I Am a Miner

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

I Am a Miner EARCH 1. Mine Try finding this artwork and fill in the missing SPOT THE DIFFERENCE! S CAN YOU READ D 2. Photograph details by looking at the LABEL. The label tells us Find the 5 ways the image on the le has been changed! R 3. Label more information about the artwork, such as the O S A M B S O U C T M 4. Museum AN ARTWORK? TITLE THE NAME of the work, the year it was W 5. Camera made and the MEDIUM (what was used to make T D G J Y A N A G I the artwork): H J M U S E U M W N Y G C U L A B E L E I was made by David Goldbla K N L B Z T R R O I P H O T O G R A P H My title is Miner, Consolidated J H B F K M E L O T Mine Reef, Roodepoort I am a ______________________ (medium) I was made in the year ______________ HELP VINCENT FIND THE GOLD! Photographs like the ones Goldbla made were taken with a film camera, and the images are stored on a roll of film rather than a memory card! Can you complete this image this complete you Can half?the second drawing by MIRROR–MIRROR E? ON MY WAY HOME DAVID GOLDBLATT: I SE O Draw some memorable things in the circles below! ON THE MINES I AM A MINER D T Write down all the things you Name Age School A The best thing I saw at My guide looked H can name in this photograph! Norval Foundation: like this: Hard hat W WHAT DO I SEE? This type of artwork is called a PHOTOGRAPH. A person who takes photographs is called a PHOTOGRAPHER. MINES are underground tunnels Overalls where metals such as gold are dug out. A person who works in My favourite artwork My favourite plant a mine is called a MINER. looked like this: looked like this: I am a miner. I work in a _____________________. I wear a ______________ ______________________ on my head. I wear _______________________ over my clothes. My __________________ is behind my back. A NORVAL FOUNDATION www.norvalfoundation.org/kids EDUCATIONAL RESOURCE [email protected] Create a COLLAGE with this photograph IBRAHIM MAHAMA by pasting objects or people on top of it! WHAT MAKES ART, ART? LABOUR OF MANY THINGS TO DO Test your knowledge of the exhibition by filling in the crossword puzzle below! 1. The type of photography that What’s the dierence between a selfie with your friends shows events and people as they and Goldbla’s photographs? appear in real life. 1↓ 2. An object or picture that We usually take photographs to have memories of an 2↓ event, or when we want to show o how good we look! represents something else. But Goldbla’s photos were taken for another reason – 3. The idea that holds an 3→ he had an idea in mind when he took the photographs. exhibition together. All the photographs are of dierent people, places and 4. A type of artwork that takes up things, but they are all connected by this idea. This idea a lot of space in a gallery. is called a CONCEPT. 5. The thing that provides more information about an artwork. What concept do you think holds Goldbla’s EXHIBITION together? Ibrahim Mahama is a Ghanaian artist who uses bags that were used to transport 4→ exports such as coal and cocoa to cover entire buildings (or in this case, a gallery!) Mahama uses the sacks because it is a symbol of Ghana’s role in the global market as When we want to find out more information about an T H E S C U L P T U R E G A R D E N artwork, we can look at the label. Find the artwork on the an item that is reused over and over not only to carry dierent exports but for use in 5→ far right and write down the details of the label below! Ghanaian households such as curtains and clothing. The imprint of the items that the bags carried remain on the material. This type of artwork is called an INSTALLATION. I SPY... Like Goldbla’s work, Mahama’s work mentions the economy in some way. DRAW A BACKGROUND FOR THIS GUY! Can you find the artworks based on these cryptic clues? Name of artist: David Goldbla What is he doing? Where is he? Title of artwork: _________________________________________ CAN YOU MAKE AN ARTWORK IN THE STYLE OF IBRAHIM MAHAMA? 