Photographer Presentation: Josef Koudelka

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Photographer Presentation: Josef Koudelka Phot150 Steven Veit May 5, 2010 Photographer Presentation: Josef Koudelka Andrew Henderson/The New York Times The photographer Josef Koudelka at his “Invasion 68: Prague” exhibition at Aperture Gallery. Career Trajectory/ Years of Work/Impact of History on Work: Born 1938, Moravia, Czechoslovakia Mid‐‘50’s: Studies mechanical engineering. Begins photographing in late 50’s. Early 60’s: Photographs Gypsies and Prague theater, while working as an aeronautics engineer. 1967: Exhibits Gypsy photographs in Prague and leaves engineering to pursue photographic work on a full‐time basis. 1968: Happens to return home to Prague the day before the Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia, which he then photographs. Gives invasion photos to a visiting photography curator from the Smithsonian who brings them to the New York, where they are published anonymously through the efforts of Elliott Erwitt at Magnum. 1970: Leaves Czechoslovakia for London and is granted asylum in UK. During ‘70’s, travels throughout Europe photographing Gypsies and urban and rural landscapes. 1975 :“Gypsies” published. 1987: Becomes French citizen, photographs panoramic images of French northern‐ coastal landscape, particularly the changes caused by construction of the channel tunnel. 1988: “Exiles” published. 1990: Visits Czechoslovakia after 20 years of exile, photographs eastern Europe, particularly the devastated ore‐mining region of northern Bohemia, southern Germany, and Poland. 1994: “The Black Triangle” published. Photographs panoramas of South Wales. 1999: “Chaos” published. Since 2000, has continued photographing panoramic images of landscapes. Impact of Koudelka’s Czech Nationality on his Work: The Czech theater scene and the Czech Gypsy community were important early influences. His Czech nationality led directly to his fortuitous return to Prague just in time to witness the 1968 Soviet invasion, which was arguably the key event in defining his photographic career. Much, if not all, of Koudelka’s subsequent work appears to have been strongly influenced by first, his Czech nationality, and later, his stateless, wandering condition of exile from his Czech homeland. His Gypsy‐like rootlessness has undoubtedly informed his later work, documented in his books “Gypsies,” “Exiles,” “The Black Triangle” and most recently, “Chaos.” These bodies of work highlight, on the one hand, the conditions of communities on the edge of society, and on the other, the destructive changes to the landscape brought about by industrial development. Development of Koudelka’s Interest in Photography: His early work appears to have developed out of opportunities and interests pursued according to a combination of happenstance and deliberate plan. At age 12, after seeing an amateur photographer’s work, he acquired a 6x6 camera with which he made contact prints and various cropped images, exploring compositional possibilities and making what he identifies as his first panoramic images.1 Acquaintances in the artistic and theater community encouraged him to travel, to photograph, and later, to exhibit and publish his work. Although he never studied art or photography formally, he acknowledges being inspired generally by viewing the work of artists in museums that he visits on his travels. Other Artists’ Influences on Koudelka: Koudelka has stated that he has never had heroes in photography or elsewhere, and acknowledges no major influences.2 He does, however, credit the Czech photographer and critic Jiri Jenicek with providing him with much‐appreciated encouragement, and also with introducing him to the photography critic and curator Anna Farova, with whom he collaborated on various exhibitions. Karova also showed him the work of the Farm Security Administration photographers, whom Koudelka says impressed him. Koudelka also knew Henri Cartier‐Bresson (HCB) even prior to his (Koudelka’s) association with Magnum, and acknowledges HCB’s advice and support. Koudelka has said that he was often critical of HCB’s work, though he believed that HCB valued this criticism.1 “Style” and Main Subject Matter: Koudelka’s style emphasizes both people (earlier work) and landscapes (later work) that exist in the frame as images of the ordinary seen in an extraordinary way. He has a direct and literal style, though his compositional eye more often than not yields a vision of the novel and unexpected. In the Gypsy series, for example, he causes us to wonder how these figures came to co‐exist in the picture space, though they seem to fit in it plausibly enough. Images that are natural enough, perhaps, but with elements unnervingly juxtaposed. His main subject matter has been organized by multi‐year projects, resulting in several major exhibitions and in the publications mentioned above. Photographic motivation, philosophy: These quotes speak to Koudelka’s motivation and philosophy: “I have to shoot three cassettes of film a day, even when not 