Inkjetprints printed on Hahnemühle paper 34 x 42,5 cm © Claus Goedicke / SAGE Paris |
Kamm (Comb), 2013 Inkjetprints printed on Hahnemühle paper 34 x 42,5 cm © Claus Goedicke / SAGE Paris
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| | Claus Goedicke » Dinge | | until 30 January 2018 | | | | | | | | Claus Goedicke photographs objects that are as elementary as they are essential for our everyday life—light bulb, soap, band aid, hammer, pencil... — and basic foodstuffs: bread, butter, eggs, carrots, meat. Things that we see and hold in our hands almost everyday, but that are so commonplace that we barely notice them. He presents the objects singly, frontally, up close, and in even daylight that accentuates their plasticity. Unlike commercial photography, which uses similar means, the objects do not appear to be immaculate or brand new. Their limpid beauty stems from their straightforward functionality and signs of wear. Carefully chosen backdrops, which themselves show signs of wear and tear—crumpled, scratched, and yellowed—lend the objects their own identity, a back story, and the photographs a certain portrait character. Goedicke's collection is made up of images, not objects. If we focus our attention on these photographs, they give us something in return: the certain knowledge that we can halt the rattle of life through the act of attention. | |
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| Double page from Könnte Sein, Katja Stuke, 2008 © Surveillance Index, Edition One | | SURVEILLANCE INDEX | | Performing Books #1 | | Laia Abril » Adam Broomberg & Oliver Chanarin » Merry Alpern » Viktoria Binschtok » Mohamed Bourouissa » Sophie Calle » Edmund Clark » Anne Collier » Tiane Doan na Champassak » Uri Gershuni » John Gossage » Fred Hüning » Mishka Henner » Esther Hovers » Thomas Mailaender » David Maisel » Taiji Matsue » Daniel Mayrit » Daido Moriyama » Trevor Paglen » Jon Rafman » Doug Rickard » Richard Ross » Jules Spinatsch » Andrzej Steinbach » Katja Stuke » Ai Weiwei » Michael Wolf » Donovan Wylie » Kohei Yoshiyuki » ... | | 10 – 27 January, 2018 | | Opening: Wednesday, 10 January, 7pm | | | | | | | | LE BAL is launching "Performing Books". This new Bal Books initiative will present a collection every January selected by an artist, researcher, or book lover on a specific theme. LE BAL will turn into a research laboratory focused on books’ role as a political gesture and a critical reflection of our society. The first Performing Books event is dedicated to Surveillance Index. Compiled by the American Mark Ghuneim, his collection of over 200 photography books explores "the golden age of surveillance – ours" and its visible and invisible inner workings. An expert observer of technological innovation, aware of the challenges of protecting his private life very early on, Ghuneim investigates all the lawful and unlawful procedures the State has put in place to watch its citizens. In the early 1990s, he listed all the CCTV cameras in the streets of New York and created an interactive map which takes you through the parts of Manhattan that aren’t under surveillance with the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU). In 2009, six years before the Snowden affair, Ghuneim began collecting books by artists and photographers about "people who watch and those they are watching" men, machines, institutions, governments, spies, hackers, voyeurs and egotists. In the LE BAL Gallery, over 200 books from his collection Surveillance Index will be made available to the public. "The iconography of surveillance is part of our daily lives and has inspire a multitude of works of art" Mark Ghuneim. In the spirit of a genuine "artistic alert", Ghuneim is raising the alarm, using this collection and the plethora of visual material it represents as a wake-up call raising awareness and r… | |