1. I was made by an artist from Zimbabwe: KA__I__B__S _________________________________________ 2. I am a character in the play Hamlet by Shakespeare, and Year it was made: _______________ Nandipha Mntambo made an artwork of me: O__ __E__I__ Medium: _________________________ If you could choose an object that could be Cut Layer Mould 3. There are two of me standing back to back in Bre Murray’s used as a symbol of South Africa, what Collection it belongs to: _________________________________ Scratch Paste Fold Again Again: __U__ __ S would you use, and how would you 4. I sell something to people braaiing and selling meat on the transform it into an artwork? Squeeze Tear Imagine streets of Johannesburg: F__ __ __ Here are some verbs that might help you Draw Print Create 5. I looked like I rolled o the mountain!: H__ __ D__STE__O__DER in the creation of your artwork! → Paint Colour in Sketch SAY SOMETHING! An EXHIBITION is a display of things for the public. Revise Install Illustrate THE SCULPTURE In an exhibition, LABELS are used to give us more An INSTALLATION is a very big artwork that Interrogate Conceptualize GARDEN POSE-OFF information about the artworks. either takes up an entire gallery space or a CHALLENGE! large part of it. In most installations, the Have a competition between you viewer can walk through it. and your friends to see who can best EXPORTS are items that one country sells to copy a pose of an artwork in the another country. Sculpture Garden! IN THE CLASSROOM DAVID GOLDBLATT: THE PRINCIPLES & ELEMENTS OF ART AND DESIGN HOW TO BE A PHOTOGRAPHER WITHOUT USING A CAMERA! ON THE MINES IN DAVID GOLDBLATT’S PHOTOGRAPHY WHAT YOU’LL NEED NOTE: Remember to Name Grade School • Photo paper in a covered box keep the photo paper LINE • Objects to photograph RHYTHM SYMMETRY • Scanner closed when you are not in a dark room! David Goldbla (1930—2018) was a DOCUMENTARY PHOTOGRAPHER who grew INSTRUCTIONS: up in the mining town of Randfontein. • Choose the objects that you want to photograph and Goldbla didn’t take photos of protests and plan a layout in your workbook. violence, as many other photographers • In a closet, or a room where the windows are covered with thick fabric (it needs to during Apartheid did. The photos that he be so dark that you can’t see your hand in front of your face), arrange your objects took showed how black and white people’s lives were aected by Apartheid laws in even onto the photo paper and close the box. CONTRAST the smallest detail. • Take your box outside and lay it on the ground (or on a windowsill that gets direct sunlight) and expose your photo- graph for 30—60 minutes. Once you see the paper has darkened, you’ll know your image is ready! • Let your teacher or another adult scan your photo paper onto a computer. The WHY MINES? scanned image will be in the negative, meaning that all the colours will be reversed. As a child, Goldbla would play on the mine dumps with his friends. However, as he grew up, he If you want the colours in the positive, ask your teacher to invert the image by using noticed how the mines started disappearing. He wanted to show what mining was like, and the the computer’s photo editing soware. For Windows, right click on the image and people who work in it. Mining is very important in South Africa’s history and economy. If gold select “Open With” —> Paint. Once the image is open in Paint, simply, press and hold wasn’t discovered in Gauteng, Johannesburg would not exist as it does now! Gold and other down Ctrl+Shi+I metals and minerals are one of our biggest exports, however, the people working underground do not receive all of the profits made SHAPE EXPERIMENT WITH POST PROCESSING by mining. Do you think this is a fair system? Why/why not? Apartheid was an unfair system, as black people did not have the same rights that white people had. Goldbla thought that TONE Apartheid was wrong, and used his pho- tographs of the mines as a symbol Shadows Midtones DOCUMENTARY PHOTOGRAPHY is the POST PROCESSING is a technique similar to adding filters and changing the brightness or style of photography that records events, people, places and contrast on Instagram. Experiment with your computers photo editing soware (On things as they naturally take place in real life. It’s the type of Windows it’s simply called “Photo”) and play with your artwork’s colour, brightness and photography that you’d see in newspapers. Highlights EXPORTS are items that one country sell to another country. contrast seings! PROFIT is the money you make in your business A SYMBOL is an object or picture that represents something else. A NORVAL FOUNDATION www.norvalfoundation.org/kids EDUCATIONAL RESOURCE [email protected] IBRAHIM MAHAMA THEMES IN GOLDBLATT’S WORK LABOUR OF MANY ACTIVITIES HOW TO BE A PHOTOGRAPHER Draw a background for this photograph WITHOUT USING A CAMERA! REALITY Where is it taking place, and is there anyone else in the photograph? WHAT YOU’LL NEED NOTE: Remember to Goldbla wanted to replicate how the • Photo paper in a covered box keep the photo paper human eye perceives the world.
