Self-portraits: Group show

2014-11-07
Overview

The Self-Portrait

 

When a photographer shoots him/herself, s/he upsets a code of conduct, and the “shoot” morphs into a real challenge.

 This show of around 40 modern and contemporary prints reveals the photogenic power of this moment of truth.  

Berenice Abbott and Val Telberg preferred to use the photographic medium in an experimental way while Lucien Hervé, Arnold Newman, Vivian Maier made use of the ever present mirror in representing their self-portraits.  

Starting from his surname, Ezra Nahmad composes an autobiography and Choi, Arno Minkkinen, Wols explore the expressive opportunities that their own faces and bodies provide. 

Rodolf Hervé, terminally ill treats the self-portrait as a catalytic agent to express severe stress.  

Kourtney Roy, sole heroine of her own intimate illusions thinks of photography as roleplaying.   Dan Leung builds a photographic tableau--wedged in the middle of towers in Hong Kong—by which he recalls Chinese identity and wonders about the individual’s place in the city.   

Brassaï in an opium den in 1931, Louis Faurer in New York in 1947, and Raymond Depardon on his scooter in Paris in 1959 or then again with Jean-Christophe Béchet in the footsteps of  Robert Frank in 2009, all use the resources of staging but with different arrangements.  

Characterized by humor, introspection, and virtuosity, the self-portrait always reflects an interior state as Hervé Guibert illustrates so well in his own images.

Works
Installation Views
Press release
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