Chris Spackman’s Unstill Life.
There was so much to see at the Free Range photography shows that I’ve decided to amalgamate the rest or I fear I will never get it all written up. Here then are the best of the rest.
I liked the Unstill Life from Chris Spackman at Farnham Foto Flux – long exposures of flower arrangements as they keel over and die are oddly beautiful.
Charity Lamb experiments with destruction of traditional photography norms, medications and for her degree show she had layered painting and photography in My Mother’s Painting, about it which documents the destruction of one of her mother’s paintings.
Michaela Haider‘s project Con te Partiro was an intriguing documentary exploration in to cultural identity. Her grandmother was born in Italy but has spent most of her life in the UK.
For Marc Baker Untitled was a fuzzy view of people moving about their banal everyday life, similar in theme to Marie Helgesen’s project at Swansea Met.
University of West London had some nice photo documentary work of the Sikh community from Kitty Kaur.
Rick Hanley focused on representation of the male to create layered images inspired by Francis Galton for Uncovering Masculinity – the results were fuzzy identities which aim to challenge the stereotypical representation of males in media and advertising as they enter different decades of their lives.
Lizi Barker had produced a series of Case Studies, old display cases showcasing the objects and images that mean the most to a selection of individuals. The results were charmingly mysterious.
I was attracted to the strange composite photos of Chantal Weekes at the Barking and Dagenham College exhibition Back in 10 Minutes. It’s All About Me focused on a small child’s fantasy world.
Abbie Jacqueline Hart also went for a disjointed effect, layering images on top of each other in Disillusioned Daughter.
Jack Florish had created a selection from scratched and messed up negatives.
Melissa Aherne deserves special mention for her box of prints with the sign Please Do Not Nick My Prints!! scrawled beneath them. My dear, it’s best to be polite to visitors! Anyone taking your pictures had surely not realised they should not so you probably didn’t make it clear in the first place…
The students from New College Swindon are predominantly concerned with commercial photography practice but they showed their final degree wares in some exciting installations, Nine Lives, at Free Range. For Far Away and Nearby Claire McDowall had brought a whole baby tree into the building.
Sabina Paprocka looked at the British Dream from a Polish perspective. Follow Sabina Paprocka on Twitter.
Finally at Cleveland College of Art and Design I liked photography by Jessica Lauren Smith, a project heavily influenced by memory and landscape, it was beautifully printed in old style black and white analogue print. Unfortunately it was quite hard to take a good photo!
Categories ,2011, ,Abbie Jacqueline Hart, ,Back in 10 Minutes, ,Barking and Dagenham College, ,British Dream, ,Case Studies, ,Chantal Weekes, ,Charity Lamb, ,Chris Spackman, ,Claire McDowall, ,Cleveland College of Art and Design, ,collage, ,Con te Partiro, ,Cultural Identity, ,Disillusioned Daughter, ,Far Away and Nearby, ,Farnham Foto Flux, ,Francis Galton, ,Free Range, ,Graduate Shows, ,It’s All About Me, ,Jack Florish, ,Jessica Lauren Smith, ,Kitty Kaur, ,Lizi Barker, ,Marc Baker, ,Marie Helgesen, ,Melissa Aherne, ,Michaela Haider, ,My Mother’s Painting, ,New College Swindon, ,photography, ,Polish, ,Rick Hanley, ,Sabina Paprocka, ,Sikh community, ,UCA Farnham, ,Uncovering Masculinity, ,University of West London, ,Unstill Life, ,Untitled
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