Recommended publications
  • Goldblatt 1830 Metres (5000 to 6000 Feet) Elevation, on Which Lies South Africa’S Largest Conurbation
    ons after 1834 to escape British domination. Also the Afrikaner youth movement. Whites A collective term for light-skinned people predomi- David nantly of European stock. Witwatersrand Afrikaans Wit = white + waters = waters + rand = ridge. Geographical east-west formation at between 1500 and Goldblatt 1830 metres (5000 to 6000 feet) elevation, on which lies South Africa’s largest conurbation. See Reef. Fifty-one years Xhosas An Nguni African people who live mainly along the southeastern rain belt. Zulus An Nguni African people who live mainly in KwaZulu- 8 February - 14 April 2002 Natal. ACTIVITIES AROUND THE EXHIBITION ROUNDTABLE DISCUSSION FRIDAY 8 FEBRUARY AT 7.30 PM The photographer David Goldblatt, Pepe Baeza, journalist and lecturer at the Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, and Alfred Bosch, professor of African History at the Universitat Pompeu Fabra, will discuss Goldblatt’s work and the South African historical and cultural context. Auditorium. Limited number of seats. For further information: Tel. 93 412 14 13 [email protected] The provincial and homeland names and borders used in this exhibition are those that applied during most of the years of Goldblatt's photography and before South Africa's transition to democratic government in 1994. © Courtesy of Edicions Bellaterra ing the National Party to power in 1948 and keeping it there Soweto From “South Western Townships”, Johannesburg’s for more than 40 years. “location”, the extensive series of townships in which African 2 pass laws Laws controlling the movements and residential rights residents of Johannesburg were required to live in terms of seg- of Africans, principally by means of a “pass” or pass book, signed regation laws regulating African access to urban areas.
    [Show full text]
  • Photographer David Goldblatt Chronicled Apartheid in Profoundly Intimate Images - Artsy
    07/09/2020 Photographer David Goldblatt Chronicled Apartheid in Profoundly Intimate Images - Artsy Search by artist, gallery, style, theme, tag, etc. Advertisement Art Photographer David Goldblatt Chronicled Apartheid in Profoundly Intimate Images Charlotte Jansen Sep 4, 2020 2:18pm David Goldblatt, Self-portrait at Consolidated Main Reef David Goldblatt Mines, Roodepoort, 1967. Courtesy of Goodman Gallery. Shop assistant, Orlando West, 1972 Goodman Gallery How can we understand violence? Over six decades and an extraordinary body of work, the legendary late photographer David Goldblatt sought to understand forms of violence—structural and primordial, visible and invisible—inicted not only human bodies and culture, but on the Earth itself. Goldblatt was born in 1930 in the gold-mining town of Randfontein; his grandparents had ed persecution of Jews in Lithuania and settled in South Africa in the late 19th century. He began taking photographs, Skip to Main Conatlebent it as an amateur, in 1948; that same year, South Africa’s right-wing https://www.artsy.net/article/artsy-editorial-photographer-david-goldblatt-chronicled-apartheid-profoundly-intimate-images 1/15 07/09/2020 Photographer David Goldblatt Chronicled Apartheid in Profoundly Intimate Images - Artsy SearchN bya atritoisnt, agla llPerayr, styty lew, tahse meele, tcatge, edtc. .It was the beginning of nearly 50 years of apartheid. David Goldblatt David Goldblatt Rochelle and Samantha Adkins, Hillbrow, 1972 Anna Lebako, a washerwoman from Goodman Gallery Soweto carrying the week's laundry to a … Goodman Gallery By the time Goldblatt began his professional career in photography in 1962, South Africa was segregated in every sense—80% of the land was legally claimed for white people, forcing millions of Black South Africans from their homes.
