TOM WOOD – PHOTOGRAPHS 1973 – 2013

Posted on 2013-03-04

Tom Wood has taken photographs almost every day for the last 40 years. The resulting, remarkable bodies of work now form the basis of this new retrospective exhibition, his first in the UK.

Most of Wood’s work has been taken in Liverpool and on Merseyside, where he has lived for much of the last four decades. He has photographed on the streets, in pubs, clubs and markets, workplaces, parks and outside football grounds.

Wood’s photographs are not organised in series, where one project has a start and end date. Instead, he works daily on an unfolding, diary-like recording of his observations and encounters. He will spend many years returning to particular places and studying them in an attempt to refine and distil the essence of them in his photographs. The result is a constantly evolving celebration of the pleasures of photography and its potential to transform its subjects.

Exhibition runs through till June 16th, 2013

National Media Museum
Bradford
West Yorkshire
BD1 1NQ

www.nationalmediamuseum.org.uk

  

ERWIN OLAF – BERLIN

Posted on 2013-03-04

In a significant departure from his previous projects, ‘Berlin’ is set and shot on location at six different historical locations throughout the grand city, rather than in imagined settings, constructed in Olaf’s Amsterdam studio.
Following the recent awarding of the Vermeer Prize to Olaf (the most important cultural recognition conferred by the Dutch government), this latest series further reiterates his status as one of the world’s most talented, prolific andinfluential artists. With ‘Berlin’, Olaf has again broken the boundaries of contemporary photographic practice.

Creating powerful imagery that is at once historical and contemporary, with a tension-filled and ever-shifting narrative, the artist manages to entrance, perplex, confound and delight viewers.
Esteemed photographic critic Francis Hodgson, in his essay exploring ‘Berlin’, comments: ‘You could see Berlin as an opera. There are the grand elements from history, which are like the bits of legend or myth or biblical story that make up the plots of opera. Here are some of them: The Neue Sachlichkeit (the New Objectivity, an art-history label for the harsh realism of painters such as Otto Dix or Christian Schad).

Here’s the building where John Kennedy called
himself a Berliner (“lift your eyes beyond the dangers of today, to the hopes of tomorrow, beyond the freedom merely of this city of Berlin, or your country of Germany, to the advance of freedom everywhere.”). Here is a broad hinted
reminder of the great Jesse Owens, carrying off the plaudits at Hitler’s own Olympiad, and making a mockery of the Chancellor’s racism in doing so. Here’s the peculiar sub-culture of the duelling clubs, there’s a kid who looks uncomfortably like an enthusiastic recruit to the Hitler Youth, with his slicked hair and his black leather gloves. These are concrete references but not deployed to be specific. Olaf uses them to take us through a range of moods, exactly as opera does. We don’t need an exact narrative because so many of the historical references are so clear.
Instead we get a set of pictures just imbued with Berlin.’

Exhibition runs through till May 10th, 2013

Hamiltons Gallery
13, Carlos, Place
London
W1K 2EU

www.hamiltonsgallery.com

  

PARKER

Posted on 2013-03-04

Parker follows the tale of a thief, with a unique code of professional ethics, who is double crossed by his crew and left for dead. Assuming a new disguise and forming an unlikely alliance with a woman on the inside, he looks to hijack the score of the crew’s latest heist.

In theaters March 8th, 2013

www.parker-film

  

SIDE EFFECTS

Posted on 2013-03-04

A young woman’s world unravels when a drug prescribed by her psychiatrist has unexpected side effects. Stars Rooney Mara, Channing Tatum and Jude Law.

In theaters March 8th, 2013

www.sideeffectsmayvary.com

  

OZ THE GREAT AND POWERFUL

Posted on 2013-03-04

Oscar Diggs (James Franco), a small-time circus magician with dubious ethics, is hurled away from dusty Kansas to the vibrant Land of Oz. At first he thinks he’s hit the jackpot-fame and fortune are his for the taking. That all changes, however, when he meets three witches, Theodora (Mila Kunis), Evanora (Rachel Weisz), and Glinda (Michelle Williams), who are not convinced he is the great wizard everyone’s been expecting. Directed by Sam Raimi.

In theaters March 8th, 2013

thewizard

  

DAVID BOWIE – THE STARS (ARE OUT TONIGHT)

Posted on 2013-03-04

Titled “The Stars (Are Out Tonight)”, this one follows “Where Are We Now?”, which was more of a slow, introspective ballad. The video, directed by Floria Sigismondi, stars Bowie and Tilda Swinton as a married couple whose lives are disturbed by a celebrity couple.

www.davidbowie.com