Archive for the ‘Gear I Use’ Category

PHOTOLITA EXHIBITION OPENING AT FIVE HUNDRED DOLLARS, LONDON JULY 9TH 2010

Friday, June 25th, 2010

PHIL HALE 􏰀 TOM HUNTER 􏰀 MICHELE TURRIANI 􏰀 SIMON LARBALESTIER 􏰀 CHARLOTTE HEAL 􏰀 GUY PATERSON 􏰀 SARAH ROESINK 􏰀 RACHEL THOMSON

PHOTOLITA EXHIBITION OPENING AT FIVE HUNDRED DOLLARS, LONDON JULY 9TH 2010

PHOTOLITA is an antidote to Photoshop, reflecting a growing rejection amongst artists of the ubiqui- tous ease of a digital aesthetic. The artist’s role is to say no to the common currency and to find their own way. The group of artists in this show have chosen to work with analogue photographic processes, drawing on the unpredictability of light and the deliberate pursuit of chance. Away from the screen and in the sun- light or darkroom there is less control, and a directness that can be open-ended, creatively satisfying and risk-taking. The artists are guided by their own restless interest in the world, and their perspective in PHOTOLITA is the recognition of incomplete knowledge. The work experiments with the earliest forms of photography, cyanotype and van dyke, liquid emulsion, instant Polariod, infrared and panoramic film, pinhole and cameraless photography. At the opening of PHOTOLITA, Michele Turriani will be delivering a live black and white dark room performance and there will be a short documentary to accompany the show, filmed on Super 8 by Phil Hale.

ARTISTS IN PHOTOLITA

􏰀 PHIL HALE 􏰀

Phil Hale is a London-based painter whose work has been heavily influenced by his own experimentation in analogue photography. With film supplied by The Impossible Project (www.impossibleprojects.com) and a Polariod SX-70 camera he will take a series of black and white abstracted head shots of his fellow artists and writers in East London.The intention is to include the Polaroids unique presence as a relic of the event itself. Phil Hale was best known for his illustration work for Playboy, Stephen King, Warner Bros and others in the 1990s. In 2000 he made the transition to portraiture and fine art. His portraits have included Thomas Ades for the National Portrait gallery in London and Tony Blair’s official portrait for the House of Commons. His paintings hang in numerous public and private collections including Lords Cricket Grounds, the National Portrait Gallery, the Jerwood foundation and the Royal Portrait Painter’s society. Solo shows include Mockingbirds/Relaxeder at the Jerwood Space, and Urge Ourselves Under at Five Hundred Dollars, London.

www.mockingbirdsrelaxeder.com

􏰀 TOM HUNTER 􏰀

Internationally renowned photographer Tom Hunter uses a pinhole camera to photograph places of worship in his local area of East London. Tom Hunter graduated from the London College of Printing with a BA First Class Honours [1994], Hunter took his MA at the Royal College of Art, London [1997]. In 1998, Hunter won the John Kobal Photographic Portrait Award. In 2006 Hunter was the first artist to have a photography show at the National Gallery, London.He currently lives and works in London. His work is often particular, but not exclusive, to the community of travellers he knows as neigh- bours and friends in East London. He has exhibited work both nationally and internationally, in solo and group shows and is also a Senior Research Fellow of the London College of Communication, University of the Arts London.

􏰀 MICHELE TURRIANI 􏰀

www.tomhunter.org

Photographer Michele Turriani has over twenty years experience in the dark room often manipulating his images to stunning effect. He will be doing a live photography performance at the show, shooting directly onto 10 x 8 paper negatives. Visitors will be invited to take part and follow their image as it is developed, contact printed and displayed. Michele Turriani trained in Urbino as a graphic designer and art director. He moved to London in the 90’s and worked in the music industry with the formidable ADS such as Vaughan Oliver at 4AD and Rob O’conner at Stylorouge. He currently works in fashion, editorial and advertising with clients including Levi’s, Pirelli, Champion, Lee Jeans and Heineken. He undertook a live large format Polariod performance at the BAFTAS, photographing among others Claude Schiffer, Dame Helen Mirren, Diane Kruger and Juliette Lewis.

