Friday, 1 July 2011
Julian Germain
Julian Germain (London, 1962) became interested in photography at school. He went on to study it at Trent Polytechnic in Nottingham and the Royal College of Art in London. He has published several books, including ‘In Soccer Wonderland’ (1994) and ‘The Face of the Century’ (1999). His first book, ‘Steel Works’ (1990), utilised a combination of his own photographs alongside historical images and pictures from various sources including family albums to examine the effects of the closure of Consett steelworks as well as broader issues of post industrialisation. Julian’s continued belief in the value of amateur and ‘functional’ images is also reflected in his recent book, ‘For every minute you are angry you lose sixty seconds of happiness’, published by SteidlMack in 2005, and also in his project ‘The Running Line’, a sculptural installation in Saltwell Park, Gateshead in 2007, of more than 139,000 pictures made by amateur and professional photographers of the previous year’s ‘Great North Run’.Since 1995 he has been working with Brazilian artists, Patricia Azevedo and Murilo Godoy on a number of photography projects which are conceived and executed as collaborations with groups such as favela communities and street children, who produce the imagery themselves. In 1998, the book ‘No Mundo Maravilhoso do Futebol’ was published by Basalt (the proceeds financing the construction of a library and community centre) and the ‘No Olho da Rua’ project has specialised in bringing imagery made by these marginalised groups directly to the public, in the form of posters displayed on city walls and most recently (July 2007) as a newspaper distributed free on the streets of the Brazilian city of Belo Horizonte.
Daniel Stier
In 2001 Stier received first prize at the renowned Festival International de Mode et de Photographie in the French town of Hyères. In the following year, his artistic projects were shown in diverse exhibitions such as the Centre National de la Photographie Paris, in the Fotogalerie Vienna, in the Kunstverein artrmx, Cologne and at the Singapore International Photography Festival. Numerous portraits of his are included in the collection of the National Portrait Gallery, London.
Suki chan
Education
Like many, Chan found the art school environment quite difficult in many ways. However, after graduating in 1999, Chan was approached by an art consultant working for Deutsche Bank and spent months producing a body of work for her consideration. Although this did not lead to Deutsche Bank picking her up in the end, Chan did not see the time spent on it as wasted, as it meant that she averted the ‘post-graduation’ slump many artists experience. Maintaining the momentum for her practice, Chan started applying for opportunities, building contacts that led to future opportunities. a-n Magazine was an important aide at this stage, as Chan found many exhibiting opportunities through open calls to artists.
Exhibitions
i like this image because of the extremely small depth of field
Like many, Chan found the art school environment quite difficult in many ways. However, after graduating in 1999, Chan was approached by an art consultant working for Deutsche Bank and spent months producing a body of work for her consideration. Although this did not lead to Deutsche Bank picking her up in the end, Chan did not see the time spent on it as wasted, as it meant that she averted the ‘post-graduation’ slump many artists experience. Maintaining the momentum for her practice, Chan started applying for opportunities, building contacts that led to future opportunities. a-n Magazine was an important aide at this stage, as Chan found many exhibiting opportunities through open calls to artists.
Exhibitions
In recent years, Chan has exhibited both in the UK and China, building an international profile. As an artist, she feels connected to both places, yet simultaneously in between both of them, a sensibility that is evident in her work, with its emphasis on fragmentation and liminal space. Chan also feels a desire not to be pigeon holed by labels imposed by others. In a sense one can see this in her work also – using tropes associated with both the East and the West and transforming them into something else.
Interestingly, Chan finds there are often differences in how her work is perceived in China and Europe, with Chinese artists often feeling surprised that her work is ‘very Chinese’ as she is (to them) Western, and Westerners commenting on her (and her works) ‘Chinese-ness’. Chan’s work niftily remains resistant to such binary comparisons, finding it’s own space between the two, using the formal and the material to explore ideas around cultural displacement and difference amongst other things.
Chan has also exhibited as part of the Liverpool Biennale, the ‘When in Rome’ touring exhibition as well as spaces in Canada, Serbia, Thailand, the US and Ireland.
i like this image because of the extremely small depth of field
Friday, 24 June 2011
jill cole
Jill moved into photography as a second career after working for twelve years as an agricultural economist. In 2004, with two young children at home, joined Cleveland College of Art and Design, to study for a degree course and graduated in 2008.
Wanting to find a way of producing work without travel or huge cost, Jill produced Guns in 2007. It was a way of commenting on larger issues in a local way. In this case, about how guns are present in our everyday lives.
Leading from that, Jill went on to photograph army recruits, noticing how young they were. This work won her the Fujifilm Student Awards in 2007. This was a great boost and as this was significant, Jill decided to revisit one of the recruits a year later. He had since left the army and Jill made a short documentary of him.
this image is interesting to me because it shows life in the split moment in which we blink we can miss something i love the short depth of field used in this image
this image is one of my favorite images of jill coles images because it shows the humanity even in the militant forces showing the pain in the soldiers eyes.
rut blees luxemburg
information on her career and life
Luxemburg studied photography at London College of Communication and gained her last formal education at the University of Westminster.
She employs long exposures to allows her to use the light emanating from the street only, for instance from office blocks or street lights in her photos.
Luxemburg created a series of images for the London Underground in 2007.
she also took the photograph for The Streets album original pirate material which was taken in London
i chose to use this image on my blogger because it shows the advertising that she did for The Streets along with the nice vibrancy of the orange/yellow tint to make it feel warm
i chose this image to display because it is interesting with the light and the writing on the wall, i like the layout of the image because of the different colours in the image
this is a portrait of rut blees Luxemburg the artist
Jon Burgerman
i like this image because of the vibrant colours and abstraction of his art it makes the images more appealing to the younger generation and it has a style of graffiti which is very unique
information on his life and career
Jon Burgerman was born August 8, 1979, in Nottingham, UK. He studied art foundation in Bournville, Birmingham, England, and thenFine Art at Nottingham Trent University. Burgerman has worked on artwork for a race-track on Sony's WipEout Pure PlayStation Portable video game and the book, Hello Duudle, made with Danish artist Sune Ehlers. He has produced designs for exhibition at the Science Museum in London, the Game On exhibition (2006-2007), and an exhibition about the Large Hadron Collider. He has collaborated with Media Molecule on DLC for LittleBigPlanet. In 2009, Burgerman teamed up with ustwo, a London based company, to create an iPhone application called Inkstrumental.jon burgerman also did some designing for nike in which he added style and more detail into the trainers
in my personal opinion jon burgerman is a very talented artist in all the work i have seen in his work
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