30/04/00

Visatec Solo 800 B Photo Studio Light

The Swiss flash unit manufacturer Bron Elektronik has supplemented its product line with a compact unit which has a f-stop of 45 2/3 with standard reflector at a distance of 1 m (100 ISO). The output of the Visatec SOLO 800 B can be controlled continuously over 3 f-stops. The halogen modelling light with 150 W can be set to three operating modes: 1. Full output independent of the chosen flash energy, 2. proportional to chosen flash energy or 3.
"dim", which means that the modelling light is reduced during recharge and allows the photographer to check whether all flash units have triggered. The built-in infrared-sensitive photocell can be used to trigger several units in a time-synchronous manner. The supplied protective transport cap and protecting glass protect the flashtube and the modelling light from damage. The coated flashtube ensures precise colour reproduction. It is pluggable and can be exchanged by the photographer himself. The new device comes in a sturdy aluminium housing. The unique bayonet catch allows a rapid exchange of the light shapers. They can be turned by 360°. An extensive range of accessories is available for the Visatec SOLO 800 B. Ideally matched to the flash unit, it allows the photographer to shape the light creatively in a large number of ways. The new Visatec is also available in kits with two or three compact units and accessories.
Photo (c) Visatec / Bron Electronik AG - Tous droits reservés - http://www.bron.ch/

08/04/00

Morris Louis, Bernard Jacobson Gallery, London

Morris Louis
Bernard Jacobson Gallery, London
5 - 29 April 2000

The Bernard Jacobson Gallery presents a group of major paintings by the American colour field painter MORRIS LOUIS.

At the age of 41 in 1953 Morris Louis was introduced by his friend Kenneth Noland to Helen Frankenthaler. Frankenthaler showed him her 1952 painting Mountains and Sea. The effect of seeing this painting was so great as to cause Morris Louis to destroy almost all of his previous work. The freedom this gave him allowed him to break away from the cubist style of his early work and to develop a technique of controlled staining which took him much closer to his professed love of colour in general and that of Matisse in particular.

In 1954 Morris Louis painted his first “Veil” paintings, as the title suggests these consisted of skeins of colour overlaying each other in a large veil like shape, being unprimed, the colour bleeds into the canvas and gives a sort of ethereal immanence to the paintings. The size of the canvas and the all over nature of the “veils” led to the term “colour field” being used to describe his paintings.

After producing the first “Veils” Morris Louis returned to a more traditionally Abstract Expressionist technique which he employed between late 1954 and 1957, he subsequently destroyed 300 of these paintings and in Winter 1957 began a second series of “Veils”.

In 1960 Morris Louis began the “Unfurleds” . These paintings used a more porous canvas which allowed greater colour saturation and the new Magna acrylic paint which had a more fluid consistency. These technical changes allowed the painting a new spareness in which the larger part of the canvas was left blank and each side has coloured stripes falling inwards towards the bottom of the canvas. In 1961 Morris Louis concluded the unfurled series and began to paint the Stripe series, these paintings were somewhat reminiscent of Barnett Newman’s “Zips” being in the main vertical columns of pure colour albeit on an unprimed field. These groups of work in which the material nature of the painting is very much apparent were influential on the minimalist artists of the younger generation who were at that time formulating their ideas.

Morris Louis was diagnosed with lung cancer in July 1962 and died that September, leaving behind some 600 paintings in his estate. Subsequently every major museum in the world has acquired works by Morris Louis. This is the first major exhibition of the works of Morris Louis in London since 1979.

This exhibition is presented in association with the estate of Morris Louis, represented exclusively by Diane Upright Fine Arts.

BERNARD JACOBSON GALLERY
14A Clifford Street, London W1X 1RF
www.jacobsongallery.co.uk

07/04/00

Davies, Grauerholz, Kozyra, Muller-Pohle, Smith at the Museum of Contemporary Photography in Chicago

 

The Museum of Contemporary Photography, Columbia College Chicago, presents exhibitions by five prominent contemporary artists working with photography: John Davies (UK), Angela Grauerholz (Germany), Katarzyna Kozyra (Poland), Andreas Müller-Pohle (Germany), and Seton Smith (USA, resides in France). The works on view have never before been shown in Chicago.

