Tag: Foam Fotografiemuseum

10
Mar

William Eggleston. Los Alamos

In William Eggleston – Los Alamos, Foam displays his portfolio of photographs that were taken on various road trips through the southern states of America between 1966 and 1974. The exhibition includes a number of iconic images, amongst which Eggleston’s first colour photograph.

The American photographer William Eggleston (1939, Memphis Tennessee, US) is widely considered one of the leading photographers of the past decades. He has been a pioneer of colour photography from the mid-1960s onwards, and transformed everyday America into a photogenic subject.

Los Alamos starts in Eggleston’s home town of Memphis and the Mississippi Delta and continues to follow his wanderings through New Orleans, Las Vegas and south California, ending at Santa Monica Pier. During a road trip with writer and curator William Hopps, Eggleston also passed through Los Alamos, the place in New Mexico where the nuclear bomb was developed in secret and to which the series owes its name.

Foam is supported by the BankGiro Loterij, De Brauw Blackstone Westbroek, Delta Lloyd, City of Amsterdam, Olympus and the VandenEnde Foundation.

The over 2200 images made for Los Alamos were originally intended to be published in parts, but were forgotten over the years. The photographs were rediscovered almost 40 years after the project started. They were published and exhibited for the first time in 2003. The vibrant photographs of traffic signs, run-down buildings and diner interiors distinctly betray the hand of the wayward autodidact. His early work evidences his penchant for the seemingly trivial: before the lens of Eggleston’s ‘democratic camera’, everything becomes equally important.

Eggleston began Los Alamos ten years before his contested solo exhibition at MoMA in 1976, which placed colour photography on the map as a serious art form. At the time, colour photography in the fine arts was regarded as frivolous, or even vulgar. It earned Eggleston the scorn of many. However, this did not stop him from experimenting with the no longer used dye-transfer process, a labour-intensive and expensive technique that was mainly used in advertising photography. The process allowed the photographer to control the colour saturation and achieve an unparalleled nuance in tonality; a quality that also characterizes the 75 dye-transfer prints exhibited at Foam.

William Eggleston – Los Alamos will be opened on Thursday 16 March, 2017

17 March – 7 June 2017

Foam Fotografiemuseum
Keizersgracht 609, Amsterdam
+31 (0)20 5516500
info@foam.org

 

11
Dic

Hiroshi Sugimoto. Black Box

16 December 2016 – 8 March 2017

A notably intellectual artist, the work of Hiroshi Sugimoto (b. 1948, Tokyo) contains a highly meditated conceptual element that encourages the spectator towards philosophical reflection. The artist reinterprets some of the principal genres in the classic tradition of photography. Sugimoto is a master craftsman and has rejected digital technology in favour of traditional methods.

In the exhibition Hiroshi Sugimoto – Black Box, Foam presents an overview of the work of the Japanese artist. The exhibition offers a survey of his work through his major series: Theaters (1976-ongoing); Lightning Fields (2006-ongoing); Dioramas (1976-2012); Portraits (1994-1999); and Seascapes (1980-ongoing).

On display are a total of 34 large-format works, selected by guest curator Philip Larratt-Smith, that offer a survey of the artist’s last forty years of artistic activity. Given that some of the series are still ongoing, the exhibition also looks forward to future creations.

The images are characterised by great visual beauty and notable technical virtuosity, emphasised by his habitual use of large formats. Taken as a whole, Hiroshi Sugimoto’s work constitutes a profound meditation on the nature of perception, illusion, representation, life and death.

OPENING
The exhibition opens on Thursday 15 December 2016Continue Reading..

21
Gen

Jacques Henri Lartigue – Life in Colour & Awoiska van der Molen – Blanco

Two new exhibitions will open on Thursday 21 January 2016

JACQUES HENRI LARTIGUE – LIFE IN COLOUR
Foam is pleased to present the work of famed French photographer Jacques Henri Lartigue (1894-1986). Lartigue was considered a genius at taking black-and-white photos of everyday life in the last century, but his breath-taking colour photography is less well known. The exhibition Life in Colour reveals this seldom-seen aspect of his oeuvre.
More information on the exhibition: bit.ly/lartigue-fb

The exhibition has been conceived and produced by the Association des Amis de Jacques Henri Lartigue, Ministère de la Culture, France, known as the Donation Jacques Henri Lartigue, in collaboration with diChroma photography, Madrid.

AWOISKA VAN DER MOLEN – BLANCO
Foam ushers in the New Year with Blanco, the first major museum-based solo exhibition by Awoiska van der Molen (b. Groningen, 1972). Already in 2007, Foam presented Van der Molen’s work within the Foam 3h programme. Blanco features the monochrome landscape photography the artist has been working since 2009.
More information on the exhibition: bit.ly/awoiska-fb

The exhibition was made possible by the Gieskes-Strijbis Fund.

More information on the opening: bit.ly/lifeincolour-blanco

Foam Fotografiemuseum
Keizersgracht 609, Amsterdam
+31 (0)20 5516500
info@foam.org

The exhibition is open from 22 January to 3 April 2016

14
Dic

Francesca Woodman. On Being an Angel

Foam ends 2015 with a retrospective exhibition featuring works from the exceptional oeuvre of American photographer Francesca Woodman (1958–1981).

The most significant subject in Francesca Woodman’s work was Francesca Woodman herself. She used photography as an extremely personal means of expression, as if wearing her skin inside out, making herself the only subject of her work. Her photographs were shown in a number of major international exhibitions and they have inspired artists all over the world. Before committing suicide at the age of twenty-two, Woodman explored themes such as gender, representation, sexuality and corporality. Her oeuvre consists of a large number of self-portraits. A striking aspect of her work is that she is either explicitly naked, or in contrast, attempts to hide her body: squeezed into a cupboard, behind the wallpaper, wrapped in plastic or material, or in a shroud of movement. She photographs herself in interiors punctuated by evidence of decay. Even when other people feature in Woodman’s photographs, they function purely as a stand-in for the artist. Woodman’s photographs showcase a range of symbolist and surrealist influences, and in many cases they evoke oppressive feelings. Francesca Woodman grew up in a family of artists and began taking photographs in her teens. From 1975 to 1978 she studied at the Rhode Island School of Design. Her oeuvre is usually divided into periods: the early work, her work as a student in Providence, work made in Italy (1977-1978) or at the MacDowell Colony and, finally, the work she produced from 1979 in New York until her death in 1981. She left several hundred gelatine silver prints, although she also experimented with other techniques. The first major travelling exhibition of Francesca Woodman’s work took place in 1986, some years after her death. Her first European exhibitions were held in the early 1990s. The Kunsthal in Rotterdam was the first to present her work in the Netherlands, in 1998.

The exhibition Francesca Woodman. On Being an Angel has been organized by the Moderna Museet in Stockholm in collaboration with the Estate of Francesca Woodman and consists of 102 photographs, mainly gelatine silver prints but including several large-format diazotype prints and six short videos.

Image: Francesca Woodman, From Space2, Providence, Rhode Island, 1976 © George and Betty Woodman

Foam Fotografiemuseum
Keizersgracht 609, Amsterdam
+31 (0)20 5516500
info@foam.org

18 December 2015 – 9 March 2016