I will be showing several prints from Pierdom at this year’s PondyPHOTO in Pondycherry, India. The prints are part of a group show curated by Cheryl Newman entitled ‘The Kitchen Sink’.

The exhibition also includes works by Mustafah Abduliaziz (USA), Corey Arnold (USA), Marcus Bleasdale, UK, Antoine Bruy (France), Solmaz Daryani (Iran), Mitch Epstein (USA), Rose Lynn Fisher (USA), Stephen Gill (UK), Noemie Goudal (France), Tom Hunter (UK), Max Pinckers (Belgium), Yan Preston (China/UK), Alessandra Sanguinetti (USA), Nigel Shafran (UK), Bharat Sikka (India), Alec Soth (USA), Maurice Van Es (Netherlands) and Vasantha Yogananthan (France).

PondyPHOTO, a biennale festival initiated by PondyART, is a platform where art and education attempt to break existing social barriers, by presenting visually impactful photography-oriented events focused on today’s social and environmental issues in public spaces. The theme for PondyPHOTO 2016 is WATER.

I will be exhibiting some prints in the group show An Ideal for Living: Photographing Class, Culture and Identity in Modern Britain, exhibited at Beetles&Huxley gallery in London.

The exhibition runs: 27 July – 17 September 2016

An Ideal for Living uses photography from the 1920s to the present day to examine perceptions of class, custom and identity in modern Britain. A timely consideration of what it means to be British, the exhibition will draw on the work of 28 diverse photographers to present the habits, styles and routines, which encapsulate British identity through social aspiration, political protest and counter-culture.

The earliest photographs in the exhibition are Bill Brandt’s and E.O. Hoppé’s studies of the interwar period. These images show the idiosyncrasies of the British class at this time, depicting miners, maids and gentlemen in their homes, on the streets, at work and leisure. Another early photograph is Henri Cartier-Bresson’s sardonic documentation of the crowds during the coronation of King George VI in 1937.

The post-war period is represented by Frank Habicht’s photographs showing the spirit on the 1960s, a period when libertarian attitudes were expressed through fashion, design and political activism. John Bulmer’s images of the same time provide a contrasting view of this decade with photographs of working class communities in the north of England and Charlie Phillips’ photographs document the integration of black communities into British towns and cities. Also from this period, Bruce Davidson’s photographs of nannies in Hyde Park and mining communities in Wales show the continuation of British traditions in the 1960s.

The political unrest and social divides of the 1970s and 1980s are represented by Syd Shelton’s images of the Battle of Lewisham in 1977, Philip Jones Griffith’s photograph of a young soldier in Northern Island, Neil Libbert’s reportage of the 1981 Brixton riots, the bleakly cinematic images of Glasgow by Raymond Depardon and Richard Billingham’s hard-hitting series Ray’s A Laugh. The emergence of a defined youth culture and identity is shown through Derek Ridgers iconic photographs of skinheads and punks contrasted with Jürgen Schadeberg’s photographs at the other end of the spectrum of unruly students at a May Ball in Cambridge. These images are juxtaposed with Martin Parr and Peter Dench’s wry and humorous studies of the British at leisure in the same period.

The most recent work in the exhibition is by Anna Fox, James Morris and Simon Roberts whose work collectively explores social identity in contemporary Britain through photographs of the modern British environment, in the countryside and city.

I will be exhibiting several prints from my Motherland and Polyarnye Nochi series in the group show- Northern Light: Landscape Photography and Evocations of the North.

The exhibition and related conference explores the ways that photographic images address notions of a Northern landscape – whether drawing on established traditions of art and photography or whether concerned with contemporary photographic and lens based practice.  The conference will bring together scholars and practitioners to discuss a wide range of practices and critical approaches, from both contemporary and historical perspectives.

The exhibition – to be held in the SIA Gallery, Sheffield Hallam University – will open for a private view on July 4th and will then be open to the public until July 31st.

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Where:
Sheffield Hallam University – Howard Street, Sheffield S1 1WB, United Kingdom – View Map

The premise of the exhibition is to explore what constitutes contemporary photographic practice in relation to Northern Landscape and its representations.   We welcome a diversity of responses ranging from documentary to experimental.

Flowers Gallery will be participating at AIPAD – The Photography Show, exhibiting some of my prints.

Preview: Wednesday April 13, 5-9pm

Flowers Gallery is pleased to announce that we are now members of The Association of International Photography Art Dealers [AIPAD], which has become a unifying force in the field of photography. Celebrating its 36th year in 2016, The Photography Show will be held in Manhattan’s Upper East Side at the Park Avenue Armory with more than 80 of the world’s leading photography art galleries. Flowers Gallery will exhibit work by Boomoon, Nadav Kander, Scarlett Hooft Graafland, Simon Roberts and Shen Wei.
To view work visit: http://www.flowersgallery.com/exhibitions/view/aipad-the-photography-show
With members in the United States, Australia, Canada, Europe and Japan, The Association of International Photography Art Dealers [AIPAD] has become a unifying force in the field of photography. Celebrating its 36th year in 2016, The Photography Show will be held in Manhattan’s Upper East Side at the Park Avenue Armory with more than 80 of the world’s leading photography art galleries exhibiting, including Flowers Gallery.

