Showing posts with label Budapest. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Budapest. Show all posts

2.13.2015

SYLVIA PLACHY: Mai Manó Haz, Budapest

  In The Shadow of the ElephantPhotograph © Sylvia Plachy

“Not since Robert Frank's 'The Americans' have I experienced a body of work of such range and power. She makes me laugh and she breaks my heart. She is moral. She is everything a photographer should be.”–Richard Avedon 


Photograph © Sylvia Plachy

Jean Michel Basquiat.  Photograph © Sylvia Plachy
 
Adrien Brody as Richie Rude in Spike Lee's Summer of Sam
Photograph © Sylvia Plachy

“I couldn't take my eyes off him. Here was this vibrant little being; his emotions mirrored in his face.”–Sylvia Plachy 

Her son – the Oscar-winner Adrien Brody – was born in 1973 and became her constant model. The photographs of her son are integral part of her oeuvre and, to this day, she wishes her friends and acquaintances happy holidays each year with a picture taken of Adrien in that given year.
Night Mare.  Photograph © Sylvia Plachy

 Recoleta Argentina.  Photograph © Sylvia Plachy

Sylvia often visited Kertész; they talked a lot about life and photography, and gradually a deep friendship developed between them. “I have never seen the moment sensed and caught on film with more intimacy and humanity." – Kertész said of Sylvia and her work.


 Dora and Marika.  Photograph © Sylvia Plachy
"The 110 images from Sylvia Plachy's exhibition, When Will It Be Tomorrow, opening at the Hungarian Photographer’s House in Budapest, are selected from her entire oeuvre with neither the places they were taken at, nor their theme playing a role in their inclusion, but they are chosen if they are attracted by the title’s question." Gabriella Csizek, the curator of the exhibition writes, "The installation adheres to a logic of poetry. The individual walls are verses, bringing the halls and the exhibition as whole together into a poem, a series of poems. The sequences of images created through associations, emotions, and meanings are sometimes painful and eternally lonely. Still at times, they put a smile on our faces."

"Sylvia Plachy's humanism and commitment to truth," continues Ms. Csizek in her introduction to the show, “are not in the harmonious presentation of the world or in search of its beauty; instead, she makes us see the back story with an almost imperceptible subtlety. She sees the fallibility of human existence and reveals cracks and layers of fragility in the faces or course of events. She senses the moment and converts this feeling into an image mapped onto light-sensitive paper. She often conceals her portraits, almost displaying them as quasi-still lifes. Her subjects are never beautiful or ugly; they are people who are just who they have become and who they could be. Sylvia holds a soul-mirror in the form of a camera in her hand. All of her images are a piece of fiction, yet genuinely real at the same time. She never finishes a story but shows it, thus giving life to the image."
SYLVIA PLACHY
When Will It Be Tomorrow
February 15 – April 19, 2015
Hungarian Photographer’s House / Mai Manó Haz
1065 Budapest-Terézváros, Nagymezõ utca 20

Sylvia Plachy, 2014.  Photograph ©Elizabeth Paul Avedon


In 1956, after the revolution, the world-famous Budapest-born photographer, Sylvia Plachy, crossed the Austrian border with her parents. Part of the way they were hidden by corn in a horse-drawn farm cart. Two years later the family settled in the New York area, where she has been living with her family since then. She took her first photographs in the Austrian Alps at the age of 15 during a school trip with an Agfa Box camera a gift from her father. The picture was  of a black goat in the snow-covered white landscape.

She began taking photographs during her studies at Pratt Institute in 1964, learning the basics of the craft during a photography course she took in her junior year; she then realized that she had found her calling. Sice 1974, for thirty years, Plachy was an influential staff photographer of the Village Voice, a cultural weekly newspaper in New York. For eight of those years, she had a column, UNGUIDED TOUR and on the contents page in one image per week and without words she was the city’s peculiar chronicler. Her first book, Unguided Tour came with a record by Tom Waits and featured selected images from the column and from her other Voice assignments. It won ICP’s Infinity award for best publication in 1990. Her next book Red Light (1996) was followed by Signs + Relics (1999), then Self Portrait with Cows Going Home, which received a Golden Light Award in 2004. She subsequently published Going on About Town (2007) and Out of the Corner of My Eye (2008).

Her photography work has been accompanied by continuous success and recognition. In 1977, she received a Guggenheim Fellowship. In 2004, the WIPI (Women in Photography International) gave her a Lucie Award. In 2009, she was given the Dr. Erich Salomon award by the German Society for Photography (DGPh) for her lifetime achievement in photojournalism.

Her photographs have appeared in Vogue, Camera Arts, Artforum, The New York Times, Granta, Grand Street, Newsweek, Conde Nast Traveler, Metropolis Magazine, and New Yorker. She has had multiple solo shows around the globe from Tokyo to Los Angeles. Her works are in private and museum collections including, amongst others, Guggenheim Museum (NYC), Museum of Modern Art (NYC), San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, Bibliothèque Nationale de France (Paris).

In her life and images, Sylvia Plachy sustains what Central European roots mean for her. She looks back at her first thirteen years in Hungary as a decisive period of her life, cherishing childhood friendships and using the values of her parents as her inner compass to guide her to this day. Starting in 1965, she returned frequently, like a pilgrim.  She visited her grandmother, her friends and the smells and scenes of her childhood.  Her newfound language, photography was the bridge that connected past and present.

The title of the exhibition, When Will It Be Tomorrow, is a sentence from her childhood she used to ask before going to bed. She intends to give this title to her next book as well.
or thirty years, Sylvia Plachy was an influential staff photographer of the Village Voice, a cultural weekly newspaper in New York. For eight of those years, she had a column, the title most of the time was UNGUIDED TOUR and on the contents page in one image per week and without words she was the city’s peculiar chronicler. Her first book, the legendary Unguided Tour came with a record by Tom Waits i and featured selected images from the column and from her other Voice assignments. it won ICP’s Infinity award for best publication in 1990. (text provided by sylviaplachy.com)

2.03.2011

THOMAS KELLNER: Photography In Art

London, Tower Bridge, 2001
Photograph (c) Thomas Kellner /All Rights Reserved

(click to enlarge these images)

Budapest Parliament, 2006
Photograph (c) Thomas Kellner /All Rights Reserved

Monaco, Royal Palace, 2006
Photograph (c) Thomas Kellner /All Rights Reserved

Beijing, Great Wall of Mutianyu 1, 2006
Photograph (c) Thomas Kellner /All Rights Reserved

"Each photographic work is made up of horizontally placed film strips of up to 1,269 individual pictures. Every single one of these smaller images was taken with the camera from a slightly shifted perspective and subsequently combined into an overall picture, creating an entirely new image."

"To approach something like The Great Wall of China is much more complicated than it looks. Once you reach one of the accessible parts of The Wall, you have to walk, climb, and tumble up and down the path on top of the Wall and the many stairs that have been polished by the feet of thousands and thousands of soldiers, and later by millions of tourists. You have to get away from the mass tourism to find a place of silence. In the way that I work, it is not possible to photograph more than just a little piece out of the thousands of miles of this wall. It takes hours to expose 25 roles of 36-exposure film, or 900 shots, to be finished before the sunset, smog and fog enter the frame. In this image, I started with sunshine in the bottom of the image and ended with less sun towards the top."–Thomas Kellner


German born artist/photographer, Thomas Kellner, creates large scale images that combine photography, collage and moving pictures. His final images are contact prints of the films he shoots—the more film, the larger the final image. If he shoots one film, the size is 20cmx24cm; if he shoots 36 films, the print is 100cmx120cm. Read more here