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| Allan Sekula: The Forgotten Space, 2010. Filmstill; © Estate of Allan Sekula. Courtesy WILDart FILM, Wien | | Space & Photography | | Philip Kwame Apagya » Herbert Bayer » Franz Bergmüller » Giacomo Brogi » Jindrich Eckert » Hans-Peter Feldmann » Seiichi Furuya » Isa Genzken » Georges Lévy & Moyse Léon » Johannes Gramm » Birgit Graschopf » Florence Henri » M. Hoffmann » Kenneth Josephson » Wolfgang Kudrnofsky » Werner Mantz » Ingrid Martens » Santu Mofokeng » László Moholy-Nagy » Negretti & Sambra » Beaumont Newhall » Gregor Sailer » Alfons Schilling » Allan Sekula » Dayanita Singh » Margherita Spiluttini » Hito Steyerl » Sasha Stone » Clare Strand » Yutaka Takanashi » Wolfgang Tillmans » UMBO (Otto Umbehr) » Felix Weber » Stephen Willats » | | until 22 April 2018 | | | | | | | | Stereoscopic vision and conceptions of spatial dimensions, their extension and transformation are fundamentally at odds with the two-dimensional technically recorded image. Since the dawn of photography, this very incompatibility has prompted photographers to grapple with the question of how to represent space. The pioneering exhibition Space & Photography at the Museum der Moderne Salzburg surveys the history of this engagement with a selection of works by thirty-five artists from fourteen countries spanning the period from 1860 to the present. The exhibition’s thematic spectrum ranges from works by Wolfgang Tillmans and others that examine architectonic and virtual spaces, to photographs addressing social, economic, and conceptual questions, as in the work of Santu Mofokeng. "As a center of expertise on artistic photography, we have designed this exhibition to tease out the interconnections between the photographic medium and sociopolitical questions around space, with a particular view to the recent renaissance of boundaries and standardizations," Sabine Breitwieser, Director of the Museum der Moderne Salzburg, explains. "Our objective is to shed light on photography’s formal and technical diversity as well as the evolution of genres and themes in a variety of geographical and sociopolitical contexts." Christiane Kuhlmann, the museum’s Curator of Photography and Media Art, underscores the historical depth and cultural breadth of the selection on view in Space & Photography: "In addition to examples from the early days of photography, we showcase contemporary works by artists whose non-European backgrounds and circumstances inform their perceptions and interpretations of space, complementing the long-domin… | |
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| © Youngsook Park | | Youngsook Park » Could Not Have Left Them Behind | | until 17 February 2018 | | | | | | | | |
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| Willy Spiller, Studio 54, NY, 1977-1985, Archival Pigment Print, 80 x 110 cm, Edition 5 & 2 AP | | Willy Spiller » Street Life: NY/LA 1977-1985 | | until 27 January 2018 | | Artist talk: Thursday January 18 at 6.30pm Laurence Frey, art historian, in a talk with Willy Spiller | | | | | | | | Between 1977 and 1985 Swiss photographer Willy Spiller lived in New York and L.A. Fascinated by the speed, the energy and the absurdity of the 1970s and 80s, he roamed the streets far and wide with his camera. Whether it was rides on the subway, dancers at the legendary Studio 54, hip-hop culture in the streets of New York or the poolside life of L.A.'s high society, Spiller captured all the many facets of a bygone world in images as varied, as fascinating and as absurd as that world itself had been. In the process, he combines his curiosity for his fellow human beings with a profound understanding of the beauty of the banal and mundane in the world around him. It is this that ensures his place in the annals of great Swiss photography. Like many of the resonating names before him, he managed to translate empathy into form through strength of will. Or, as his long-time friend and companion Paul Nizon so aptly put it: "I've often asked myself what made Willy Spiller's photography so forthright, so refreshing and so riveting. I believe it's a blend of unabashed curiosity and roguish complexity combined with a fraternal sense of compassion. It isn't something you learn at school: it's more a question of class, of predisposition, and ultimately of character. Behind the swashbuckling, wheeler-dealing façade is a dreamer, a man hungry for life and beauty. And that is the reason he sides with humanity, which is just another way of saying that he had an innate love of mankind. That is the way he sees things. And it is driven by a highly developed artistic energy." | |