    [Show full text]
  • Marian Goodman Gallery David Goldblatt
    MARIAN GOODMAN GALLERY DAVID GOLDBLATT Birth 1930, Randfontein, South Africa Death 2018, Johannesburg, South Africa Awards: 2015 Kraszna-Krausz Fellowship Award 2013 ICP Lifetime Achievement award from the International Center of Photography, New York 2011 Honorary Doctorate San Francisco Art Institute 2011 Kraszna-Krausz Photography Book award (with Ivan Vladislavic) 2010 Lucie Award Lifetime Achievement Honoree 2009 Henri Cartier- Bresson Award, France 2008 Honorary Doctorate of Literature, University of Witwatersrand 2009 Lifetime Achievement Award, Arts and Culture Trust 2006 HASSELBLAD PHOTOGRAPHY AWARD 2004 “Rencontres d’Arles” Book Award for his book ‘Particulars’ 2001 Honorary Doctorate of Fine Arts, University of Cape Town 1995 Camera Austria Prize SELECTED SOLO EXHIBITIONS 2018 David Goldblatt: 1948-2018, Museum of Contemporary Art, Sydney, Australia David Goldblatt, Structures de domination et de démocratie, Centre Pompidou, Paris, France David Goldblatt, Librairie Marian Goodman, Paris 2016 Ex-Offenders, Pace Gallery, New York, USA 2015 Structures of Dominion and Democracy, University of the Free State, Bloemfontein, South Africa David Goldblatt, The Pursuit of Values Standard Bank Gallery, Johannesburg, South Africa 2014 Structures of Dominion and Democracy, Galerie Marian Goodman, Paris, France Structures of Dominion and Democracy in South Africa, Minneapolis Institute of Art, USA New Pictures 10: David Goldblatt, Structures of Dominion and Democracy, Minneapolis Institute of Arts, United States 2012 On the Mines, The Goodman
    [Show full text]
  • Steidl WWP SS18.Pdf
    Steidl Spring/Summer 2018 3 Index Contents Artists/Editors Titles Adams, Shelby Lee 63 1968 99 Paris Reconnaissance 113 3 Editorial 81 Orhan Pamuk Balkon Adams, Bryan 93 200 m 123 Paris, Novembre 95 4 Index 85 Christer Strömholm Lido Adolph, Jörg 14-15 42nd Street, 1979 61 Park/Sleep 49 5 Contents 87 Guido MocaficoLeopold & Rudolf Blaschka, The Bailey, David 103-109 8 Minutes 107 Partida 51 6 How to contact us Marine Invertebrates Baltz, Lewis 159 Abandoned Moments 133 Pictures that Mark Can Do 105 Press enquiries 89 Timm Rautert Germans in Uniform Bolofo, Koto 135-139 Abstrakt 75 Pilgrim 121 How to contact our imprint partners 91 Sory Sanlé Volta Photo Burkhard, Balthasar 71 Andreas Gursky 69 Poolscapes 131 93 Bryan Adams Homeless Callahan, Harry 151 Asia Highway 167 Printing 137 95 Sze Tsung, Nicolás Leong Paris, Novembre Clay, Langdon 61 B, drawings of abstract forms 25 Proving Ground 169 DISTRIBUTION 97 Shelley Niro Cole, Ernest 157 Bailey’s Democracy 104 Reconstruction. Shibuya, 2014–2017 19 99 Robert Lebeck 1968 7 Germany, Austria, Switzerland Collins, Hannah 149 Bailey’s East End 108 Regard 127 101 Andy Summers The Bones of Chuang Tzu 8 USA and Canada Davidson, Bruce 165 Bailey’s Naga Hills 109 Seeing the Unseen 153 103 David Bailey’s 80th Birthday 9 France Devlin, Lucinda 147 Balkon 81 Shelley Niro 97 104 David Bailey Bailey’s Democracy All other territories Dine, Jim 113 Ballet 145 Stories 5–7, Soweto—Dukathole—Johannesburg David Bailey Havana Edgerton, Harold 153 Balthasar Burkhard 71 129 105 David Bailey NY JS DB 62 11 Steidl Bookshops Eggleston, William 37-41 Binding 139 Structures of Dominion and Democracy 73 David Bailey Pictures that Mark Can Do 13 Book Awards 2017 Elgort, Arthur 145 Bones of Chuang Tzu, The 101 Synchrony and Diachrony, Photographs of the 106 David Bailey Is That So Kid Fougeron, Martine 119 Book of Life, The 63 J.
