Among the myriad exhibitions in the Yaesu district, the T3 Photo Festival Tokyo offers a view on the construction of masculinity through the lens of the image. Curated by Mika Kobayashi, the exhibition "Where did this ‘masculinity’ come from?" echoes the fiftieth anniversary of the landmark exhibition opened at MoMA in 1974, which sought to gather and shed light on the vibrant photographic creation in Japan. While that exhibition allowed…
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The Eye of Photography is the ultimate digital magazine where everything about photography art is published daily, highlighted, discussed and archived for all professionals and amateurs, in English and French. Its Agenda compiles the most comprehensive selection of photography events in the world (photography exhibitions, art fairs, awards, lectures, workshops…).
The Japanese T3 Photo Fair Asia held its first edition from Friday, October 18, to Monday, October 21. In the vast space of Midtown Yaesu, it brought together Japanese and Korean galleries, before expanding next year to include other historical scenes emerging from the Asian continent. Walking through a fair remains a subjective exercise. Whether you are a collector or a passionate enthusiast, you move from gallery to artist, from…
The T3 Tokyo Photo Festival unfolds in the Nihonbashi district in unusual venues. Exploration tour. Technology, talent, and tolerance. The T3 Tokyo Photo Festival gathers around these three words starting with the letter T, echoing Richard Florida's theory, The Rise of the Creative Class (2002). As one strolls among the exhibitions in the official program as well as its satellite program, a fourth word should be added: tribulation. While…
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This is the 27th installment of the online series by Peter Fetterman Gallery called the Power of Photography highlighting hope, peace and love in the world. We invite you to enjoy and reflect on these works during this time. William Klein (b. 1928) Club Allegro Fortissimo, Paris, 1990 © The Estate of William Klein/Courtesy Peter Fetterman Gallery Only a smart, sensitive, intelligent, maverick like William Klein could have pulled this image off. It indeed has power…
Publication by Editions Normal of Matthieu Sonnet's book: Fragments. "After 10 years of activity as a photographer and working in the world of images for much more, I decided to launch my very first monographic book. I imported, went through, sorted hundreds of photos, dozens of sessions, took out all my archives, selected for weeks the images that were closest to my heart, those that were going to tell this…
For Marion Leleu, self-portraiture is a spontaneous and non-narcissistic practice. It is to be present. And the photographer does not differentiate between the selfie and other photographic genres. It's a way of not bothering others by taking yourself as the subject. The artist says: "no technique, no lighting. And we erase if it's not good." However, if her shots are successful, it's because she has an eye. To appeal to…
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Cécile Tréal: A Moment in Time It’s been a long time since Cécile Tréal and I first met. It was her father who introduced us, convinced we would get along—and he was right. I can still see us, driving through the streets of Paris in her little Fiat 500… from back in the day! singing at the top of our lungs, oblivious to the world around us. These memories, and…
Camera obscura. This is the instrument Vera Lutter uses to capture reality. And it also captures the expended time it takes for reality to impress itself on the light-sensitive paper. A huge and slow photography that does not care about the decisive moment or the potential of AI. It goes back to its roots, an exploration of light that produces spectacular images. SPECTACULAR. An Exploration of Light by the German…
Launched this year, the Swiss Photomonth is a large-scale initiative aimed at highlighting the richness of the Swiss photography scene. Organized by Spectrum – Photography in Switzerland, the Swiss Photography Month, running from late August to early October, brings together nearly sixty cultural venues across the country. Noting that many photographic events are held at the end of summer, the initiative aims to increase visibility and attendance for these venues…
The Hungarian editions hECTIC bOOKs publish Porcelain and Wool by Kincső Bede. They send us these pictures and this text : Many times, we feel like objects of certain cultural codes that are based on our origins and that we never asked for. To reconsider the approach to our birthplace without feeling stigmatized and patriotic, Kincső Bede offers a photobook. She grew up in the Hungarian Székely minority of Transylvania,…