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| cover Foam Magazine #49: Image from the series Disassembly © Bownik / courtesy of The Ravestijn Gallery | | OUT NOW | Foam Magazine #49: Back to the Future | | | | | | | | In this issue of Foam Magazine, which takes as its theme Back to the Future. The 19th Century in the 21st Century and the exhibitions of the same name at Foam Fotografiemuseum Amsterdam (18 January — 28 March 2018) and C/O Berlin (29 September — 02 December 2018), anachronisms have an important part to play. At its heart are contemporary artists who rearrange, reinterpret, adopt and recycle themes, techniques and ideas from the nineteenth century, always in a contemporary way, using digital techniques, new materials and contemporary motifs. Beyond projects relating to the theme of Back to the Future, regular features include a Self Portrait by Aneta Bartos that explores the complexities of the father-daughter relationship, an insightful interview with Anne-Marie Beckmann, Curator and Director of the Deutsche Börse Photography Foundation, as well as new work by Simone Bergantini, Willem Popelier, Aaron Schuman and Kenneth Bamberg. CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHERS AND ARTISTS Anna Atkins | Kenneth Bamberg | Tim Barber | Sylvia Ballhause | Aneta Bartos | Simone Bergantini | Karl Blossfeldt | Bownik | Matthew Brandt | Raphaël Dallaporta | Jessica Eaton | Sam Falls | Lucas Foglia | Spiros Hadjidjanos | Thomas Mailaender | Douglas Mandry | Chris McCaw | Liz Nielsen | Drew Nikonowicz | Trevor Paglen | Willem Popelier | Jannemarein Renout | Khadija Saye | Aaron Schuman | Silver and Gold | Theo Simpson | August Strindberg | Witho Worms AWARD-WINNING PUBLICATION Foam Magazine has been awarded several prizes for both its high-grade graphic design and the quality of its content. Most recently, Foam Magazine was awarded Photography Magazine of the Year at the Lucie Awards 2017. MORE INFO: shop.foam.org/en/foam-magazine-49-back-to-the-future.html For subscriptions: shop.foam.org/nl/foam-magazine-foam-magazine-subscription-2-years.html | |
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| | | | Seydou Keïta Prize, Grand Prize of the Rencontres de Bamako : Athi-Patra Ruga |
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| liquid time (2017) © Michael Najjar Format 1: 132 x 202 cm / 52 x 79.5 in, edition of 6 + 2 AP Format 2: 67 x 102 cm / 26.3 in x 40.2, edition of 6 + 2 AP Hybrid photography, archival pigment print, aludibond, diasec, custom-made aluminium frame | | Clouds ⇄ Forests | | 7th Moscow International Biennale of Contemporary Art | | Adel Abidin » Matthew Barney » Björk » Hussein Chalayan » Rohini Devasher » Cecile B. Evans » Forensic Architecture » Theaster Gates » Gauri Gill » Elliot Hundley » Pierre Huyghe » Ali Kazma » Michael Najjar » Uriel Orlow » Laure Prouvost » Robert Zhao Renhui » August Sander » Mikhail Tolmachev » Ryan Trecartin » .. | | – 18 January 2018 | | | | | | | | The 7th Moscow International Biennale of Contemporary Art takes place in the New Tretyakov Gallery (The State Tretyakov Gallery, 10, Krymsky Val, Moscow) from 19 September 2017 to 18 January 2018. The Main Project Clouds⇄Forests is curated by Yuko Hasegawa - one of the leading curators in the international art world - and includes 52 artists from 25 countries. The concept of Clouds⇄Forests focuses on a new eco-system formed through the circulation of "Cloud Tribes" born on the Internet cloud space, and "Forest Tribes" born in an analogue world. Works of the artists in the Main Project are displayed in dialogue with works from the permanent exhibition of The State Tretyakov Gallery. Michael Najjar » has been invited to participate in the Biennale with several large-scale artworks from his celebrated "outer space" series. On view for the first time will be his "liquid time" triptych, created especially for the Biennale. This work highlights the fragility of our ecological balance and the significance of the change of state from ice to water because glaciers are storehouses of time - layer on layer they capture the air, water and oxygen of countless thousands of years. The picture was taken in early 2017 in an ice cave under the Breiðamerkurjökull glacier in Iceland. Also on view, in the All-Russian State Library, will be Michael Najjar´s striking new video artwork "terraforming". The work focuses on transformation of a natural environment through energy input and combines footage taken on various locations in Iceland in early 2017 with Martian landscapes shot by NASA´s Curiosity Mars rover. | |
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This newsletter was sent to [email protected] If you can't read this mail, please click here. Forward this newsletter Like it on Facebook Unsubscribe here |
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© 10 January 2017 photography-now.com Ziegelstr. 29 . D–10117 DE . Berlin . Editor: Claudia Stein + Michael Steinke . [email protected] . T +49.30.24 34 27 80 |
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