The 34th edition features more than 80 of the world's leading fine art photography galleries with a wide range of museum-quality work, including contemporary, modern, and 19th-century photographs as well as photo-based art, video, and new media.
New York – The AIPAD Photography Show New York, one of the world’s most highly anticipated
annual photography events, will be held April 10-13, 2014, at the Park Avenue Armory. Presented by
The Association of International Photography Art Dealers (AIPAD), the fair is the longest-running and
foremost exhibition dedicated to the photographic medium.
More than 80 of the world’s leading fine art photography galleries will present a wide range of
museum-quality work, including contemporary, modern, and 19th-century photographs as well as
photo-based art, video, and new media. The 34th edition of the show will commence with an opening
night gala on April 9, 2014, to benefit Her Justice, formerly inMotion, which provides free legal
services to low-income women.
EXHIBITORS
The AIPAD Photography Show New York 2014 will feature galleries from across the U.S. and around
the world, including Europe, Asia, and South America. New exhibitors this year include Feroz Galerie,Bonn, Germany; Jenkins Johnson Gallery, New York and San Francisco; Paci Contemporary, Brescia,
Italy; Grundemark Nilsson Gallery-Swedish Photography, Berlin and Stockholm; Taka Ishii Gallery,
Tokyo, Japan; and Von Lintel Gallery, Los Angeles
EXHIBITION HIGHLIGHTS
Since 1980, The AIPAD Photography Show New York has been celebrated for exhibiting some of the
most important photography from around the world. David Zwirner will feature photographs that
address architecture and interior spaces. On view will be recent work by Stan Douglas of unique
places from his native British Columbia, works by Philip-Lorca diCorcia created in the 1980s of
intimate scenes blending fact and fiction, small-scale domestic interiors from the 1980s by Thomas
Ruff, and a selection of images by James Welling from his recent Wyeth series and his project begun
in 2006 about the Glass House – the iconic home designed by American architect Philip Johnson in
New Canaan, Connecticut.
Michael Hoppen Gallery, London, will exhibit a substantial and important body of work by the
Japanese photographer Akira Sato, noted for his graphic and experimental photographs of women.
His prints from the 1960s are extremely rare and have been hidden away until very recently.
A rare photo sculpture by Robert Heinecken will be on view at Robert Koch Gallery, San Francisco.
The tower of images that rotate on a central axis, Fractured Figure Sections/Beach (Multiple Solution
Puzzle,) 1966, is similar to one on view in a survey exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art in New
York through June 22, 2014. Powerful images by Heinecken, of a Cambodian soldier holding two
severed heads, will be shown by Chicago’s Stephen Daiter Gallery. Heinecken, best known as a
pioneer in the postwar Los Angeles art scene, probably used these 1971 works as early “sketches” for
his iconic images of the soldier, collaging it onto the pages of fashion magazines, which, in some
instances, he put back on the newsstand.
Bonni Benrubi Gallery, New York, will show the work of Richard Renaldi from his new book Touching
Strangers. A coinciding show, Touching Strangers Photographs by Richard Renaldi will be exhibited at
Aperture from April 3 - May 15, 2014. In his ongoing series, Renaldi randomly approaches people on
the street and pairs complete strangers together in his portraits, asking them to embrace or touch,
and creating spontaneous relationships brought together by the photographer’s vision.
Brazilian photographer Gustavo Lacerda’s Albino series will be on view at Catherine Edelman Gallery,
Chicago. Since 2009, Lacerda has explored the ethereal beauty of albino people who are often
marginalized and victimized. A new book by Lacerda will be published this spring by Editora Estúdio
Madalene, Brazil.
William Eggleston’s depiction of suburban Memphis from 1972 will be on view at PDNB Gallery,
Dallas. The dye-transfer print was shown in a 1976 exhibition at The Museum of Modern Art, New
York, curated by John Szarkowski. Work by Alec Soth including Peter's Houseboat, Winona, MN, 2002,
will be exhibited at Weinstein Gallery, Minneapolis.
San Francisco-based artist Jim Campbell is showing a new photo-based LED work at Bryce Wolkowitz
Gallery, New York. The artist currently has his first New York solo museum exhibition at the Museum
of the Moving Image, Jim Campbell: Rhythms of Perception, through June 15, 2014.
2Man Ray photographed many of the leading artists of his day, including Meret Oppenheim, a
surrealist artist best know today for Fur Tea Cup. The gelatin silver print of Oppenheim from 1931-32
will be on view at Hyperion Press Limited, New York. Paul M. Hertzmann, Inc., San Francisco, will
show a rare 1930 rayograph by Man Ray.