'photographing', in order to keep the eye in practice.” Josef Koudelka, quoted in “On Being a Photographer : A Practical Guide” (3rd Ed.) by David Hurn, in Conversation with Bill Jay, New York: Lenswork, 2001. “What matter most to me (...) is to take photographs; to continue taking them and not to repeat myslef. To go further, to go as far as I can.” 3 Why Koudelka’s art speaks to me: I find Koudelka’s work remarkable in that it explores in image after image a way of seeing that transcends the ordinary reality of everyday experience yet seems nevertheless to be securely grounded in that reality. Koudelka’s images seem, more often than not, novel and unusual, while at the same time being entirely believable. Looking at a Koudelka image, for example, one wonders how that scene, simultaneously odd yet composed of ordinary, recognizable elements, could possibly exist, yet one has no doubt that it did in fact exist in the space before Koudelka’s camera. Could such natural montages, such perfectly composed images be revealed to just any onlooker? Or is there something privileged about Koudelka’s vision that enables him to see what we wouldn’t ordinarily, or perhaps ever see, even if thrust into the same setting and instructed to look with an awareness open to every possibility? Technical aspects: Used a Rolleiflex for early work, then an Exacta slr with a 25mm lens for photographs of Gypsies and of the Prague invasion. For later panoramic work, Koudelka used a 6x17 medium format camera. He admits to having tried color once, but having given it up with no regrets after not liking it at all. Koudelka mentions that his physical viewpoint was influenced by his having obtained in 1963 one of the first wide‐angle lenses available in Czechoslovakia for the 35‐mm format, an East‐ German 25mm lens.1 He says in one of his interviews with Karel Hvizdala that this lens “changed my vision,” and enabled him to “work in the small spaces where Gypsies lived…to separate the essential from the unessential, and to achieve in bad light the full depth of field which I had always wanted.”1 Interestingly, he stated in this interview that he stopped using the wide‐angle lens when he left Czechoslovakia, after he began to feel that it was restricting his creativity. What can we learn from the work of Josef Koudelka? Koudelka has approached his subject matter with a singular vision that connects only occasionally with other currents in the larger world of photographic artistry. His images of Gypsies and others outside the mainstream of society exist as naturally‐occurring montages of the never‐before‐imagined mundane. A horse, a dog, a bather, a child, a group of men in suits, each viewed in a strange world that is at once foreign to us and at the same time somehow familiar. Similarly, Koudelka’s landscapes give us a new way of seeing the human‐made and natural environment. Industrial, debris‐strewn chaos takes on a mystical, otherworldly beauty, occasionally enhanced by combination with other images in a 2‐ or 3‐image format. Simply put, as with all great photographers, what we can learn from Koudelka is nothing less than how to see in a new way. Selected Images by Joseph Koudelka: Prague, 1968 Spain, 1971 France, 1973 Portugal, 1976 Notes 1. Karel Hvizdala Interview, in “Koudelka,” Prague: Torst, 2002 2. Bernard Cuau, “A Book of Questions” (Introductory Essay, 1984) in “Joseph Koudelka,” New York: Thames and Hudson, 2007. 3. Josef Koudelka ‐ in “Chaos,” Paris: Edition Nathan/Delphi, 1999 Annotated Bibliography: 1. Josef Koudelka. Prague, Torst, 2002. This small paperback, number 10 in the publisher Torst’s series on noteworthy Czech artists, offers an excellent overview of Koudelka’s work to date, organized by the principal themes that have marked the artist’s career, with 82 images. Accompanied by an insightful introduction by Koudelka’s long‐time friend, the Czech art historian and curator Anna Farova. Concludes with notes from discussions between Koudelka and Karel Hvizdala that occurred over an 11‐year period between 1990 and 2001. Includes a biographical chronology. 2. Joseph Koudelka. (Robert Delpire, Series Ed.) New York, Thames and Hudson, 2007. Another compilation of Koudelka’s work, part of Thames and Hudson’s Photofile series on important photographers. This book presents 66 of Koudelka’s images, introduced by a 1984 essay written by Bernard Cuau, and including a biographical timeline through 2006. Also includes a list of selected exhibitions of the artist’s work. 3. Chaos, Koudelka. Josef. (2nd. Updated Ed., originally published 1999) New York, Phaidon, 2005. Described in the jacket blurb as “A collection of urban and environmental landscapes, panoramas devoid of people,” this large‐format monograph is Koudelka’s first since “Exiles.” Includes 108 black and white images photographed in various locations around the world, highlighting environments changed by human presence. Introductory notes by Robert Delpire. With a biographical timeline, bibliography and exhibition list. 4. Invasion 68: Prague. Koudelka, Josef. New York, Aperture, 2008.