    [Show full text]
  • The International Center of Photography Announces Appointment of David E
    THE INTERNATIONAL CENTER OF PHOTOGRAPHY ANNOUNCES APPOINTMENT OF DAVID E. LITTLE AS NEW EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR New York, NY—August 10, 2021—The Board of Trustees of the International Center of Photography (ICP) announced today the selection of David E. Little as its new Executive Director, following an international search. Little will join ICP in mid-September 2021, after six years as director and chief curator of the Mead Art Museum at Amherst College, and will succeed Mark Lubell, who announced his departure in March 2021. “David brings to ICP an outstanding mix of skills and experiences, between his work as an educator, curator, fundraiser, and manager, and we are thrilled that he will be joining us,” said Jeffrey Rosen, ICP’s Board President. “His wide-ranging roles at leading institutions both within and outside of New York City make clear that he understands the different but interrelated elements of exhibitions, education, and community engagement that make ICP unique, which in turn made him the clear choice for our new Executive Director.” Little’s tenure at the Mead Art Museum at Amherst was marked by a record of successful fundraising, collection growth and diversification, and institutional planning that has strengthened the Mead’s curatorial program and its educational role within Amherst’s liberal arts curriculum. Little’s prior positions include time as the Curator and Department Head of Photography and New Media at the Minneapolis Institute of Art, Associate Director and Head of Education at the Whitney Museum of American Art, and Director of Adult and Academic Programs at the Museum of Modern Art.
    [Show full text]
  • David Goldblatt Ex Offenders at the Scene of Crime
    david goldblatt Ex Offenders at the Scene of Crime September - October 2012 opening: thursday, September 20th, According to David Goldblatt, his recent photographic project Ex Offenders at the Scene of Crime – a series of por- traits of individuals convicted of having committed crimes in South Africa, where crime rates are among the highest in the world, and the threat of crime an inescapable part of daily life for every stratum of society -- began as a question: My interest in ex-offenders arises from a wish to know who are the people who are doing the crimes and to get a sense of their life and how they came to crime. Could these people be my children? Could they be you? Or me? I have no ‘agenda’. Perhaps that is why very often ex-offenders talk very openly to me. I am not a magistrate or a judge or a lawyer or a social worker or an activist. I think that for some, this has been the first opportunity they have had to tell their story without being judged. The answer to Goldblatt’s questioning is Ex Offenders at the Scene of Crime, a gripping series of photograph-and-text portraits currently on view at the Elba Benitez Gallery. The photographs in Ex Offenders follow a basic format. Each is a medium-size black-and-white photographic portrait taken at the site where a crime was committed. All are accompanied by ‘statements’ about the crimes based on the words of their perpetrators – petty shoplifters, celebri- ty bank robbers, rapists, thieves, jealous lovers, police torturers and murderers.