A nude by Edward Weston, taken in Mexico in 1925, will be a highlight at Galerie Johannes Faber,
Vienna. The silver print was a gift to the sitter. At Barry Singer Gallery, Petaluma, CA, a platinum-
palladium print by Irving Penn, Guedras in the Wind, Morocco, 1971, depicts women with their faces
mysteriously covered. A sequence of photographs by Duane Michals tells the story of a girl’s dream in
a 1969 work at Scheinbaum & Russek Ltd., Santa Fe.
Julie Blackmon is known for her often-comical depictions of young children in slightly surreal
domestic situations. Her new work will be on view at Robert Mann Gallery, New York. Also marked
by a surreal element are photographs depicting women stranded in nature by Dutch artist Ellen Kooi,
shown at New York’s P.P.O.W. Gallery.
The loneliness of being an obese young woman is acutely captured in a new book of self-portraits, Jen
Davis: Eleven Years (Kehrer Verlang, 2014), which explores issues of beauty, desire, body image, and
identity. In 2011, Davis lost a significant amount of weight. Notes Davis about her most recent work:
“You can almost see the realization on my face: I am open to myself.” A number of prints will be
exhibited at Lee Marks Fine Art, Shelbyville, IN.
Gygory Kepes’s 1939 portrait of his wife Juliet with one eye covered with a peacock feather becomes
an “eye” superimposed on another eye at James Hyman Fine Art and Photographs, London. In her
recent series My Pie Town, Debbie Grossman has created an imaginary world populated by women.
The images are based on 1940-era pictures of homesteaders and can be seen at Julie Saul Gallery,
New York.
Christer Strömholm almost destroyed his prints in the 1980s. They were saved by an assistant and will
be on view at Grundemark Nilsson Gallery-Swedish Photography, Berlin/Stockholm, for the first time
since then. The 1965 images of women in alluring poses are from a series entitled Place Blanche and
were shown that year in a breakthrough exhibition.
In 1948, Robert Frank visited Peru and made a series of images with a spontaneity that captured the
country’s expansive vistas and rural life. One image from the trip, depicting a young boy standing in
the doorway of a dilapidated room where plastic doll parts are hanging on a string like sausages, will
be on view at Alan Klotz Gallery, New York.
Matthew Brandt’s Dust series re-creates found images of old buildings being demolished. The images,
processed with dust from buildings currently on the sites, will be exhibited at Yossi Milo Gallery, New
York, along with work by Alison Rossiter, whose abstract photographs are created without a camera
on expired vintage photo paper.
Joel Meyerowitz’s new still life photograph of humble antique objects from Tuscany takes a painterly
approach at Howard Greenberg Gallery, New York. “These objects seemed to have a new life, as if
3once more they could express something of their character, which is a touching sentiment to give to
things that have been rendered useless,” notes Meyerowitz.
Zhang Bing pieces together urban digital information to create large-scale aerial-view maps of New
York City and the Forbidden City in Beijing. The photographs, which take him months to create, will
be on view at 798 Photo Gallery, Beijing. Christine Osinski’s images of Chicago from the early 1980s
will be shown at Sasha Wolf Gallery, New York City. Richard Misrach’s eerie 1970s images of the
desert a night, made using strobe lighting will be on view at Etherton Gallery, Tucson, AZ.
French artist Eric Rondepierre, whose photographs were shown by The Museum of Modern Art, New
York, in 1995, works often with frames from long-forgotten films, excerpting them and showing them
as large-format prints. They will be on view at Paci Contemporary, Brescia, Italy.
Kikuji Kawada is widely known, both in Japan and internationally, for The Map, a book of photographs
published on August 6, 1965, 20 years after the bombing of Hiroshima, which generated heated
discussion due to its piercing imagery and has been hailed as one of the most important photography
books of the last century. Work from The Map will be exhibited at Photo Gallery International,
Tokyo. The entire series of images from the book will be on view at the Tate Modern in November
2014 in an exhibition on war and photography. L. Parker Stephenson Photography, New York, will
show work from Kawada’s Last Cosmology, which is little known outside of Japan. Images from the
series date from 1969 to 1997. Collaborating with a forensic pathologist, among others, French
photographer Raphael Dallaporta, explores dying and its effects on the organs of the body in the
2010 series Fragile, also at Stephenson
Tokyo-based artist Izima Kaoru’s circular photograph Sentosa, Singapore (One Sun), 2006, will be on
view at Von Lintel Gallery, Los Angeles. Traveling the world, Kaoru tracked the path of the sun from
sunrise to sunset on a single day in one location. Using a fisheye lens and long exposure, he left his
shutter open from dawn to dusk, capturing the sun’s progress as it made its way across the sky.