www.micheleturriani.com

􏰀 SIMON LARBALESTIER 􏰀

Photographer Simon Larbalestier’s hand manipulated monochromatic imagery combines characteristic beauty and melancholy with a documentary approach. Using a Hassalblad panoramic camera to photograph this landscape series in Morroco, he then individually hand prints and tones the images onto fibre based paper. Simon Larbalestier’s work has become emblematic of the legendary band the Pixies and his often surreal and macabre imagery has hugely affected many artists, photographers and designers. He has had many solo and group exhibitions in Britain, Europe, Scandinavia and the USA. His work during the 1990s and 2000s has moved through several landscape series in Italy, USA, Australia and India to longer term documentary projects in Thailand, Cambodia and other areas of South East Asia.

www.simon-larbalestier.co.uk

􏰀 CHARLOTTE HEAL 􏰀

Graphic designer and photographer Charlotte Heal’s delicately iridescent photographic series appears to document a new galactic landscape, revealing a fascination with the beauty and strength of memetic patterns in nature. Charlotte Heal graduated from the Royal College of art in 2007 and has been working as a freelance graphic designer incorporating her own photography and illustrations into her designs. Her clients include Laurence King, The House of Lords, Royal School of Ballet, Drama Fashion Magazine, The Poetry Society and Penguin Books.

www.charlotteheal.com

􏰀 GUY PATERSON 􏰀

Artist Guy Paterson approaches photography from his fine art print background combining screen printing with photo chemistry on light sensitised surfaces and conventional photography. His work reappropriates and reassigns obsolete industrial equipment, materials and techniques questioning our standing and perception of progress. In ‘1000 nails’ he uses the cameraless technique of the photogram to strip photography to its fundamentals allowing for a very typological approach and exploring the relationship between mechanical reproduction and individuality/uniqueness. His hand bound ‘sketchbook’ permits an indulgence into the tactile fascination of wet processing techniques. Guy Paterson teaches and inspires imagemakers on his alternative photographic courses at Central St Martins.

www.guy-paterson.co.uk

􏰀 SARAH ROESINK 􏰀

Sarah Roesink is a London based photographer, with a strong interest in recording the atmosphere of the moment. She works in various formats of photography including a self-made camera obscura and a collection of vintage cameras. The images here were taken with a pinhole camera, a contact print then printed from colour photographic paper. Sarah Roesink graduated in 2008 with a distinction from the MA course in Communication Design (pathway photography) at Central Saint Martins College of Art and Design in London and also has a BA in Fashion Photography from London College of Fashion. Since Autumn 2008 she has been teaching at Kingston College for Art and Design, in Kingston upon Thames, Surrey.

www.sarahroesink.net www.Ideologio.com

􏰀 RACHELTHOMSON􏰀

Rachel Thomson makes cyanotype shadowgraphs that map a history of her surroundings, including the plants, people, places and found street treasures in Hackney East London.Rachel Thomson trained in photography and print media at Central St Martins, where she founded her first print magazine Loop. She uses various process- es including photogravure and cyanotype. She is currently editor\producer of Imbroglio magazine and is the curator of PHOTOLITA.

www.imbrogliomagazine.com

FIVE HUNDRED DOLLARS 21 Vyner Street London E2 9DG

info@fivehundreddollars.co.uk

www.fivehundreddollars.co.uk

(nearest tube: Bethnal Green)

PHOTOLITA PRIVATE VIEW

Thursday 8th July 2010, 6pm-9pm

PHOTOLITA FILM SCREENING

Thursday 15th July 2010, 6pm-9pm

OPEN 9th July – 5th August, Friday – Sunday 12pm-6pm or by appointment and First Thursdays 6pm-10pm

Here are the four prints I will be exhibiting:

Zagorra Desert, Morocco, 2010. split selenium toned Lith Print, printed on my last stock of 16" x 20" Forte Museum G4, edition of 5. © Simon Larbalestier ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

Zagorra Desert, Morocco, 2010. split selenium toned Lith Print, printed on my last stock of 16" x 20" Forte Museum G4, edition of 5. © Simon Larbalestier ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

Sahara Desert, Morocco, 2010. split selenium toned Lith Print, printed on my last stock of 16" x 20" Forte Museum G4, edition of 5. © Simon Larbalestier ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

Zagorra Region, Morocco, 2010. split selenium toned Lith Print, printed on my last stock of 16" x 20" Sterling G3 , edition of 3. © Simon Larbalestier ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

Wired: Best Album Art of All Time

Friday, June 25th, 2010

Quote from Underwire:

Pixies: Come On PilgrimSurfer Rosa, Doolittle

Just as with The Velvet Underground, more bands (including Nirvana and Radiohead) were probably influenced by the Pixies than actually heard or saw the group during its ferociously productive heyday in the late ’80s and early ’90s. Those of us who did follow the Pixies around the country in those days were captivated by the brutal but beautiful music and art.