Recommended publications
  • Koudelka-Exhibition-Proposal.Pdf
    Josef Koudelka, Invasion 68 Prague: Checklist 1 Warsaw Pact tanks invade Prague, Czechoslovakia, Au- gust 21, 1968. Josef Koudelka/Magnum Photos 35.75 x 23.25 inches Archival pigment print mounted on PETG with wood brace. Insurance value: $300 PAR67284 KOJ1968004 W00497/29 pp.10-11 Prague, Czechoslovakia, August 1968 2 Josef Koudelka/Magnum Photos 35.75 x 23.25 inches Archival pigment print mounted on PETG with wood brace. Insurance value: $300 PAR340107 KOJ1968004 W00484/06 pp. 26-27 3 Prague, Czechoslovakia, August 1968. Josef Koudelka/Magnum Photos 35.75 x 23.25 inches Archival pigment print mounted on PETG with wood brace. Insurance value: $300 PAR339562 KOJ1968004 W00479/X pp. 36-37 4 Invasion by Warsaw Pact troops, Prague, Czechoslavakia, August 1968. Josef Koudelka/Magnum Photos 35.75 x 23.25 inches Archival pigment print mounted on PETG with wood brace. Insurance value: $300 PAR67283 KOJ1968004 W00458/28 pp. 22-23 1 5 Invasion by Warsaw Pact troops, Prague, Czechoslavakia, August 1968. Josef Koudelka/Magnum Photos 35.75 x 23.25 inches Archival pigment print mounted on PETG with wood brace. Insurance value: $300 PAR67286 KOJ1968004 W00454/14 pp. 24-25 Prague, Czechoslovakia, August 1968. 6 Josef Koudelka/Magnum Photos 35.75 x 23.25 inches Archival pigment print mounted on PETG with wood brace. Insurance value: $300 PAR 67297 PAR67285 PAR67290 PAR67289 pp. 30-31 7 Prague, Czechoslovakia, August 1968. Josef Koudelka/Magnum Photos 35.75 x 23.25 inches Archival pigment print mounted on PETG with wood brace. Insurance value: $300 PAR339564 PAR339565 PAR339563 PAR339561 pp.
    [Show full text]
  • Project #3: Inspired By… - Description Critique Date - 3/29/19 (Fri)
    Project #3: Inspired by… - Description Critique Date - 3/29/19 (Fri) "The world is filled to suffocating. Man has placed his token on every stone. Every word, every image, is leased and mortgaged. We know that a picture is but a space in which a variety of images, none of them original, blend and clash." – Sherrie Levine Conceptual Requirements: In this project, you will do your best to interpret the style of a particular photographer who interests you. You will research them as well as their work in order to make photographs that have a signature aesthetic or approach that is specific to them, and also contribute your ideas. Technical Requirements: 1. Start with the list on the back of this page (the Project Description sheet), and start web searches for these photographers. All the ones listed are masters in their own right and a good starting point for you to begin your search. Select one and confirm your choice with me by the due date (see the syllabus). 2. After choosing a photographer, go on the web and to the library to check out books on them, read interviews, and look at every image you can that is made by them. Learn as much as you can and take notes on your sources. 3. Type your name, date, and “Project 3: Inspired by...” at the top of a Letter sized page. Then write a 2 page research paper on your chosen photographer. Be sure to include information such as where and when they were born, where it is that they did their work, what kind of camera and film formats they used, their own personal history, etc.