 

JOHN DAVIES

In his silver gelatin prints, John Davies concentrates on investigating the modern landscape as it has evolved from natural to industrial environments. Although his work is informed by documentary photography, he does not present exclusively "objective" perspectives. He is famous for his ability to capture the "edge" between the urban and the rural, with precision and calculated detachment. These rich, black-and-white images of arresting open spaces reveal urban development both in and out of harmony with the natural environment.

 

ANGELA GRAUERHOLZ

Angela Grauerholz's work Sententia I to LXII, 1998, is comprised of sixty-two images housed in a specially made wooden cabinet that resembles a piece of antique library furniture, a fine retail display case, or, when closed, a tomb. To see the images, the viewer must slide the photographs from the case one at a time. The massive cabinet suggests permanence, importance, and authority. The photographs, however, are ambiguous and moody, soft-focus images of transitional spaces: windows, doors, railroad tracks, a fleeting glimpse of passers-by. This juxtaposition of image content and an unusual presentation raises questions regarding the veracity of information housed in historic archives and underscores the role of the archive as a place of intellectual "travel."

 

KATARZYNA KOZYRA

Katarzyna Kozyra made headlines in 1999 as the Polish representative at the Venice Biennale with her video piece entitled The Men's Bathhouse, for which she gathered footage by entering a men's bathhouse in Budapest disguised as a man and carrying a hidden camera. At The Museum of Contemporary Photography she is exhibiting a similar piece, The Bathhouse, 1997, shot clandestinely in a women's spa in Budapest. This video installation, comprising one large video projection and five video monitors, opens with Ingres’s painting The Turkish Bath. The painting, which depicts women as idealized figures fitting perfectly into a circular composition, provides a stark contrast to Katarzyna Kozyra’s video footage, which follows. By presenting the nude figure in its unashamed, unabashed form, she raises issues of voyeurism and privacy rights, as well as drawing attention to the fact that uncorrected, unimproved nudity is not often visible in our culture.

 

ANDREAS MULLER-POHLE

Andreas Müller-Pohle, a founding editor of European Photography magazine, believes that digital work is the purest form of the photographic medium owing to its universality. His Digital Scores I, II, and III, 1995—1998, are digital interpretations of the earliest known photograph, Nicephore Niepce's View from his Study, taken in 1826. In these works, Andreas Muller-Pohle has digitized Niepce's photograph, which presumably had an eight-hour exposure time, translated it into alphanumeric signs, and output it as ink-jet prints. The information contained in the resulting seven million bytes has been distributed over eight squares which are hung four across and two high, with each frame installed eight centimeters apart. In contrast, Andreas Müller-Pohle's video piece Entropia, 1996, shows an industrial shredder destroying photographs, lithographic films, and framed pictures. "What I don't see, I photograph. What I don't photograph, I see," Andreas Müller-Pohle has said.

 

SETON SMITH

Seton Smith's work Pale Guide to Transparent Things, 1997, examines the convergence of spaces: interior/exterior, public/private, real/imagined, past/present. This series is presented as an installation of large-scale (six-by-four feet) color transparencies mounted on light boxes and arranged on the walls and floor of the gallery. Recontextualized in the museum, the images interact with as well as change and add to the architecture of the space itself. Seton Smith's use of soft focus, tight cropping, and monochromatic colors alters the real objects she photographs, including Chinese-style chairs, seats in an auditorium, and institutional fluorescent lights. The resulting series of ambiguous images share a formal unity despite their disparate subjects. These images are unresolved, yet the scenes pictured seem vaguely familiar, as if recalled from dream or memory. "I create scenes, but they are open to interpretation. People project their own experiences onto them," Seton Smith says of this work.

 

Museum of Contemporary Photography, Chicago

April 8 - June 10, 2000

 

The exhibitions, presentations, and related programs of The Museum of Contemporary Photography are supported in part by grants from The Chicago Community Trust; The John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation; the Sara Lee Foundation; the Illinois Arts Council, a state agency, and the National Endowment for the Arts. This project is also sponsored in part by LOT Polish Airlines and Halina's European Restaurant & Deli. This ongoing series of exhibitions is principally sponsored by American Airlines, the official airlines of The Museum of Contemporary Photography.