| | | | Frida Orupabo: Untitled, 2019 Collages with paper pins mounted on aluminium © Courtesy Galerie Nordenhake Berlin/Stockholm/Mexico City Photo: Gerhard Kassner | | | JACK DAVISON OMER FAST FRIDA ORUPABO | | | | 30 September 2021 – 23 January 2022 | | | | | | | | | | Jack Davison: Untitled, 2017 (Abstract Colour) From Photographs, published by Loose Joints, 2019 © Jack Davison | | | | JACK DAVISON, OMER FAST, FRIDA ORUPABO Exhibition: 30 September 2021 – 23 January 2022 Starting September 29, 2021, the Deichtorhallen Hamburg will open »PHOXXI«, the Temporary House of Photography, a new exhibition venue in Hamburg. PHOXXI will present international contemporary positions in photography at the main branch of the Deichtorhallen, thus bridging the three-year period during which the southern hall, where the House of Photography has been located since 2005, will be closed for renovations. The opening exhibitions will feature works by JACK DAVISON, OMER FAST, and FRIDA ORUPABO.
The name »PHOXXI« comes from the artistic discipline of photography and the Roman numeral »XXI«, thus signifying a transformation of photography and the dialogue with contemporary conceptions of photography in the 21st century.
The exterior of the building was designed by the Berlin-based artist Anselm Reyle, who teaches at the University of Fine Arts (HFBK) in Hamburg, and whose work was presented in a solo exhibition at the Deichtorhallen in 2012. His colorful design for the facade places works from the F. C. Gundlach Collection, among others, in an exciting dialogue with his characteristic stripes. Reyle became known at the early 2000s for works whose formal language ties in with the achievements of abstract art and which have a fascinating sense of spatial presence as objects.
The 50-by-12.5-meter, multi-story building offers a total surface area of around 820 square meters to accommodate a large exhibition space, an auditorium, and office space. The facilities are rounded out with a cloakroom and shop next to the foyer. In addition, during the renovation of the south hall, some photography exhibitions will also take place in the Hall for Contemporary Art and the Falckenberg Collection, and the educational program will be continued.
Bridging the gap between historical photography and the digital present of the 21st century is the focus of the first exhibition projects at PHOXXI, the Temporary House of Photography. Starting fall 2021, the exhibitions by JACK DAVISON, OMER FAST, and FRIDA ORUPABO will feature expansions of analog photography into digital, three-dimensional, and moving images. | | | | | | Jack Davison: Untitled, 2020 © Jack Davison | | The use of existing iconic images forms the basis of the work of JACK DAVISON (*1990 in Essex). The London-based photographer makes use of a multitude of genres, styles, and techniques, ranging from avant-garde experiments to objective documentaries, and from mid-20th-century portraits to conceptual studies. His pictures seem like déjà-vus from the history of photography and are reminiscent of photographs by Max Ernst and Man Ray. Davison succeeds in creating works that have a fascinating sense of immediate presence. He makes use of the presentation aesthetics of online communities such as Flickr. Inspired by Salvador Dalí’s imagery, Davison plays with reflections of light and the targeted use of individual props, and thus brings surrealistic, dreamlike forms of expression into the present. | | | | | | Omer Fast: Still aus dem Film AUGUST, 2016 3D-Film mit Sound, 15:30 min Im Auftrag von Martin Gropius Bau/Berliner Festspiele © Filmgalerie 451/Stefan Ciupek/Julia M. Müller | | The Israeli video artist OMER FAST (*1972 in Jerusalem, lives in Berlin) reflects on the work of August Sander, one of the most important photographers of the early 20th century, with his 3D multi-channel video installation AUGUST. Fast depicts Sander as a fictional character at the end of his life, almost blind and haunted by the death of his son and the ghosts of the people he photographed. Sander’s groundbreaking portrait series People of the 20th Century, which he created from 1900 to the mid-1930s, also features in the film. Ultimately, it examines the question of whether photography as a medium can depict the truth about people and society. The narrative line between documentation and fiction, which Omer Fast deliberately uses in his works, is part of an emerging genre in contemporary art known as "parafiction." | | | | | | Frida Orupabo: Untitled, 2019 Collages with paper pins mounted on aluminium © Courtesy Galerie Nordenhake Berlin/Stockholm/Mexico City Photo: Gerhard Kassner | | The Norwegian-Nigerian artist FRIDA ORUPABO (*1986, lives in Oslo) uses historical images found on the Internet as well as pictures from colonial history, music videos, African-American media, and personal photographs to explore her own background and identity. Her extensive archive, which she makes public via her Instagram account @nemiepeba, forms a basis for her to understand, process, and reorganize the colonial legacy. Based on her collaboration with the American artist Arthur Jafa, which marked the beginning of her exhibition work, Orupabo brings her digital practice into three-dimensional space. Her collages dismember pictures of bodies, reassemble them with thumbtacks like brutally mangled dolls, or confront them with genre pictures whose context often remains unclear. Racism and sexism are prominent themes in these powerful works, which have jumped from the Internet to the real world via walls, tables, and floors. | | | | | | Omer Fast: Still aus dem Film AUGUST, 2016 3D-Film mit Sound, 15:30 min Im Auftrag von Martin Gropius Bau/Berliner Festspiele © Filmgalerie 451/Stefan Ciupek/Julia M. Müller | | | | unsubscribe here Newsletter was sent to newsletter@newslettercollector.com
© 20 Sep 2021 photo-index UG (haftungsbeschränkt) Ziegelstr. 29 . D–10117 Berlin Editor: Claudia Stein & Michael Steinke contact@photo-index.art . T +49.30.24 34 27 80 | |
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