    [Show full text]
  • Notable Photographers Updated 3/12/19
    Arthur Fields Photography I Notable Photographers updated 3/12/19 Walker Evans Alec Soth Pieter Hugo Paul Graham Jason Lazarus John Divola Romuald Hazoume Julia Margaret Cameron Bas Jan Ader Diane Arbus Manuel Alvarez Bravo Miroslav Tichy Richard Prince Ansel Adams John Gossage Roger Ballen Lee Friedlander Naoya Hatakeyama Alejandra Laviada Roy deCarava William Greiner Torbjorn Rodland Sally Mann Bertrand Fleuret Roe Etheridge Mitch Epstein Tim Barber David Meisel JH Engstrom Kevin Bewersdorf Cindy Sherman Eikoh Hosoe Les Krims August Sander Richard Billingham Jan Banning Eve Arnold Zoe Strauss Berenice Abbot Eugene Atget James Welling Henri Cartier-Bresson Wolfgang Tillmans Bill Sullivan Weegee Carrie Mae Weems Geoff Winningham Man Ray Daido Moriyama Andre Kertesz Robert Mapplethorpe Dawoud Bey Dorothea Lange uergen Teller Jason Fulford Lorna Simpson Jorg Sasse Hee Jin Kang Doug Dubois Frank Stewart Anna Krachey Collier Schorr Jill Freedman William Christenberry David La Spina Eli Reed Robert Frank Yto Barrada Thomas Roma Thomas Struth Karl Blossfeldt Michael Schmelling Lee Miller Roger Fenton Brent Phelps Ralph Gibson Garry Winnogrand Jerry Uelsmann Luigi Ghirri Todd Hido Robert Doisneau Martin Parr Stephen Shore Jacques Henri Lartigue Simon Norfolk Lewis Baltz Edward Steichen Steven Meisel Candida Hofer Alexander Rodchenko Viviane Sassen Danny Lyon William Klein Dash Snow Stephen Gill Nathan Lyons Afred Stieglitz Brassaï Awol Erizku Robert Adams Taryn Simon Boris Mikhailov Lewis Baltz Susan Meiselas Harry Callahan Katy Grannan Demetrius
    [Show full text]
  • Josef Koudelka Wall Label
    The Museum of Modern Art H West 53 Street, New York, N.Y. 10019 Tel. 956-6100 Cable-. Modernart WALL LABEL JOSEF KOUDELKA February 2^ -April 30, 1975 The Czech photographer Josef Koudelka was born in the Moravian town of Boskovice in 1938, the year in which the cession of the Sudetenland to Germany began the dismemberment of the young Czechoslovakian republic. Koudelka attended the Technical University of Prague, and took his degree in aeronautical engineering. He worked in this field until 1967; since then he has devoted himself entirely to photography. His earlier work as a photographer was concerned largely with interpretation of the theater, and includes a book on Alfred Jarry's Ubu Roi and considerable work for the magazine Divadlo (Theater). In the past decade the major continuing subject of his work has been the Gypsies of Europe. Koudelka left Czechoslovakia in 1968--the year in which the "Prague Spring" was answered with military occupation by the Soviet Union, East Germany, Poland, Hungary, and Bulgaria. He has since traveled in England, France, Ireland, and Spain. The Czech critic Anna F^rova* has noted that photographers in her country have generally regarded the expressive and the documentary functions of ,'heir medium as antithetical. In this view, the artistic potentials of photography are served by idealized interpretations of recognizably poetic subject matter. Photographs with topical relevance, on the other hand, are judged by a utilitarian standard, to which aesthetic values are thought irrelevant. Elsewhere such attempts to divide the role of photography into spiritual and mundane categories have met with little success.
    [Show full text]
  • Josef Koudelka: Invasion 68: Prague Free Download
    JOSEF KOUDELKA: INVASION 68: PRAGUE FREE DOWNLOAD Josef Koudelka,Jaroslav Cuhra,Jiri Hoppe,Jiri Suk | 295 pages | 01 Aug 2008 | aperture | 9781597110686 | English | United States Josef Koudelka – Invasion 68 Prague Josef Koudelka. Lime Stoneby Josef Koudelka. That all changed on the night of August 21, when Warsaw Pact tanks invaded the city of Josef Koudelka: Invasion 68: Prague, ending the short-lived political liberalization in Czechoslovakia that came to be known as the Prague Spring. At the same time photographs were also assembled by Erwitt as a news clip for television. Invasion by Warsaw Pact troops near the Radio headquarters. In the days before, tanks of Josef Koudelka: Invasion 68: Prague Warsaw Pact had entered the city to the screech of tank tracks on the cobbles. I suppose that could be said of all of Koudelka's best work. Though the images gathered in this remarkable publication document a specific historical event, their transformative quality still resonates. Friedrichs price: Euro. Koudelka had returned home the day before from photographing gypsies in Romania. Friend Reviews. Invasion: Prague 68 Josef Koudelka. I responded to it. Enlarge cover. Magnum Photos. David Hurn Shop Now. Sixteen years later, after his father died, his photographs were credited with his name. Cookie preferences. Add to Wishlist. After leaving Czechoslovakia in on a three-month exit visa, Koudelka remained in the West, received asylum as Josef Koudelka: Invasion 68: Prague political refugee in Josef Koudelka: Invasion 68: Prague and became a member of the Magnum photographic collective inbefore he moved to Paris in Josef Koudelka, a Czech photographer, took his camera and mingled in the masses on the streets.