I will have works included in the Small is Beautiful exhibitions taking place at Flowers Gallery in London and New York. For this annual exhibition, contemporary artists working in all media are challenged to produce works with a fixed economy of scale, each piece measuring no more than 9 x 7 inches.

Small is Beautiful: New York
19 November 2015 – 2 January 2016
Opening Reception Thursday 19 November 6-8pm
Details: http://www.flowersgallery.com/exhibitions/view/small-is-beautiful-1

Small is Beautiful: London
9 December 2015 – 2 January 2016
Details: http://www.flowersgallery.com/exhibitions/view/small-is-beautiful-london-2015

I will be exhibiting photographs from my Polyarnye Nochi series (Polar Nights) at Baker Mamonova gallery in St. Leonards-on-Sea from November 20th-December 2nd 2015.
 
The exhibition opens on Friday 20th November when I will also be giving an artist talk about my work in Russia, hosted in the Kino-Teatr at Baker Mamonova. The event starts at 6.30pm.
 
Baker Mamonova have been exhibiting the best of 20th Century Russian Art since 2001and have collaborated with the State Tretyakov Gallery, Pushkin House, Belgravia Gallery and other locations in the UK and the USA.

As part of the Pierdom exhibition at Brighton Museum and Art Gallery, we are hosting a series of short talks exploring the history of British Piers along with related artworks in the Museum’s collection.

All of the events are free to attend (with an admission ticket) and take place in the Pierdom Exhibition gallery.

Brighthelmstone, Sussex (1824) by Joseph M W Turner
A special opportunity to see Turner’s depiction of Brighton at the height of the city’s development, With Fine Art Curator Jenny Lund.
Tuesday 27 October 12:00pm – 1:00pm

Passion for Piers
Explore the personality, architecture and history of British piers made before 1914, With Explainer Jackie Marsh-Hobbs.
Tuesday 10 November 12:00pm – 1:00pm

Passion for Piers
Take a closer look at the history and architecture of the West Pier, with explainer Michael Carey.
Tuesday 22 December 12:00pm – 1:00pm

Passion for Piers
Explore the delights and disasters that feature in the history of British piers made after 1914, with explainer Jackie Marsh-Hobbs.
Tuesday 29 December 12:00pm – 1:00pm

More information about the Bite-Size Museum events can be found here.

 

I have been selected by Stephen Doherty to participate in the ING Discerning Eye Exhibition this November at the Mall Galleries, London.

The Discerning Eye annual exhibition is a show of small works independently selected by six prominent figures from different areas of the art world: two artists, two collectors and two critics. Work is selected from open submission and from artists invited by the individual selectors. Each selector’s section is hung separately giving the impression of six small exhibitions within the whole.

Stephen Doherty is the Director of Visitor Communications for Somerset House in London where he has mounted a variety of free exhibitions. For nearly 20 years he worked for the V&A, where he managed travelling exhibitions and curated fashion performances in the Museum’s galleries.

The 2015 ING Discerning Eye Exhibition will be held at the Mall Galleries, The Mall, London SW1, and will be open to the public daily from Thursday 12 November until Sunday 22 November 2015. Entrance will be free and all works will be for sale.

I will be showing six pieces from my New Vedute series.

Back and Forth is an exhibition of ten artists who have recently passed through the IED Madrid school: five of them as students, the other half, as teachers. It is also a selection of works that reflect the world we live in, from the point of view of contemporary lens-based art. Needless to say that there are common subjects, such as landscapes and still-lives, portraits and street-life. However, all of the participating artists make use of a visual language that combines formal clarity, technical brilliance and a sound understanding of what photography is, or might be, in the second decade of the twenty-first century.

More details here: http://www.pip919.com/33/170119514.html

Curator: Moritz Neumüller

Artists:

Ricardo Cases (Spain)

Stephen Chalmers (US)

Edmund Clark (UK)

Anna Fawcus (Australia)

Jorge Fuembuena (Spain)

Vivek Manek (India)

Marta Mantyka (Poland)

Simon Roberts (UK)

Han Shuo (China)

Joan Villaplana (Spain)

The final leg of the Pierdom national exhibition tour concludes at Brighton Museum & Art Gallery this winter.

All of the works from the 2014 summer tour will come together at the Museum from 3rd October 2015 – 21st February 2016.

In addition to the photographic prints the exhibition will feature film material exploring my working process, items from the Museum’s local history archive and personal stories of seaside memories. Visitors will be invited to share their ‘pier stories’ on a display panel within the exhibition.

For more information visit the Brighton Museums website here.

The exhibition is made in collaboration with Flowers Gallery and has been made possible with the help of Arts Council England, Spectrum Photographic and Dyson Art.

 

Flowers logo Black Print

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Dyson Logo - Writing up the side