29.11.11

Portraits


The National Portrait Gallery is currently showing the winners of the Taylor Wessing Photographic Prize, an annual portrait competition (that everyone can submit to, so remember that! The competition for 2012 opens next spring). Though I wonder how some of the shortlisted images are supposed to be the best of over 6000 entries, there where some really good portraits (like the winning guinea pig portrait above by Jooney Woodward) and the exhibition (as well as the rest of the collection at NPG) is well worth having a look at, not only because there is a portrait of Kiera Knightley that shows that she's actually human and has wrinkles (which sometimes is hard to believe looking at all those glossy Chanel ads, but because one of your tasks is to take a portrait and I find it hard to believe that there would be any other place where you could find such a wide variety of portraits of all mediums - there's not only paintings and photographs, go there and see yourself what other ways there is to portray a person.

The Taylor Wessing competition has become a quite big event and intrestingly an other competition has popped up in the shadow of it. Portrait Salon is a competition for entries rejected by the Taylor Wessing Photographic prize. The exhibition showcases 75 rejected entries and opens tomorrow at Roxy Bar and Screen at 128-132 Borough High Street, SE1 1LB. Gonna go and check out that for sure!

31.10.11

Exhibitions


As promised, some exhibition recommendations. More coming soon!



TATE MODERN

There's lots of great stuff at the Tate at the moment (actually so much I haven't had the time to see it all). And the permanent collection is also always good.




An exhibition exploring the power of photography as a documentary medium, with works by Luc Delahaye, Mitch Epstein, Guy Tillim,
and Akram Zaatari. Could be useful for the environment unit! On until 31st March.




The Artist Rooms at Tate Modern currently show's a three room exhibition of the American photographer Diane Arbus. Arbus is most famous for her portraits of people in the outskirts of society. Hurry, because this exhibition is on only until 6th November!


In my opinion, one of the best and interesting exhibitions this year. In this project Simon is investigating bloodlines and it's an exhibition where the personal and the political meet. Simon is a master of combining image and text and the exhibition is a must see for anyone interested in portraiture and social commentary. Simon has also documented some objects of her subjects, so I think this exhibition is very supportive to both your units - and it's for free, as the exhibitions above. It's on until 2nd January.

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Besides these three, Tate Modern currently shows Gerhard Richter, I haven't seen it yet, but I'm sure it's good. He's a painter, but his work is very closely linked to photography, so do have a look at him! The museum also shows Tacita Dean's film, wich I'm also very curios about.

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Julia Margaret Cameron @ V&A Museum of Childhood


For anyone interested in portraiture, the history of photography or alternative processes, the V&A Museum of Childhood in Bethnal Green in East London has a nice little exhibition of Cameron's portraits of children. And if you havent been to the Museum of Childhood before, its permanent collection is worth having look at, though I do recommend you avoid it on weekends, unless you like family fun with lots of children. Watching the museum displays is like walking down memory lane to your own childhood. Oh, and they have very nice shop!

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Since you have to photograph an object, I started to think about this. Bill Jackson's exhibition Cabinet of Curiosities brings together three of the artist's series, all exploring the idea of the photograph as an object. As the daughter of a collector (and a bit of a collector myself) of everything, I especially enjoyed the series called Relics. The exhibition is on at Troika Editions Front Room gallery until the end of the month.





27.10.11

About My Practice



Hello 1st Years!
I thought it would be polite to start by introducing myself, just so you know who you're talking with. My name is Ida Taavitsainen, I'm 24 years old and graduated from UCA Rochester last summer. I had a fantastic three years at uni, I just wish I could have stayed there longer!
I started doing photography when I was fourteen, because my sister was into it and wanted company. As it happens, my sister never really got into it, but here I am, still trying to figure it out (so, thanks Kira!). At the moment I live in London (where I moved for the third year - highly recommended if you want to get into the art scene and keep yourself sane), where try to balance boring work that I actually get paid for and my personal artistic practice.
As I say in my little introduction on the right-hand side, I only work with film and I absolutley love - and miss - working in the darkroom. My personal projects usually revolve around my family, memories, history, collecting, the traces and objects that define us and that we leave behind when we leave this world. I have a lifelong love for fashion, but do not see myself as a fashion photographer and I love writing (which you will probably notice and suffer from) and am also very interested in the relationship between image and text.
During my three years at uni I worked on and off on a project called The Memory of My Wardrobe and that project also became my final project in the 3rd year. It's a project I started when I realized that so many of the clothes I have have belonged to someone else before me. I have garments in my wardrobe that have belonged to my mother, sisters, grand mothers, great grand mother and even great great grandmother and other family members and friends, so this project is basically a family history told through materials (the image at the top of this post is from this series - the dress belonged to my super stylish great grandmother).
I am also one third of the people behind the fashion and photography publication, Out of Fashion, that I did as a part of my final project at uni together with two other girls from my year. Hopefully the publication will soon be at the shelves of the uni, so that you can go and have a look at it!
If you want to have a look at what I've done during the past years I do have a website, it's just terribly out of date (hoping to fix that asap) and I also have a blog, but that is more a personal thing than professional, it does have pictures, but I mostly keep it to let my mom know I'm ok.

Here's some further links to my work and projects:


If you have any questions, worries or comments, feel free to drop me a line anytime. I usually reply quite quickly.

26.10.11

On Mentoring

This autumn I was asked to be an online mentor for the first year photography students at UCA Rochester (I am an alumni), so the purpose of this blog is mainly to comment on the first year students' blogs as well as introduce my own practice and also recommend exhibitions and events in London and other parts of the world. Hopefully, by the end of the year, both the students and I have gained something out of this whole process.