Stephen Wilkes’ extraordinary day-to-night landscapes of New York City and San Francisco can be
seen at Peter Fetterman Gallery, Santa Monica, CA.
Taka Ishii Gallery, Tokyo, will focus on the work of Teikoh Shiotani, one of the renowned Japanese
Pictorialist photographers. A 1940 gelatin silver print entitled Dune shows a vast desert landscape
with tiny figures on horseback in the background.
19TH-CENTURY PHOTOGRAPHY
Charles Schwartz Ltd., New York, will show Robert Howlett’s renowned 1857 portrait of Isambard
Kingdom Brunel, standing in front of one of the largest steamships of the 19th century. Brunel, the
ship’s builder, was one of the most celebrated civil engineers of his time. Howlett was commissioned
to document the construction of this massive vessel, and the portrait he made of Brunel posed before
the ship’s immense launching chains became one of the century’s most famous photographs.
A romantic with a poetic eye, Charles Marville documented 19 th-century Paris and its surrounding
countryside. His haunting work will be on view at Charles Isaacs Photographs, New York, Hans P.
Kraus Jr. Inc., New York, and Robert Koch Gallery, San Francisco and coincides with an exhibition at
4The Metropolitan Museum of Art through May 4, 2014, entitled Charles Marville: Photographer of
Paris.
THEMATIC EXHIBITIONS/SOLO EXHIBITIONS
The work of Roy DeCarava will be on view at Jenkins Johnson Gallery, New York and San Francisco.
Since his 1996 retrospective at The Museum of Modern Art in New York, his work has not been
shown substantially except for a 2006 exhibition at Jenkins Johnson. Photojournalism will be the
focus at Monroe Gallery, Santa Fe, including images of Bobby Kennedy and John Lennon by Bill
Eppridge as well as previously unseen images of the Selma March by Steve Schapiro. Steven Kasher
Gallery, New York, will show a thematic exhibition focusing on grids. The gallery will present
groupings by artists including Miles Aldridge, Melissa Cacciola, Henry Chalfont, and Jerome Liebling.
Juxtaposition: History and Continuity in Photography, 1850 – 2000 will be the theme at
Contemporary Works/Vintage Works, Chalfont, PA, including work by Gustave Le Gray, Eugène
Atget, Brassaï, Henri Cartier-Bresson, André Kertez, and Arthur Tress.
AIPAD 2014 PANEL DISCUSSIONS
Saturday, April 12, 2014
Four panel discussions featuring leading curators, artists, and collectors will be held on Saturday, April
12, 2014. The panels will be held at Hunter College in the Hunter West Building, Room 615. (The
entrance to the Hunter West Building is located on the corner of East 68th Street and Lexington
Avenue, just one block from the Park Avenue Armory.) Each AIPAD panel is $10 per person. Seating is
limited and available on a first-come, first-served basis. Tickets are available for purchase at the Park
Avenue Armory during Show hours. Tickets will not be sold on-site at Hunter College.
10 a.m. | THE DECIDERS: CURATING PHOTOGRAPHY
Prominent curators from major U.S. and international museums talk about their methodology and
how the growing demand for photography exhibitions has influenced their decisions.
Moderator
Lyle Rexer, faculty member, School of Visual Arts, New York; curator; critic
Speakers
Corey Keller, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art
Nissan Perez, Shpilman Institute for Photography, Tel Aviv
Jeff Rosenheim, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
Johan Sjöström, Gothenburg Museum of Art, Sweden
12 noon | LGBTQ/PHOTOGRAPHY
Photography is no stranger to campaigns for social awareness and change. This panel discusses
photography’s role in serving LGBTQ visibility and equality.
Moderator
Chris Boot, Executive Director, Aperture Foundation, New York
Speakers
Philip Gefter, author and critic
Sunil Gupta, artist; Visiting Professor of Photography, University for the Creative Arts, Farnham, UK
K8 Hardy, artist
2 p.m. | PERSPECTIVES ON COLLECTING
Collectors discuss the current photography market and what motivates them to continue to build
their collections.
Moderator
Loring Knoblauch, founder and publisher, Collector Daily
Speakers
Fred and Laura Ruth Bidwell, Cleveland
Michael and Elizabeth Marcus, Boston
Artur Walther, New York
4 p.m. | FILM: EVERYBODY STREET
The filmmaker Cheryl Dunn screens her latest documentary, Everybody Street, featuring Bruce
Davidson, Elliott Erwitt, Joel Meyerowitz, and Mary Ellen Mark, among others. A Q+A will be held with
director Cheryl Dunn and selected artists after the screening.
