Sophy Rickett's most recent body of work, Objects in the Field, was made during her time as Artist Associate at the Institute of Astronomy in Cambridge, and develops the artist's interest in the role of the camera as a mediator between people and the natural world, exploring how light and darkness define and articulate our relationship to space. More →
Exhibitions
We regret to announce that after 26 years of supporting photographers and championing photography throughout the UK, Redeye, the Photography Network will wind down on 31 July 2024 due to a number of factors, including lack of funding. Read our full statement here. We are no listing exhibitions. The archive of past exhibitions is available below.
These rarely-seen and mostly newly-printed works from two masters of the documentation of English life form the central opening exhibition at Media Space. This new venue has been set up in London partly to explore the National Media Museum's collection. More →
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Red Saunders’ epic photographic tableaux vivants (‘living pictures’) recreate momentous but overlooked events from Britain’s struggle for democracy and equality, from the Peasants Revolt of 1381 to the Chartist movement of the mid nineteenth century.
First shown as part of Ways of Looking, a photography festival in Bradford, this major solo touring exhibition of Saunders’ work features three dramatic new works, specially commissioned by Impressions Gallery and The Culture Company. More →
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The first of three Eurovisions exhibitions at Side Gallery, marking the 25th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall.
Solidarity, the broad anti-Soviet movement in Poland, emerged in the shipyards of Gdansk in 1980. It was repressed, but from 1985, in the Soviet Union itself, Mikhail Gorbachev began introducing the policies of glasnost (openness) and perestroika (restructuring). Throughout the Eastern Bloc, change became inevitable. More →
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Foam ended 2013 with a unique retrospective exhibition by William Klein. The entire museum has been dedicated to the life and work of this legendary photographer, filmmaker and designer.
The career of William Klein (b. 1928) spans more than sixty years and his work had a major influence on photography in the second half of the twentieth century. The exhibition gives ample coverage to Klein’s ground-breaking work in New York in the 1950s while also displaying work made in Rome, Moscow and Tokyo. More →
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Photographs by Paul Reas 1972 to 2012: Paul Reas emerged from the new wave of British colour documentary of the mid-1980s. This is the international première of Reas’ first major retrospective, spanning 40 years from Thatcherite Britain to today’s recession. More →
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Portrait Salon aims to show the best of the unselected entries from the annual National Portrait Gallery Photographic Portrait Prize, organised annually by the National Portrait Gallery.
Founded in 2011 by photographers Carole Evans and James O Jenkins, Portrait Salon has existed in previous years as a projection at a one-off event. This year, Fuse Art Space will be holding the first ever printed exhibition of the selected images, spanning a cross-section of contemporary portrait photographers from around the world. More →
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Ffotogallery presents two solo exhibitions by Paul Gaffney and Michal Iwanowski. Both artists make work of an exploratory nature, during long and physically demanding walks far from the comforts of home, to reflect on ideas of landscape, meditation and memory.
[img_assist|nid=10679|link=none|align=left|width=520|height=414]Paul Gaffney
We Make the Path by Walking More →
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