    [Show full text]
  • Bibliography
    Bibliography Artists exhibited & represented Alberto Diaz Korda Aleksandras Macijauskas Alfred Gregory Alfred Hind Robinson Antonio Reynoso Arno Rafael Minkkinen Ashvin Gatha Atsushi Tani Ava Vargas Borje Almquist Bruce Rae Carl Warner Charles Henri Ford and Pavel Tchelitchew Charlie Phillips China Hamilton Chris Nash Christine Rendina Constantino Arias Miranda Cristobal Herrera Ulashkevich Daniel Blaufuks David Goldblatt David Lurie Edith Macklin Emma Parker Emily Anderson Eva Rubinstein Evelyn Hofer George Holz Gilles Berquet Giovanni Zuin Graham Ovenden Helen Lyon Hubert Grooteclaes Jamie Hodgson Jan Saudek Jerry Berndt Jesus Sanches Uribe John Claridge John Donut John Haynes John Stewart Jose Alberto Figueroa Jose Julian Marti Josephine Sacabo Juliet Van Otteren Karen Maloof Karin Rosenthal Keith Cardwell Klanger & Boink Kyo Nakamura 1 Lazaro Miranda Vera Lewis Morley Lewis Wickes Hine Lilo Raymond Margaret Casson (nee McDonald) Marie Andersson Mario Diaz Leyva Martin H.M. Schreiber Mick Lindberg Michael Woods Mike Roles Masaaki Toyoura Michel Hanique Morel Derfler Omar Badsha Paul Caffell Paul Kilsby Pedro Abascal Peter Bromley Phil Stern Phillip Trager Pierre Louys Pilar Macias Ralph Eugene Meatyard Raul Canibano Ercilla Raul Corrales Fornos Richard K Diran Richard Lancelyn Green Collection Richard Sawdon Smith Robin Hanbury-Tenison Russ Karel Sean Hillen Taneli Eskola Tansy Spinks Terry King Trevor Watson Vee Speers Veronica Sive Victor Sloan Wallace Wilson Wilhelm Moser William Carter William Ingram Willy Ronis Wolfgang Suschitzky
    [Show full text]
  • David Goldblatt's Intimate Portrait of Domestic Life Under Apartheid
    19/08/2020 David Goldblatt’s Intimate Portrait of Domestic Life Under Apartheid - ELEPHANT MENU 19 Aug SNAPSHOT 2020 David Goldblatt’s Intimate Portrait of Domestic Life Under Apartheid The photographer created a nuanced chronicle of South Africa from the dawn of apartheid through its collapse and up to today. One enlightening image from his long-running Soweto series shows a side of life that might be unfamiliar to an international audience. Words by Amah- Rose Abrams David Goldblatt, Makana Tshabalala and Ntsiki Kabane, Rockville, Dube, Soweto, 1970 © David Goldblatt, courtesy Goodman Gallery Snapshot is a new weekly series that zooms in on a single photograph to explore the context of an image, the conditions it is created within and its wider cultural impact. Photographer David Goldblatt created a document of his native South Africa that spanned his lifetime. The photographs he has left behind provide a nuanced chronicle of the country from the dawn of apartheid, through its collapse, and up to today. “I do have a sense https://elephant.art/david-goldblatt-soweto-snapshot-portrait-photography-19082020/ 1/7 19/08/2020 David Goldblatt’s Intimate Portrait of Domestic Life Under Apartheid - ELEPHANT when I’m photographing… tha t I’m recognising what MENU has been largely overlooked or not seen, and I have a sense both of its past and its weight,” he says in the book The Last Interview, published by Steidl in 2019. In 1948, a 17-year-old Goldblatt would hitchhike from Randfontein, the West Rand gold mining city he grew up in, to nearby Johannesburg and Soweto.
    [Show full text]
  • "The Camera Is Not a Machine Gun"
    Fred Ritchin | Reviews "The Camera Is Not a Machine Gun" At Kevin Kwanele’s Takwaito Barber, Lansdowne Road, Khayelitsha, Cape Town, in the time of AIDS, 16 May 2007. All photos courtesy New Museum I often wished during those years that I could be a lyricist with a camera. I would look at Edward Weston’s work and envy the freedom to be lyrical. I took great delight in his and many other photographers’ work. I envied them the freedom to photograph a landscape apparently without concern for the implications of its possession. —David Goldblatt, Interview with Okwui Enwezor, 1998 For most of David Goldblatt’s career, which began in the early 1960s, nearly everything that he saw was contextualized by the distorting prism of apartheid. The ownership and use of land, as well as housing, jobs, marriage, schooling and countless other facets of everyday life, were all powerfully linked to the color of one’s skin. Partially as a result, Goldblatt chose to photograph the manifestations of apartheid in shades of gray until, after Nelson Mandela’s ascension, his medium evolved into color. “During those years color seemed too sweet a medium to express the anger, disgust and fear that apartheid inspired,” the photographer told photo historian Mark Haworth-Booth in the beautifully produced 2005 book Intersections, a volume that precedes the exhibition “Intersections Intersected: The Photography of David Goldblatt,” on view at New York’s New Museum through October 11. Suburban garden and Table Mountain, Bloubergstrand, Cape Town, 9 January 1986 A member of a Lithuanian Jewish family that had come to South Africa to escape religious persecution, Goldblatt described himself as a “self-appointed observer and critic of the society into which I was born.” And he was, choosing a probing, dispassionate style of photography that sought complexity and nuance, rather than an overtly activist stance.