Until the 23rd of November, Joseph Bellows Gallery presents the work of Bevan Davies. Bevan Davies: New York Typologies features vintage black and white photographs of lower Manhattan made in the mid-1970s. Davies utilized a large-format view camera to generate images of great depth and clarity, pursuing an approach to documenting the urban landscape of the Empire City that the late photographer Lewis Baltz described as “rigorously contemporary while acknowledging…
What a beautiful book, what a wonderful eye! A Poor Sort of Memory by Tracy L. Chandler captures the essential strangeness of the inhabited desert in a special way, her photos telling us stories about things that happened in a private past. These are not the decisive moments of photo theory but rather the memories of them. They stir emotions in the same way visiting a historical site stir emotions.…
Bruno Quinquet sends us his series “〒YUBIN” and presents it as follows: “〒 YUBIN” is a collection of urban scenes from Tokyo, observed from the standpoint of a postal worker on their delivery round. The 〒 sign, known as “yubin mark”, is the symbol of the postal service (yubin) and zip code in Japan. The idea of emulating a postal worker’s eye on the city arose from my desire to…
I met Jerho (from UK) and Ruben in Spain, in the working-class neighbourhoods on the outskirts of Barcelona. They are a flamenco duo who opened their doors to me, allowing me access behind the scenes. They... She allowed me to document their daily lives, their passions, their questions, their doubts, their art... In short, their lives. Flamenco Queer is a group of friends united by their love for flamenco, where…
Formal Portraits by YLLA (Camilla Koffler, 1911 - 1955) My pictures preach no message and present no scheme of world betterment … I try for simpler goals: the personalities of the animals, their expressions, their beauty. I have often been asked what my favorite animal is. Any animal I am photographing is my favorite until I feel that I have exhausted
The sky essences The sky essences, trees, are at the base of the development and multiplication of the various forms of life on earth. This work finds and reincarnates the mythological tree of life. Trees are necessary, indispensable, they are everywhere but they are also so mistreated and eliminated by human activities. Trees are beings of light. They feed on it, absorb it, reflect it. Photographs are made by light.…
Sorry I Trashed It. The title Is a reference to the planet and my generation passing on a world covered is trash from every corner of the surface of the earth to the depths of the ocean. Somehow the Ocean seems to be a favorite dumping ground for our trash. Most of what we manufacture, purchase, use and consume is made to be perishable and eventually obsolete but at the…
You must believe in spring This project explores my unreliable narrative as an immigrant, as someone alien to a new territory. My work integrates photography and embroidery, creating unique pieces that deconstruct and reconstruct landscape imagery. I capture photos during car journeys, often with my partner driving. I then digitally manipulate these raw images, employing excessive image correction tools("retouch" and "blend" functions) until they lose their single vanishing point. Once…
Urban Duality This photographic series captures a silent dialogue between historic architecture and the palpable absence of daily life. The shots, while anchored in the tangibility of spaces, invite reflection that transcends the image fixed on film. The monochrome palette and the choice of black and white exalt the drama of architectural forms and chiaroscuro, highlighting the latent nature of places concealing untold stories. Each frame embodies a delicate balance…
The Morning Light In the study of history of photography it’s easy to see how light is fundamental, in fact photographers of every ages have been able to create atmospheres, communicate sensations and show the movement of surfaces through more or less intense contrasts of lights and shadows. Even in the observation of reality we realize that even most common objects get particular visual aspects thanks to light. I studied…
Edwynn Houk Gallery presents Erwin Olaf : Stages, a memorial exhibition of seminal works of art from the multidisciplinary artist’s key series centered on the concept of performance, a recurring theme in the artist’s four-decade career. The exhibition Stages includes Olaf’s 1980s documentation of Amsterdam’s nightlife scenes, meticulously produced series such as Hope (2005) and Grief (2007) that dramatize social norms, and ongoing engagement with dance. These tableaux — whether…