    [Show full text]
  • MAGNUM PHOTOS and PICTO 1950-2020
    70 Years of Correspondences: MAGNUM PHOTOS and PICTO 1950-2020 NEW YORK, NY / ACCESSWIRE / Oct 26, 2020 / RICHARD TAITTINGER GALLERY is pleased to announce the exhibition 70 YEARS OF CORRESPONDENCES: MAGNUM PHOTOS AND PICTO 1950-2020, curated by photography historian Carole Naggar. This exhibition is a collaboration with MAGNUM PHOTOS and PICTO and a celebration of the seventy years of partnership between two important institutions in the photo world. This exhibition consists of three parts - YESTERDAY, TODAY and TOMORROW - and is an overview of this continuous collaboration since 1950. It is presented through the work of nineteen photographers and more than 100 prints (vintage and modern). Curated by Carole Naggar October 29 - December 20, 2020 Opening: October 29, 2020, 2 p.m. - 9 p.m. MAGNUM PHOTOS was founded in Paris in 1947 by Robert Capa, Henri Cartier-Bresson, George Rodger and David 'Chim' Seymour in response to World War II and the need to observe and report on the state of the world. Today her agency has 89 international members (past and present). Founded in 1950 by Pierre and France Gassmann, PICTO produced works for Magnum's founders such as Henri Cartier-Bresson, Robert Capa and Chim, as well as other notable artists such as William Klein, Willy Ronis, Robert Doisneau and Edouard Boubat. Photography is an innovative medium that records history and change and deals with them. This exhibition celebrates leading figures in the field and offers a journey through the medium of the past 70 years that invites us to imagine its future. 70 YEARS OF CORRESPONDENCES: MAGNUM PHOTOS AND PICTO 1950-2020 will be on display at RICHARD TAITTINGER GALLERY, 154 Ludlow Street, from October 29th to December 20th, 2020.
    [Show full text]
  • The Original Copy: Photography of Sculpture, 1839 to Today
    The Original Copy: Photography of Sculpture, 1839 to Today The Museum of Modern Art, New York August 01, 2010-November 01, 2010 6th Floor, Special Exhibitions, North Kunsthaus Zürich February 25, 2011-May 15, 2011 Sculpture in the Age of Photography 1. WILLIAM HENRY FOX TALBOT (British, 1800-1877) Bust of Patroclus Before February 7, 1846 Salt print from a calotype negative 7 x 6 5/16" on 8 7/8 x 7 5/16" paper (17.8 x 16 cm on 22.5 x 18.6 cm paper) The J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles, California, 84.XP.921.2 2. ADOLPHE BILORDEAUX (French, 1807-1875) Plaster Hand 1864 Albumen silver print 12 1/16 x 9 3/8" (30.7 x 23.8 cm) Bibliothèque nationale de France, Paris 3. LORRAINE O'GRADY (American, born 1934) Sister IV, L: Devonia's Sister, Lorraine; R: Nefertiti's Sister, Mutnedjmet from Miscegenated Family Album 1980/94 Silver dye bleach print 26 x 37" (66 x 94 cm) Courtesy the artist and Alexander Gray Associates, New York 4. CHARLES NÈGRE (French, 1820-1880) The Mystery of Death, Medallion by Auguste Préault November 1858 Photogravure 10 1/2 x 10 1/2" (26.6 x 26.7 cm) National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa Purchased 1968 The Original Copy: Photography of Sculpture, 1839 to Today - Exhibition Checklist Page 1 of 73 5. KEN DOMON (Japanese, 1909-1990) Right Hand of the Sitting Image of Buddha Shakyamuni in the Hall of Miroku, Muro-Ji, Nara 1942-43 Gelatin silver print 12 7/8 x 9 1/2" (32.7 x 24.2 cm) The Museum of Modern Art, New York.
