Showing posts with label Michael Hoppen Gallery. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Michael Hoppen Gallery. Show all posts

22/10/23

Photographer Ori Gersht @ Michel Hoppen Gallery, London - "The Unreality of Time" Exhibition

Ori GershtThe Unreality of Time
Michel Hoppen Gallery, London
20 October - 1 December 2023

Michael Hoppen presents the gallery first solo exhibition with ORI GERSHT (b. 1967).

For over twenty-five years, Ori Gersht has been exploring the relationships between history, memory and landscape using the language of photography. Often this has meant adopting a poetic, even metaphorical approach to examine the difficulties of visually representing conflict and violent events or histories. Ori Gersht’s work has the ability to transform a seemingly mundane experience to something ethereal and magical.

The Unreality of Time explores Ori Gersht’s innovative use of photography and technology through several bodies of work dedicated to botanical studies. Referencing art history, Ori Gersht's imagery is uncannily beautiful; the viewer is visually seduced by the often violent intervention of an explosion, caught on camera in fractions of seconds. These events are then processed, or rather, re-imagined as incidents in time. To approach this challenge Ori Gersht is often adopting cutting edge technologies which allow him to push the boundaries of photography, questioning its relationship with our notion of reality and claim for truth.

Amongst work spanning from 2004 to 2022, ‘Elephant 2’ stems from a series in which Ori Gersht searches for deserted grounds at the edges of cultivated gardens. “My intention is to explore the amalgamation of culture with nature; the failure to overcome nature expresses a state of mind as much as physical space”. The image was made during the short blossom season and the long, intentional over-exposure “invited the light to violate and fragment the film”.

It is the motif of fragmenting that has been a constant throughout Ori Gersht’s career. ‘Becoming’, 2021, explores the relationship between creation and disorder through the canonical structure imposed by museums upon their collections. Images of paintings drawn from the postcard collections of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, The Getty Museum, Los Angeles, and the Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam are printed onto analogously sized sheets of glass and then carefully arranged on a specially constructed wall that mimics a traditional postcard display. Order cedes to chaos as each wall of glass is methodically shattered. Recorded by the camera at the instant of destruction, a new space of creation emerges. In this photographic space, Gersht visualises the entropic forces that these institutional systems resist as the images shatter into dispersed fragments of collective memory, perhaps returning to the state of disorder from which they originated.

Curated in collaboration with Ori Gersht, this inaugural exhibition at Michael Hoppen Gallery brings together a group of works which all seek to explore nature, science, technology and identity.

Ori Gersht's work has been exhibited and collected by major institutions including the Museum of Fine Art Boston, Boston, the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Washington, The Photographers Gallery, London, The National Gallery, London, the J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles, and the Victoria & Albert Museum, London.

MICHAEL HOPPEN GALLERY
10 Portland Road, London W11 4LA 

07/07/21

Edward Quinn @ Michael Hoppen Gallery, London - Online exhibition - Edward Quinn's Dublin, 1963

Edward Quinn's Dublin, 1963
Michael Hoppen Gallery, London
Online Exhibition
Through 15 July 2021

Edward Quinn
EDWARD QUINN
Two Boys on a Bicycle, Dublin 1963
Vintage silver gelatin print 
21.9 x 26.2 cm

The Michael Hoppen Gallery presents an online exhibition of vintage pictures of Dublin by Irish photographer, EDWARD QUINN, which have never been shown together in the UK.

Edward Quinn is best known for capturing the lives of celebrities on the Côte d’Azur during the 1950s and 60s and for recording the enduring friendship with Picasso that enabled him to record the artist at work and play over the last two decades of the artist’s life. There have been numerous exhibitions and publications celebrating Quinn’s career but his 1963 photographs of his hometown of Dublin, have not received the attention they deserve.

Edward Quinn describes how he “rambled around Dublin from dawn until dusk, but instead of catching and noting words and phrases, I caught the little incidents of the people’s daily life and the atmosphere of the places, with a small unobtrusive camera”. These images would eventually be published in Edward Quinn, James Joyce’s Dublin, with selected writings from Joyce’s works, in 1974. 

All of the prints in this online exhibition were taken by Edward Quinn in Dublin during the early summer of 1963. They were hand-printed by the photographer and have a rich tonality that is typical of a photographer who is at one with his medium of choice. Some of the images were included in the 1974 publication and these have accompanying text by Joyce, as selected by Quinn.

MICHAEL HOPPEN GALLERY