Moderator
Cheryl Dunn, filmmaker
Speakers
Jill Freedman, artist
Max Kozloff, writer and artist
Jeff Mermelstein, artist
BOOK SIGNINGS
Adrienne Aurichio, wife of the late photojournalist Bill Eppridge, will be signing copies of the just-
published book The Beatles: Six Day That Changed the World, Rizzoli. Aurichio was editor of the book
and a long-time collaborator with Bill Eppridge. The book signing will take place on Thursday, April 8,
from 5-7 p.m. at Monroe Gallery of Photography.
Jerry Uelsmann will sign copies of his new book Uelsmann Untitled: A Retrospective, University Press
of Florida, on Friday, April 11 at 6 p.m. at Scheinbaum & Russek Ltd. A book signing with Maggie
Taylor for her book No Ordinary Day, 2013, Jerry N. Uelsmann, will be held on Friday from 6-8 p.m. at
Catherine Couturier Gallery. Elinor Carucci will sign copies of her book, Mother, Prestel, 2013, on
Saturday, April 12 at 2 p.m. at Edwynn Houk Gallery. Richard Renaldi will sign his new book Touching
Strangers, Aperture, at Bonni Benrubi Gallery on Saturday, April 12 at 3 p.m.
Verve Gallery of Photography will host a book signing for Brigitte Carnochan and her book Floating
World: Allusions to Poems by Japanese Women of the 7th -20th Centuries, Hudson Hills, 2013, on
Friday, April 11, from 6-8 p.m. Osamu James Nakagawa will be on hand for a book signing for his new
book Gama Caves, Akaaka Publishing, at Photo Gallery International on Friday, April 11 at 5 p.m. and
Saturday, April 12 at 3 p.m. A book signing with Andy Freeberg for his new book Art Fare, Sojourn
Books, will be held on Saturday, April 12 at 3 p.m. at Kopeikin Gallery.
Catherine Edelman Gallery will present a book signing on Saturday, April 12 from 1-3 p.m. for John
Cyr’s Developer Trays, newly published by powerHouse Books. The photographs include trays from
many well-known photographers including Ansel Adams, Bruce Davidson, Elliott Erwitt, Adam Fuss,
Sally Mann, Richard Misrach, Minor White, and Joel-Peter Witkin. A book signing at Robert Klein
Gallery will be held on Saturday, April 12 at 2 p.m. with B.J. and Richeille Fomento for their book
Circumstance, YellowKorner, 2010. In 2009, the couple photographed 50 women in 25 states who
were affected by the financial crisis.
HER JUSTICE BACKGROUND
Since 1993, Her Justice, formerly inMotion, has confronted the challenging needs of families in crisis
by providing free legal services to low-income and abused women. Her Justice has helped thousands
of women free themselves from abusive relationships, stay in their homes, and win the financial
support to which they—and their children—are legally entitled. More information is available at
herjustice.org.
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AIPAD BACKGROUND
Founded in 1979, The Association of International Photography Art Dealers (AIPAD) represents more
than 120 of the world’s leading galleries in fine art photography. AIPAD is dedicated to creating and
maintaining the highest standards of scholarship and ethical practice in the business of exhibiting,
buying, and selling fine art photography. More information is available at aipad.com.
Image: Akira Sato, Untitled, 1960. Vintage silver gelatin print, 11 x 14 inches © Estate of Akira Sato. Courtesy Michael Hoppen Gallery, London
For further press information, please contact:
Nicole Straus Public Relations
Nicole Straus, 631-369-2188, 917-744-1040, pr@aipad.com
Margery Newman, 212-475-0252, pr@aipad.com
MEDIA PREVIEW
A Media Preview will be held for The AIPAD Photography Show New York from 3:30 p.m. to 5:00 p.m.
on Wednesday, April 9, 2014. To RSVP, please contact Margery Newman at pr@aipad.com.
OPENING NIGHT GALA
An opening night gala for The AIPAD Photography Show New York will be held on Wednesday, April 9,
2014, from 5 to 9 p.m. at the Park Avenue Armory to benefit Her Justice, which provides free legal
services to low-income women. Tickets for 5 p.m., which include one four-day Show pass and one
copy of the AIPAD Membership Directory and Illustrated Catalogue, are $250 each. Tickets for 7 p.m.,
which include a one-day Show pass, are $100 each. To order tickets, please go to aipad.com.
Park Avenue Armory
67th Street in New York City
Thursday April 10 11 a.m. to 7 p.m.
Friday April 11 11 a.m. to 7 p.m.
Saturday April 12 11 a.m. to 7 p.m.
Sunday April 13 11 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Admission is $30 for one day and $50 for a four-day pass. Student admission is $10 with a valid
student ID. No advance purchase is required. Tickets will be available at the door