The Wapping Project Bankside
London
65a Hopton Street
0044 2079819851
WEB
Gallery artists' review
dal 16/8/2010 al 3/9/2010
Tues-Sat 10-18, on Monday by appointment only

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The Wapping Project



 
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16/8/2010

Gallery artists' review

The Wapping Project Bankside, London

A group show


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Following the opening of Jules Wright’s photography, film and video gallery, The Wapping Project – Bankside, in October 2009, we are pleased to show a small review collection of each of the gallery artist’s works, prior to our first launch of a film collection by Elina Brotherus on 16 September 2010.

Elina Brotherus
Finnish, fine art photographer – highly autobiographical work, the content has been formally shaped by variously Dutch and French painting, impressionist landscapes and Cezanne’s mountain while never losing the essential Scandinavian qualities which can be recognized from the architecture of Alvar Aalto to the films of Bergman.

Peter Marlow
British Magnum photographer, whose tense filmic night shots of the East End (1981 black and white vintage prints) recall the post war images of Bill Brandt.

Lillian Bassman
92 year old black and white fashion photographer – Bassman’s stylized images recall fine pen and ink drawings and re-cast fashion photography as calligraphy.

Deborah Turbeville
76 year old New Yorker – Turbeville’s striking narrative images capture the underbelly of Jean Rhys’s Paris, and Eastern Europe before the fall of the wall. Turbeville took fashion photography into a narrative world that her young heirs attempt to emulate, while she continues to shoot regularly for Vogue Italia, amongst others, staying creatively one step ahead of the pretenders

Annabel Elgar
Young British photographer who stages precise photographs in which psychological trauma is palpable. She explores the dark side of British suburban life, misfits and miscreants and is regularly selected in international exhibitions to represent the best of young British photography.

Susan Meiselas
New York Magnum photographer, internationally acclaimed for her tough, front line images from Nicaragua, confronts sexual perversion in Manhattan (Pandora’s Box) with exactly the same unsentimental eye she brings to her war photography.

Stephen Morgan
Irish catholic photographer from inner city Birmingham accounts for the place in which he grew up in a series of intimate, thoughtful and quietly contemplative works.

Image: Elina Brotherus

For press enquiries please contact: press@thewappingprojectbankside.com

Opening 17 August 2010

The Wapping Project - Bankside
65a Hopton Street (adjacent Tate Modern) London SE1 9LR
open Tuesday – Saturday 10.00-18.00 hrs and on Monday by appointment only
Closed Sunday

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Peter Marlow
dal 23/5/2011 al 1/7/2011

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