    [Show full text]
  • On Being a Photographer, 3Rd Edition
    Photography/Photojournalism $12.95 USD Revised – Third Edition! “A photographer might forget his camera and live to tell the ON BEING A PHOTOGRAPHER tale. But no photographer who survives has ever forgotten the lessons in this book. It is not just essential reading, it’s compulsory.” DAVID HURN/Magnum Daniel Meadows Head of Photojournalism, Center for Journalism Studies, in conversation with University of Wales “A very useful book. It discusses issues which will benefit all BILL JAY photographers irrespective of type, age or experience – and it does so in a clear and interesting manner. I recommend it.” Van Deren Coke past Director of the International Museum of Photography and author of The Painter and the Photograph “I read On Being a Photographer in one sitting. This is an invaluable book for its historical and aesthetic references as well as David’s words, which go to the heart of every committed David Hurn/ on being photographer – from the heart of a great photographer. It is inspiring.” Frank Hoy Associate Professor, Visual Journalism, The Walter Cronkite School Magnum a of Journalism and Telecommunication, Arizona State University “We all take photographs but few of us are photographers. On Being a Photographer talks clearly and cogently about the difference … and Bill Jay photog- the book is rich in practical detail about how to practice as a photographer and to create worthwhile pictures.” Barry Lane past-Director of Photography at the Arts Council of Great Britain and presently Secretary-General rapher of The Royal Photographic
    [Show full text]
  • Aperture Would Like to Thank All of the Venues and Artists for Participating in Aperture’S 50Th Anniversary Celebration
    Aperture would like to thank all of the venues and artists for participating in Aperture’s 50th anniversary celebration. American Museum of Natural History 79th Street and Central Park West, 10024 212-769-5100 Artists: Ken Blackbird, Lee Mormon, Elaine Riecheck, David Wajnarowicz Aperture’s Burden Gallery 20 East 23rd Street at Madison Avenue, 10010 212-505-5555 Artists: Brian Weil, Chuck Close, Robert Adams, Tina Modotti, Anna Gaskell, Josef Breitenbach, Gregory Crewdson, Shomei Tomatsu, Frederick Evans Arsenal Gallery* Central Park, 830 Fifth Avenue at 64th Street,10021 212-360-8163 * Twenty-three photographs from the show will be exhibited in the Arsenal Gallery from September 24, 2002 to October 24, 2002. Artists: Bruce Davidson, Gary Winogrand, Alen MacWeeney, Nick Waplington, Ferdinando Scianna, Letizia Battaglia, David Graham, Virginia Beahan and Laura McPhee, Pedro Meyer, William Eggleston, Eugene Smith, Walter Bigbee, Ray Metzker, Barbara Morgan, Robert Glenn Ketchum, Flor Garduno, Leonard Freed, David Goldblat Barnard College 3009 Broadway at West 116th Street, 10027 212-854-5262 Artists: Don McCullin, Eugene Richards, Raghubir Sing Barnes & Noble, 600 Fifth Avenue 600 Fifth Avenue between 48th and 49th Street, 10020 212-765-0592 Artists: Robert Cappa, Barbara Morgan Barnes & Noble, 396 Avenue of the Americas 396 Avenue of the Americas at 8th Street, 10011 212-674-8780 Artists: Mimmo Jodice, Neil Folberg Barnes & Noble, 1972 Broadway 1972 Broadway between 66th and 67th St. at Lincoln Center, 10023 212-595-6859 Artists: Letizia
    [Show full text]
  • Press Release
    PRESS RELEASE Paris, June 17 th , 2009, DAVID GOLDBLATT, WINNER OF THE HCB AWARD 2009 On June 16th, after meetings at the Fondation Henri Cartier-Bresson in Paris, the jury of the HCB Award 2009 has nominated the South African photographer David Goldblatt as the winner, for his project “TJ”, work in progress about the city of Johannesburg . He was presented by Janette Danel-Helleu, independent curator. Attributed by the Fondation Henri Cartier-Bresson every other year , the HCB Award is a prize of 30 000 euro to stimulate a photographer’s creativity by offering him the opportunity to carry out a project that would otherwise be difficult to achieve. Created in 1988 by Robert Delpire, it was relaunched in 2003 with the opening of the Fondation Henri Cartier-Bresson in Paris. Chris Killip (1989), Josef Koudelka (1991), Larry Towell (2003), Fazal Sheikh (2005) and Jim Goldberg (2007) were the previous recipients of the Award. The HCB Award is made possible by the support of Groupe Wendel , who thus reinforces their policy towards contemporary art. This Award has been given by an international jury composed of 7 distinguished personalities in the world of the Arts: - Martine Franck , Photographer, President of the jury, - Antoinette Seillière , Vice-President of the Fondation Croix Saint-Simon, Representative of Groupe Wendel. - Nissan Perez , Senior Curator of the photography department at the Israel Museum, Jerusalem, - Oliva Maria Rubio , Director of exhibitions at La Fabrica, Madrid, - Agnès Sire , Director of the Fondation Henri Cartier-Bresson, - Sam Stourdzé , Independent Curator, - Thomas Weski , Professor at the Academy of Visual arts, Leipzig and curator.