    [Show full text]
  • Media Release Deutsche Börse Photography Foundation
    Media Release Deutsche Börse Photography Foundation Frankfurt am Main, 31 January 2019 Deutsche Börse Photography Foundation launches anniversary year with “We love photography!” exhibition “We love photography!” exhibition curated by Martin Parr from 1 February until 24 May 2019 at The Cube in Eschborn Start of the programme to mark 20 years of the Art Collection Deutsche Börse On Thursday the Deutsche Börse Photography Foundation will open its ”We love photography!” exhibition. It showcases around 130 works by 56 artists from the Art Collection Deutsche Börse. The exhibition was curated by UK artist and collector Martin Parr and will run from 1 February until 24 May 2019 at The Cube, the corporate headquarters of Deutsche Börse, in Eschborn near Frankfurt. In 2019, the Deutsche Börse Photography Foundation is celebrating the 20th anniversary of the Art Collection Deutsche Börse with a large number of exhibitions and events. Under the theme “From another perspective”, it invited experts to share their views on this important collection of contemporary photography. This selection provides a varying, multifaceted glimpse into the primary artistic styles found in the Art Collection Deutsche Börse. The programme will be kicked off by Martin Parr, considered one of the most important personalities of contemporary photography. Martin Parr is a member of the acclaimed photographic cooperative Magnum Photos, a curator and collector. “After two decades of collecting photography, we have seized the opportunity presented by the anniversary to cast a fresh look at the extensive body of works and its history. Martin Parr’s endeavour in “We love photography!” has proved to be remarkably successful.
    [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]
  • Fall/Winter 2017/2018
    FALL/WINTER 2017/2018 ISBN 978-3-95829-357-1 Printed in Germany by Steidl Steidl Fall/Winter 2017/2018 Cover, endpapers and special “Asia Eight” pages designed by Theseus Chan Photography –October 1911 Bellocq talks to me about light, shows me how to use shadows, how to fill the frame with objects—their intricate positions. I thrill to the magic of it—silver crystals like constellations of stars arranging on film. In the negative the whole world reverses, my black dress turned white, my skin blackened to pitch. Inside out, I said thinking of what I’ve tried to hide. I follow him now, watch him take pictures. I look at what he can see through his lens and what he cannot—silverfish behind the walls, the yellow tint of a faded bruise— other things here, what the camera misses. Poem by Natasha Trethewey from Bellocq’s Ophelia STEIDL BOOK AWARD ASIA Woong Soak Teng, Ways to Tie Trees 3 Index Contents Artists/Editors Titles 3 Editorial AFRICA 4 Index 67 Margaret Courtney-Clarke Cry Sadness into the Adams, Robert 99-107 Abstrakt Zermatt 151 Recent Histories: Contemporary African 5 Contents Coming Rain Adolph, Jörg 17 Acido Dorado 159 Photography and Video Art from The 6 How to contact us 69 David Goldblatt Fietas Fractured Badge, Peter 157 and now they know 31 Walther Collection 75 Press enquiries 71 David Goldblatt Ex Offenders at the Scene of Crime. Baltz, Lewis 161 Asia Highway 89 Seeing the Unseen 117 How to contact our imprint partners South Africa and England, 2008–2016 Baumann, Daniela 75 Being Animal 109 Something So Clear 27 73 Ernest Cole House of Bondage Chan, Theseus 37 Black and White 83 STEIDL-WERK No.
    [Show full text]