That graphically sonic merge was most capably illustrated on the Pixies’ EP Come On Pilgrim, full-length debut Surfer Rosa and crossover classic Doolittle, which featured deep and arty design and photography from Vaughan Oliver and Simon Larbalestier.

Like other stunning artwork produced for albums from the influential 4AD label, the imagery of the Pixies’ first three albums propelled alternative rock into the mainstream, where less talented bands like Nirvana built upon the group’s foundational artistry to achieve stratospheric fame. So-called alt-rock has sucked ever since.

Read More http://www.wired.com/underwire/2010/06/gallery-album-covers/14/#ixzz0rrSJxVSn

Come on Pilgrim 1987

Surfer Rosa 1988

Doolittle 1988

Bayeux Ltd in London.

Tuesday, April 20th, 2010

A big thanks goes to the team at Bayeux Ltd (Terry, Nick, Julie, Iris, Martin and Rob) for their professional excellence in producing the archival Lightjet C-Type prints* for my Pixies retrospective at Snap Galleries new flagship premises in the heart of Piccadilly London. You can find them at 78 Newman Street London W1T 3EP Tel: 020 7436 1066. Bayeux also offer drum scanning facilities as well as a host of archival papers and printing output options. Special thanks to Nick B for his patience in working with my images. They also offered me a free window display whilst the show is on! A hearty thanks to Miguel at Genesis who drum scanned Nimrod’s Son and Surfer Rosa’s #1-3 last year for me.

*A note on Lightjets C-Type prints:

Silver-halide photographic paper is fixed on an internal drum, where three digitally controlled lasers simultaneously expose the photo-sensitive paper (or back-lit transparency medium) with red, green, and blue light.  The print is then processed using traditional photochemical means. After which, the photographic print is handled just as any other photo-print. LightJet is a true photographic continuous tone process. Most deliver a final product printed on Fujifilm Crystal Archive or Kodak Endura paper in sizes up to at least 4×10 feet . Other Silver-Halide based materials can be printed on laser driven devices such as the LightJet. (Info courtesy of Wikipedia ).

Bayeux Ltd in Newman Street, London.

Lucy outside Bayeux.

Shelf on the way into the basement where it all happens.

My window display Lightjets

Private View of my London, Piccadilly Pixies retrospective at SNAP Galleries

Monday, April 19th, 2010

On the 14th April 2010 there was a small private party to celebrate the opening of my Pixies retrospective 1986-2009 and the first exhibition for Snap Galleries prime London location in the heart of Piccadilly.

Guy White director of SNAP meets Nimrod's son at the Opening Celebration 14th April 2010 of my exhibition "Simon Larbalestier Pixies retrospective 1986-2009" at Snap Galleries' new London premises in Piccadilly.

The man himself 24 years on..... Opening Celebration 14th April 2010 of my exhibition "Simon Larbalestier Pixies retrospective 1986-2009" at Snap Galleries' new London premises in Piccadilly.

Jack and Lucy at the Opening Celebration 14th April 2010 of my exhibition "Simon Larbalestier Pixies retrospective 1986-2009" at Snap Galleries' new London premises in Piccadilly.

Opening Celebration 14th April 2010 of my exhibition "Simon Larbalestier Pixies retrospective 1986-2009" at Snap Galleries' new London premises in Piccadilly.

The Surfer Rosas "Simon Larbalestier Pixies retrospective 1986-2009" at Snap Galleries' new London premises in Piccadilly.

martin with rosa "Simon Larbalestier Pixies retrospective 1986-2009" at Snap Galleries' new London premises in Piccadilly.

Spike and some of the Doolittle images "Simon Larbalestier Pixies retrospective 1986-2009" at Snap Galleries' new London premises in Piccadilly.

The Minotaur Box Set Limited Edition "Simon Larbalestier Pixies retrospective 1986-2009" at Snap Galleries' new London premises in Piccadilly.

Monkey Gone to Heaven and Seahorses "Simon Larbalestier Pixies retrospective 1986-2009" at Snap Galleries' new London premises in Piccadilly.

Surfer Rosa original Polaroids 1987 "Simon Larbalestier Pixies retrospective 1986-2009" at Snap Galleries' new London premises in Piccadilly.

Surfer Rosa original Polaroids 1987 "Simon Larbalestier Pixies retrospective 1986-2009" at Snap Galleries' new London premises in Piccadilly.

Glove and Gouge Away "Simon Larbalestier Pixies retrospective 1986-2009" at Snap Galleries' new London premises in Piccadilly.

