Archive for January, 2010

Photography w(here)?

Friday, January 29th, 2010

The North East Photography Network in the UK is organizing a symposium and portfolio reviews on 13 and 14 March in the Mining Institute in Newcastle. Together with several colleagues from the UK and abroad I will be discussing commissioning and exhibition contemporary photography on Friday. On Saturday we will be reviewing portfolios during half-hour sessions. Check the NEPhotoNet website for details or to book a review, they’re only £5 per review!

Symposium Friday 12th March, 2pm – 6pm.

Portfolio Reviews : Saturday 13th March, 9.30- 2.30

The first major event: 2 days of  talks, discussion and portfolio reviews.   Explore some of the pressing issues facing contemporary photographers and share some of your ideas with our panel of leading curators, editors and practitioners . What new opportunities exist for  photographers? What are the pitfalls and how can we sustain our professional practices in the current economic climate? How are new photographic practices being supported and disseminated? Opportunities for informal and formal networking in a fabulous historic setting!

Photographer Sarah Pickering will be the key-note speaker on Friday 12thMarch. Round-table discussion chaired by Alessandro Vincentelli, Curator, Baltic.

Portfolio Reviews, Saturday 13th March: An exciting opportunity for one-to-one conversations with reviewers of your choice Each review will last approximately 20 minutes and booking is essential.

Cost: £5 per portfolio review session. You may book up to a maximum of 4 reviews.

Announcing cooperation with Dirk-Jan Visser

Tuesday, January 26th, 2010

The Road Less Travelled – Why people leave home to live illegally in Europe

“Fakhredinne is a 28-year-old migrant from Morocco who lives illegally in Brussels. His story runs counter to the popular idea of why people leave home for a better future in another country. In many ways Fakhredinne fits the stereotyped image of an illegal immigrant: a young Moroccan who has come to Europe to build a new life and earn money for his family back home.

But Fakhredinne’s life in Brussels is miserable. He suffers from Crohn’s disease – an inflammatory disease of the intestines, which in his case is accompanied by epileptic seizures and psychiatric problems. When I met him, he and 650 other migrants were occupying a building and on hunger strike to pressurize the Belgium authorities to push through their cases, but Fakhredinne had been ejected from the building after an episode of uncontrolled behavior. For a time he lived in a tiny room in a basement near the city center. Lacking any income, he was sometimes forced to steal for food. It was a big question mark for me why he ever left Morocco.

After meeting Fakhredinne, I decided to seek out his family in Morocco and found them to be fairly middle class, not poor at all, warm and full of love, with no lack of food or other material things. So why did he leave? Life in Morocco is not that bad, his life in Brussels is absolutely terrible, so why is Fakhredinne not going back?

Fakhredinne’s family say he was unable to cope with the realities at home, traumatized by the divorce of his mother and alcoholic father, and that he even attempted to commit suicide. His mother’s new husband considers him a dropout and a junk, and apparently does not want him to return. Medicines for Crohn’s disease are hard to find in Morocco and prohibitively expensive. This is not just as we consider the classic migration story. It is a universal story about the consequences of a traumatic childhood, the impact of a family history, which can take place at any time in all cultures. Each individual has his or her own way of coping”.

Personal motivations of migration

After working on the story of Fakhredinne and his family, Dirk-Jan will continue to investigate personal motivations of migration and the consequences of living in illegality. The current socio-political debate in many countries in the European Union focuses on issues of migration and integration. The debate makes the individual person disappear in statistics and figures. The debate focuses exclusively on the situation within the Union, and leaves out the people it concerns: the migrants themselves. This project will lift the veil from the unknown migrant stories, and will reveal the diversity of reasons why people choose to live a life of illegality in Europe.

Dirk-Jan will find several illegal migrants living in the European Union, he is particularly interested in getting to know these people, documenting their every day lives. Meanwhile he will investigate where they come from and reflect their story from here to the stories told by family and friends from the country of origin. Covering the stories of 5 individuals, Dirk-Jan has teamed up with project manager and curator Marc Prüst to create from these 5 stories a comprehensive traveling exhibition and accompanying publication.

The first part of the project, the story of Fakhredinne was produced for the World Press Photo Masterclass, in which Dirk-Jan Visser participated in November 2009. The production of the project has been made possible with the support of Fonds BKVB, the Netherlands.

More info: www.marcprust.com and www.dirkjanvisser.com

Text on Fakhredinne courtesy Rodney Bolt / World Press Photo

Commercially Speaking: Professional Portfolio Review Event

Monday, January 25th, 2010

The cream of London’s commercial agents gather for the first of Rhubarb-Rhubarb’s reviews beyond the world of Fine Art into commercial territories. In association with Direct, the UK’s largest Photographic Lighting and Camera Rental facility.

Rhubarb-Rhubarb’s reputation for its annual International Review is unprecedented in the world of Fine Art Photography. Photographers coming to the event have found representation and been profiled in some of the most contemporary galleries in the UK, Europe, the USA and Asia.

Commercially Speaking aims to bring the experience of ten years of the Rhubarb International Photographic Review to a different sector, yet one which is increasingly overlapping between the Fine Art and commercial worlds.

Partly due to demand and partly due to curiosity, Rhubarb offers photographers with commercial projects and aspirations the opportunity to show their work to some of those agents you just never can get hold of…

Reviewers confirmed so far include:
Angela Woods, Agent
Siobhan Squire, Agent
Charlotte Morgan, Morgan Lockyer
David Birkitt, DMB Media
Germaine Walker, Agent
Olivia Gideon Thomson, We Folk

Check website for more reviewers.

Saturday 20th March 2010, 9.30am – 3.30pm

Direct Studio
200-203 Hercules Road
Waterloo
London SE1 7LD

Cost:
£250.00 for 3 20-minute review sessions

Bookings:
For online bookings and full event details

Encounters along the Bosporus

Tuesday, January 12th, 2010

Photographer Nicole Segers and I edited  her latest book Encounters along the Bosporus together, which will be published coming February  by Lemniscaat Publishers. Besides the book publication, Modern Art Museum De Kunsthal in Rotterdam presents this work in an exhibition to open on 23 January 2010. Check out additional information on the exhibition here