larmarv916
Well-known
Cartier-Bresson : A Question of COLOR / Exposition Nov 8 - Jan 27 2013
Here is a must see exposition that is anchored by the work of the legendary "HCB" Henry Cartier-Bresson at the Somerset House in the heart of London. Now I will not be able to visit the exposition in person....but any of our friends from Deviant Art in the UK. Should make this a must visit. An easy day trip by train or car. Why? Cartier-Bresson was and remain the stand out photographer who's work dates back the earliest days for 35mm film and the original Leica rangefinder camera. This exposition is centered around his almost unknown work with COLOR film. This show is created to feature these rare color images and also the new book titled.."A Question of Color"
The Show Press Description reads as follows:
Cartier-Bresson: A Question of Colour features the work of a select number of photographers whose commitment to expression in colour was (or is) wholehearted, sophisticated, and measures up to Cartier-Bresson's requirement that content and form were in perfect balance. Some were his contemporaries, even, like Ernst Haas, friends; others, like Fred Herzog in Vancouver, knew Cartier-Bresson across a vast distance, essentially through his seminal books. Others were junior colleagues, like Harry Gruyaert, who found themselves debating colour ferociously with the master. However, the exhibition can only deal with the tip of the iceberg. Colour photographers indebted in one way or another to Henri Cartier-Bresson are legion. Nonetheless, few colour photographers could actually live up to the rigour he demanded, which he summarized as "the simultaneous recognition, in a fraction of second, of the significance of an event as well as of a precise organization of forms which give that event its proper expression."
The Show has an even bigger theme as it features 15 additional photographers, Ernst Haas, Joel Meyerowitz, Jeff Mermelstein, Fred Herzog, Andy Freeberg to name only a few. The show is excellent spectrum of real color "street photography" and "surrealism" themes. The show also has a wonderful website that many of the images can be seen. For those of us who are not able to actually see the show in person.
Visit the Positive View Foundation at http://positiveviewfoundation.org.uk/index.php/exhibitions/cartier-bresson-a-question-of-colour#
Now the "Positive View Foundation" is a really excellent creative expression of the positive influence the arts can have on our world.
A Positive View started as a personal philanthropic photography project hosted by the Saatchi Gallery in 1994, when all the donated works were sold by Sotheby's to support the Chickenshed Theatre Company for children with learning difficulties.
Diana, Princess of Wales, was that project's Royal Patron. And in 2010, when the concept was revisited, her son Prince William became Royal Patron in his turn. On this occasion, through media partnerships and a charity auction at Christie's, over £500,000 was raised to fund an innovative photography project at Crisis, the UK's leading homeless charity.
The Somerset House is home to the "Positive View Foundation" Somerset House is a spectacular, imposing, neo-classical building in the heart of London, sitting between the Strand and the River Thames. Since opening to the public in 2000, Somerset House has produced a distinctive public programme that annually draws over 1.2 million visitors providing a centre for international arts and culture in the heart of London. Somerset House presents an annual gallery programme of important international exhibitions focusing on contemporary art and photography, fashion, design and architecture, as well as an open air film and concert season with ice skating in the winter.
Here is a must see exposition that is anchored by the work of the legendary "HCB" Henry Cartier-Bresson at the Somerset House in the heart of London. Now I will not be able to visit the exposition in person....but any of our friends from Deviant Art in the UK. Should make this a must visit. An easy day trip by train or car. Why? Cartier-Bresson was and remain the stand out photographer who's work dates back the earliest days for 35mm film and the original Leica rangefinder camera. This exposition is centered around his almost unknown work with COLOR film. This show is created to feature these rare color images and also the new book titled.."A Question of Color"
The Show Press Description reads as follows:
Cartier-Bresson: A Question of Colour features the work of a select number of photographers whose commitment to expression in colour was (or is) wholehearted, sophisticated, and measures up to Cartier-Bresson's requirement that content and form were in perfect balance. Some were his contemporaries, even, like Ernst Haas, friends; others, like Fred Herzog in Vancouver, knew Cartier-Bresson across a vast distance, essentially through his seminal books. Others were junior colleagues, like Harry Gruyaert, who found themselves debating colour ferociously with the master. However, the exhibition can only deal with the tip of the iceberg. Colour photographers indebted in one way or another to Henri Cartier-Bresson are legion. Nonetheless, few colour photographers could actually live up to the rigour he demanded, which he summarized as "the simultaneous recognition, in a fraction of second, of the significance of an event as well as of a precise organization of forms which give that event its proper expression."
The Show has an even bigger theme as it features 15 additional photographers, Ernst Haas, Joel Meyerowitz, Jeff Mermelstein, Fred Herzog, Andy Freeberg to name only a few. The show is excellent spectrum of real color "street photography" and "surrealism" themes. The show also has a wonderful website that many of the images can be seen. For those of us who are not able to actually see the show in person.
Visit the Positive View Foundation at http://positiveviewfoundation.org.uk/index.php/exhibitions/cartier-bresson-a-question-of-colour#
Now the "Positive View Foundation" is a really excellent creative expression of the positive influence the arts can have on our world.
A Positive View started as a personal philanthropic photography project hosted by the Saatchi Gallery in 1994, when all the donated works were sold by Sotheby's to support the Chickenshed Theatre Company for children with learning difficulties.
Diana, Princess of Wales, was that project's Royal Patron. And in 2010, when the concept was revisited, her son Prince William became Royal Patron in his turn. On this occasion, through media partnerships and a charity auction at Christie's, over £500,000 was raised to fund an innovative photography project at Crisis, the UK's leading homeless charity.
The Somerset House is home to the "Positive View Foundation" Somerset House is a spectacular, imposing, neo-classical building in the heart of London, sitting between the Strand and the River Thames. Since opening to the public in 2000, Somerset House has produced a distinctive public programme that annually draws over 1.2 million visitors providing a centre for international arts and culture in the heart of London. Somerset House presents an annual gallery programme of important international exhibitions focusing on contemporary art and photography, fashion, design and architecture, as well as an open air film and concert season with ice skating in the winter.