Anger, Tenderness and joy. The photographer is fascinated by the different ways people relate to each other within the formal structure of the family. The show contains 21 photographs from the series 'In the Shadow of things', 'Divided Lives, the Villamil Family' and 'Autonomy, the Cariou Family'.
Kahmann Gallery proudly presents the work of our new photographer Leonie Hampton - Purchas (1978).
Leonie Hampton - Purchas is fascinated by the different ways people relate to each
other within the formal structure of the family. She has photographed numerous
idiosyncratic families in different parts of the world. Hampton’s photography celebrates
the intimate moments of tenderness and private scenes of confrontation that take place
constantly behind closed doors. ‘By immersing herself in families in Rome, London,
Cuba, Los Angeles and France, she has already confronted the needs to make herself
forgotten as the photographer in order to disturb the course of everyday life as little as
possible and therefore successfully captures those ‘little nothings’, which take us back
into the depth of actual life.
Hampton’s first book, “In the Shadow of things”, was launched last May. In this book
she follows her own family in their daily lives as she visits them, but reveals in an
extraordinary freshness of approach, working in a flexible and natural way, using colour
and ambient light, and no artificial effects. This lets her garner moments of tenderness,
children’s games, instants of anguish and pain. This is not a narrative or a story, strictly
speaking. Rather, it follows life and its threads as they weave together; taking us far
beyond mere demonstration and making us each look into the real world...’ - Christian
Cajoulle.
In 2009 Leonie Hampton - Purchas had a solo show at Foam Amsterdam after wining
the KLM/Paul Huf award. She also won numerous other prizes including the ‘F’ Award
(2008), Jerwood Photography Prize (2004) and an Ian Parry grant (2003). Hampton
participated at the Joop Swart masterclass in 2006 and had exhibitions at FORMA Milan
and Rome Photography Festival.
More about the photographer:
In the series “In the Shadow of things” Hampton photographs her own family. Even
though she portrays all the family members, she focuses on her mother Bron. Bron
found it impossible to unpack the boxes form the house of her first marriage, or to
reveal the problem to anyone outside the family. Leonie offered to help clear the house
with the tacit understanding that she would photograph the process. ‘So then I didn’t
want to move the boxes because then you’re disturbing the dust, and then you certainly
don’t want to open the box because the nice things inside that are all clean and packed
and tidy. So you don’t touch the box. You leave the boxes where they are. I just shut the
door and left it. And we lived in less than half the house.’ - Bron
We will also show work from two other series: “Autonomy, the Cariou Family – France”
and “Divided Lives, the Villamil Family - Cuba/ LA”. The Cariou family live an
autonomous life in the Provence. Their goal is to move as far as possible from the use of
non-renewable fuel. They get enough electricity from a 140-watt solar panel to provide
them with light and music throughout the year. A pump draws water from the river to a
tank. In winter they use solar energy to heat the water, as the river is too cold and the
current too strong for bathing. “The state puts everything into ones hands but one must
always work to sustain that materialistic way of life. Money serves to make the system
function and people become slaves to it.” They want to have as little to do with this
system as possible. Yanick sustains the family with his earnings from olive, apricot and
lavender farming. They do not have neighbours. “It is our choice to live unseen. It is not
easy to live in a different way with others watching. No neighbours, no worries. Maybe
one day we will have problems but we will find ways. To take the decision to live in this
way is a form of combat against modern materialistic life. And we will fight for that
decision.”
In “ Divided Lives, the Villamil Family - Cuba/ LA” we follow Felipe Villamil who was the
head of his family and a respected Santeria priest for the Afro-Cuban community in his
home town of Matanzas, Cuba. In January 1980, he was thrown into jail for an unproven
offence. After nine months in prison he was given the choice to leave for the US along
with 125,000 of Castro’s ‘undesirables’ or languish in jail for the rest of his adult life. He
opted for freedom despite having to leave behind his wife and family. He settled in Los
Angeles where he has built a new life, earning a living as a Santeria priest. Meanwhile
the family he left struggled on in Castro’s dilapidated Cuba.
Image: Leonie Hampton, Courtesy Kahmann Gallery
Opening: September 8th 2011
Kahmann Gallery
Lindengracht 35, Amsterdam
Opening hours: Tues-Sat 1-5pm