STRANGERLAND

Posted on 2016-02-01

Newcomers to the remote Australian desert town of Nathgari, Catherine and Matthew Parker’s lives are flung into crisis when they discover their two teenage kids, Tommy and Lily, have mysteriously disappeared just before a massive dust storm hits. With Nathgari eerily smothered in red dust and darkness, the townsfolk join the search led by local cop, David Rae. It soon becomes apparent that something terrible may have happened to Tommy and Lily. Suspicions run riot, rumours spread and public opinion turns savagely against the Parkers. With temperatures rising and the chances of survival plummeting with each passing day, Catherine and Matthew find themselves pushed to the brink as they struggle to survive the mystery of their children’s fate

In theatres February 5th, 2016

www.strangerland-themovie.com

  

TRUMBO

Posted on 2016-02-01

In 1947, Dalton Trumbo (Bryan Cranston) was Hollywood’s top screenwriter until he and other artists were jailed and blacklisted for their political beliefs. TRUMBO (directed by Jay Roach) recounts how Dalton used words and wit to win two Academy Awards and expose the absurdity and injustice under the blacklist, which entangled everyone from gossip columnist Hedda Hopper (Helen Mirren) to John Wayne, Kirk Douglas and Otto Preminger.

In theatres February 5th, 2016

trumbo/

  

HIRO

Posted on 2016-02-01

This retrospective of Hiro’s photographs is just a small selection from his diverse and dynamic ouevre and displays Hiro, as he is widely regarded, as a photographer unlike any other.

‘The world of Hiro’s photographs, bordered by a shoreline, is unlike any place you have ever been… Hiro’s world encompasses the separate domains of fashion, portraiture, still-life and studies of the human body. His eye scrutinises men and machines with equal focus.’ (Mark Holborn)

Known for the originality of his photographs, Hiro’s photographic career began at Harper’s Bazaar in New York as a fashion, still-life and portrait photographer. Shortly after arriving in America from Japan in 1954, with his childhood memories of The Orient, which have a place in the genesis of his work, Hiro landed an apprenticeship in Richard Avedon’s studio. Avedon soon sent Hiro to legendary art director Alexey Brodovitch after he proved too talented not to work independently, and within a few years Hiro had risen to extraordinary fashion photography heights. In January 1982 American Photographer magazine devoted their entire issue to Hiro, asking the question “Is this Man America’s Greatest Photographer?” Hiro began working under Brodovitch’s direction in 1956 and in 1963 he became the only photographer under contract at Harper’s Bazaar, a position he kept for the next ten years. Now in his 80’s, although no longer under contract, Hiro continues to take assignments with the magazine. Hiro lived up to Brodovitch’s dictum, ‘If you look in your camera and see something you’ve seen before, don’t click the shutter.’ Richard Avedon described Hiro as ‘a visitor all his life’, enabling Hiro, neither completely Eastern or Western, to document both cultures in his work with a perception that only comes from a certain detachment.

Opposite – Jerry Hall, Saint Martin, French West Indies, 1975

Exhibition runs through till March 12th, 2016

Hamiltons Gallery
13, Carlos, Place
London
W1K 2EU

www.hamiltonsgallery.com

  

MASTERS OF THE UNIVERSE PINT GLASSES

Posted on 2016-02-01

Masters of the Universe glassware featuring classic artwork of Eternia’s most famous characters!Each 16 ounce Pint Glass measures approximately 5″ tall. Perfect for use in your kitchen, home bar, or dining area of Castle Grayskull (or Snake Mountain).

www.super7store.com

  

PETER LINDBERGH

Posted on 2016-02-01

Lindbergh’s now-iconic photographs of women derive inspiration from early narrative cinema and street photography, in their fleeting observations and compositional elegance. His Eastern European heritage can be traced in the stark and guileless realism that frames the feminine beauty of his subjects.

In his editorial work for Vogue, Harper’s Bazaar, Interview, and many other international magazines, Lindbergh replaces staged, calculated glamour with a vérité approach, enhanced by his use of high-contrast black-and-white photography. He uses body movement, in particular modern dance, to celebrate the human form in a way that carries elements of both antiquity and modernity.

Spanning the last thirty years, the exhibition testifies to Lindbergh’s impact on the world of fashion photography, and his contribution to portraiture in general. The beauty of his female subjects is purposeful, self-possessed, and uninhibited. With little styling or setting to divert attention, Lindbergh’s approach emphasizes the raw physical grace of his subjects.

In a diptych of Monica Bellucci, one image holds her untamed and purposeful stare as she walks toward the camera, while in the other she looks away, apparently absorbed in a private moment far from the camera’s eye. In an homage to the late choreographer Pina Bausch, five models merge in an interlocking movement, their limbs and curves becoming elements of pure abstraction. In another photograph, Karen Elson’s pale stillness recalls classical stone statuary.

Opposite – Cordula Reyer, Camargue, France, 1993, 2003

Exhibition runs through till April 23rd, 2016

Gagosian Gallery
3 Merlin Street
Athens 10671

www.gagosian.com

  

SKIN&BLISTER

Posted on 2016-02-01

Skin&Blister is a collective of 7 female photographers who graduated from London College of Communication in 2012. They formed the collective to create a dynamic and supportive environment through which to continue sharing ideas, discussions and critiques, make work, generate exhibition opportunities and curate shows. They have participated in a number of UK and international photography exhibitions, curated shows and featured in publications including the Guardian, Dazed & Confused and Hunger TV. Their work explores female identity and is part of a lively and growing realm of re-imagining the “collective” by young women utilising a variety of public platforms to question female perception in today’s image-driven culture.

Opposite – Sophie Davis

Exhibition runs through till March 10th, 2016

Photofusion
7A Electric Lane
London
Brixton
SW9 8LA

www.photofusion.org