Opening Celebration 14th April 2010 of my exhibition "Simon Larbalestier Pixies retrospective 1986-2009" at Snap Galleries' new London premises in Piccadilly.

Opening Celebration 14th April 2010 of my exhibition "Simon Larbalestier Pixies retrospective 1986-2009" at Snap Galleries' new London premises in Piccadilly.

Bones from The Minotaur series 2008-2009 "Simon Larbalestier Pixies retrospective 1986-2009" at Snap Galleries' new London premises in Piccadilly.

Some of the Minotaur series 2008-2009 "Simon Larbalestier Pixies retrospective 1986-2009" at Snap Galleries' new London premises in Piccadilly.

Some of the Minotaur series 2008-2009 "Simon Larbalestier Pixies retrospective 1986-2009" at Snap Galleries' new London premises in Piccadilly.

Some of the Minotaur series 2008-2009 "Simon Larbalestier Pixies retrospective 1986-2009" at Snap Galleries' new London premises in Piccadilly.

Sucker and Dragon Madonna from the Minotaur series 2008-2009 "Simon Larbalestier Pixies retrospective 1986-2009" at Snap Galleries' new London premises in Piccadilly.

Some of the Minotaur series 2008-2009 "Simon Larbalestier Pixies retrospective 1986-2009" at Snap Galleries' new London premises in Piccadilly.

Cuban from the Minotaur series 2008-2009 "Simon Larbalestier Pixies retrospective 1986-2009" at Snap Galleries' new London premises in Piccadilly.

Catalogues "Simon Larbalestier Pixies retrospective 1986-2009" at Snap Galleries' new London premises in Piccadilly.

Martin outside the gallery "Simon Larbalestier Pixies retrospective 1986-2009" at Snap Galleries' new London premises in Piccadilly.

"Simon Larbalestier Pixies retrospective 1986-2009" at Snap Galleries' new London premises in Piccadilly.

Minotaur now live on Domain Website

Thursday, July 23rd, 2009

My full uncut version of the Minotaur project is now live on my site. This marks a change in the look of the site and a hint of what it may evolve into in the next few months. My idea is to simplify my site, having only 3 bodies of work for viewing. The rest of the work will be put in my Photoshelter Archive where it can more easily be seen, referenced and searched. My blogs will work in two ways; Addenda will serve as notice board to notify current projects, reviews and links etc, the key blog site will be Cyphers which will offer a way for people to explore my working/thought processes more – it will include background material to projects, reference images and versions not seen anywhere else – it will cover the last 20 years and of course new work – images will be posted daily (or every few days) building up over time, a much larger picture of how I work and what themes recur in my work. Its function will be educational but delivered in the “bite size” blog format.

Important Note: The images on my website and those that will appear in the Pixies’ Minotaur Box Set are not exactly the same. Some of the images are different depending on their particular context and relationship to other images within the same body of work. It has within it, its own narrative and recurring themes. The bulk of the imagery was shot between August and October 2008, all of it in South East Asia and much of it with the small digital Ricoh GRD2 and the much berated Sigma DP1. Later images were made with the Leica M8.2. Had the M8.2 been available in August instead of November, the project may have taken an entirely different route. I haven’t given up film! Some of the images were shot with Leica M’s. The pairing of images is something that has developed out of my panoramic work and also marks a revisit to very early work made in the mid 80’s when I was documenting Italian Catholic and Greek Orthodox Churches. Revisiting the Pixies’ classic albums has acted like a catalyst for me and triggered renewed interest in themes that I will be reexploring in the next coming months in Europe.

Wound

Wound

Joker

Joker

Haruko

Haruko

Terminal

Terminal

Simon Larbalestier talks Pixies and Minotaur on YouTube (full length version)

Friday, July 3rd, 2009

The full length version of myself discussing the Minotaur Pixies’ Box Set and other related Pixies projects is now on YouTube. This was interview was filmed in Bangkok in May 2009 by Helen Kudrich, production and editing was by Neil Chenery in Melbourne. 99% of the initial images shot for Minotaur were made with the Ricoh GRD2 and the Sigma DP1. The images  were shot in Thailand, Vietnam and Cambodia during the period August -October 2008. However as the project expanded into 2009, more recent images were made with the Leica M8.2. The decision to shoot in digital and not film was a deliberate choice on my part,  to place the work in the context of 2008/2009 and keep it separate from the original sleeve images of the late 1980’s and early 90’s.

YouTube

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