Following the success of Representation on the Line phases I & II: (Un)framing our Identities in Chelsea, the show is going on tour and will be starting in Blackpool. Phase III is to open on Saturday 31st August at HIVE, 80-82 Church Street, Blackpool until September 30th.
It was a great honour to host the first public screening of Julia Horbaschk’s film Death by Supernova, and if you weren’t able to attend, you can now view the film here. Three writers responded to the film and their responses are shown below.
Known as Ya-Haddy Sisi Saye, Khadija was a Gambian-British photographer, celebrated for her extraordinary photographs during her short life, which ended, at the age of 24, in the Grenfell fire of 2017.
The RPS has scored a major success with its current exhibition in London which features the work of 89 female photographers. Brainchild of Vice President Del Barrett ARPS and project managed by Vanessa Ansa, the venue is just off the King’s Road. The huge selection of work from the UK and abroad…
Coming from a long line of photographers, German-born Lotte Jacobi (1896-1990) was known for her intimate, dramatic and often experimental portraits in the ‘New Vision’ style of the late 1920s and 30s. After fleeing Hitler’s Germany, she re-established herself as a portraitist in New York and moved into abstraction and landscape photography…
Ilse Bing (1899–1998) was a German-born inter-war photographer who worked in photojournalism and portraiture in Paris and New York. She worked in the modernist style and innovated using solarisation and night photography. Her work was featured in MoMA’s first survey exhibition of photography in 1937.