    [Show full text]
  • Press Release Berlin June 15, 2017
    Press release Berlin June 15, 2017 Josef Koudelka Invasion / Exiles / Wall C/O Berlin presents the exhibition entitled Josef Koudelka . Invasion / Exiles / Wall from July 13th to September 10th, 2017. The opening will be on Wednesday, July 12th, 2017, at 7 pm in the Amerika Haus in Hardenbergstraße 22-24, 10623 Berlin. Prague, Wenceslas Square, August 22, 1968: An arm is thrust into the picture. The watch on its wrist indicates the time. In the days before, tanks of the Warsaw Pact had entered the city to the screech of tank tracks on the cobblestones. This photograph by Josef Koudelka fits chronologically into his series Invasion, in which he shows the passionate resistance of his compatriots to the Red Army’s determination to quell by bloody means the democratic fervor of the Prague Spring. But it is also the first photograph in his book Exiles, published twenty years later, in 1988, by Robert Delpire. 1968 was a pivotal year—both in the West and in the East. Koudelka’s photographs leave a lasting impression of these historical events, conveying a vibrant immediacy and intimacy with the situation and the depicted people that goes beyond all documentation. After leaving Czechoslovakia in 1970 on a three-month exit visa, Koudelka remained in the West, received asylum as a political refugee in England, and became a member of the Mag- num photographic collective in 1971, before he moved to Paris in 1980. Exile had a deep im- pact on his photography and resulted in one of his most important and personal bodies of work.
    [Show full text]
  • 7.10 Nov 2019 Grand Palais
    PRESS KIT COURTESY OF THE ARTIST, YANCEY RICHARDSON, NEW YORK, AND STEVENSON CAPE TOWN/JOHANNESBURG CAPE AND STEVENSON NEW YORK, RICHARDSON, YANCEY OF THE ARTIST, COURTESY © ZANELE MUHOLI. © ZANELE 7.10 NOV 2019 GRAND PALAIS Official Partners With the patronage of the Ministry of Culture Under the High Patronage of Mr Emmanuel MACRON President of the French Republic [email protected] - London: Katie Campbell +44 (0) 7392 871272 - Paris: Pierre-Édouard MOUTIN +33 (0)6 26 25 51 57 Marina DAVID +33 (0)6 86 72 24 21 Andréa AZÉMA +33 (0)7 76 80 75 03 Reed Expositions France 52-54 quai de Dion-Bouton 92806 Puteaux cedex [email protected] / www.parisphoto.com - Tel. +33 (0)1 47 56 64 69 www.parisphoto.com Press information of images available to the press are regularly updated at press.parisphoto.com Press kit – Paris Photo 2019 – 31.10.2019 INTRODUCTION - FAIR DIRECTORS FLORENCE BOURGEOIS, DIRECTOR CHRISTOPH WIESNER, ARTISTIC DIRECTOR - OFFICIAL FAIR IMAGE EXHIBITORS - GALERIES (SECTORS PRINCIPAL/PRISMES/CURIOSA/FILM) - PUBLISHERS/ART BOOK DEALERS (BOOK SECTOR) - KEY FIGURES EXHIBITOR PROJECTS - PRINCIPAL SECTOR - SOLO & DUO SHOWS - GROUP SHOWS - PRISMES SECTOR - CURIOSA SECTOR - FILM SECTEUR - BOOK SECTOR : BOOK SIGNING PROGRAM PUBLIC PROGRAMMING – EXHIBITIONS / AWARDS FONDATION A STICHTING – BRUSSELS – PRIVATE COLLECTION EXHIBITION PARIS PHOTO – APERTURE FOUNDATION PHOTOBOOKS AWARDS CARTE BLANCHE STUDENTS 2019 – A PLATFORM FOR EMERGING PHOTOGRAPHY IN EUROPE ROBERT FRANK TRIBUTE JPMORGAN CHASE ART COLLECTION - COLLECTIVE IDENTITY
    [Show full text]