Fundamentals
BEN CAUCHI • JOANNE DUGAN • ADAM JEPPESEN • TIMO LIEBER • STEVE MACLEOD • CHRIS McCAW • LIZ NIELSEN • BRUNO V. ROELS • JONI STERNBACH
Bringing together the work of nine international contemporary artists who apply historic photographic techniques to create innovative and unique artworks. The artists, many of whom work with handmade cameras, modified cameras, or no camera at all, are unified by their dedication to exploring the processes of the past and discovering novel approaches to factoring them into their practice, while redefining the very root of what photography can be.
Address:
68 Duke Street, Mayfair, London, W1K 6JY
Opening times:
Monday – Friday 10am – 6pm
Saturday & Sunday 11am - 4pm
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Ben Cauchi, Untitled (12), 2017
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Ben Cauchi, Untitled (24), 2018
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Bruno Roels, A Palm Tree Is A Palm Tree Is A Palm Tree (Night Giant), 2015
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Bruno Roels, Palmograph #3, 2019
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Chris McCaw, Sunburned GSP#1031 (Mojave/expanding), 2019
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Chris McCaw, Sunburned GSP#1016 (Mexico), 2018
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Joni Sternbach, 18.09.18 #1, 2018
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Joni Sternbach, 17.02.08 #7 In A Barrel, 2017
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Steve Macleod, Indigo 3, 2019
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Steve Macleod, Indigo 8, 2019
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Adam Jeppesen, Work no. 12, 2017
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Liz Nielsen, Cool Mountain Path, 2018
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Liz Nielsen, Cosmic Portal II, 2018
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Joanne Dugan, Enlarger Lens Meditation #1, 2019
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Joanne Dugan, Cutting Meditation #1, 2019
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Joanne Dugan, Multiples 25, Grid #19, New York City, 2018
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Joanne Dugan, Multiples 25, Grid #21, New York City, 2018
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Joanne Dugan, Paper Meditation #1 , 2019
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Ben Cauchi, Untitled (25), 2018
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Ben Cauchi, Untitled (26), 2018
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Timo Lieber, C-Blue #1, 2018
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Chris McCaw, Heliograph #129, 2016
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Chris McCaw, Heliograph #2, 2012
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Chris McCaw, Sunburned GSP#1023 (Mojave), 2019
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Bruno V. Roels, A Palm Tree Is A Palm Tree Is A Palm Tree (Hiding In The Back), 2016
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Bruno V. Roels, Breaking Promises, 2018
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Bruno V. Roels, Palmerar d’Elx, 2018
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Bruno V. Roels, Palmograph #4, 2019
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Bruno V. Roels, A Palm Tree Is A Palm Tree Is A Palm Tree (Hiding In The Back)
August 26, 2020 -
Steve Macleod, Indigo 8
August 18, 2020 -
Joni Sternbach, 04.05.20 #8 Beach Barrier
July 27, 2020 -
Chris McCaw, Sunburned GSP#1016 (Mexico)
July 15, 2020
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Bruno V. Roels, A Palm Tree Is A Palm Tree Is A Palm Tree (Night Giant)
July 13, 2020 -
Liz Nielsen, Pyramid
July 8, 2020 -
Chris McCaw, Heliograph #2
June 25, 2020 -
Bruno V. Roels, The Pyramids and Palm Trees Test (Perfection Part I)
June 24, 2020
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Joanne Dugan, Multiples 25, Grid #21, New York City
June 19, 2020 -
Chris McCaw, Sunburned GSP#1031 (Mojave/expanding)
June 4, 2020 -
Timo Lieber, C-Blue #4
June 3, 2020 -
Joni Sternbach, 18.09.18 #1, Orange Lightning Bolt
May 28, 2020
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Bruno V. Roels, Palmerar d'Elx
May 18, 2020 -
Joanne Dugan, Multiples 25, Grid #19
May 15, 2020 -
Chris McCaw, Sunburned GSP#1023 (Mojave),
May 14, 2020 -
Joni Sternbach, 11.03.17 #1 Kazzie
May 13, 2020
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Adam Jeppesen | Unseen Platform
2019 #33 October 10, 2019THE POND by Adam Jeppesen CONSTRUCTING POETIC, FLUID SCULPTURES SUSPENDED IN WATER, ADAM JEPPESEN EXPANDS THE POSSIBILITIES FOR DEFINING THE CYANOTYPE PROCESS. Your pieces are...Read more -
PRESS: Lenscratch
Joanne Dugan: Multiples & Meditations October 7, 2019Aline Smithson of Lenscratch sits down with Joanne Dugan when she visited Los Angeles to discuss her approach to photography. Joanne is an artist who uses photographic materials and processes to create art. Some years ago, the New York Times wrote about about her practice: “As a fine artist, I only work in analog. To me, photography is film, and the alchemy of silver and light and chemicals is still really important.” And like analog photographs themselves, her “Turning Point” series was born in the dark. Dugan began the project in the aftermath of Hurricane Sandy, while she was sitting in her apartment at the edge of the blackout grid — the view out front was lit, but out to the sides it was dark. “There was an odd peacefulness that that came over me as I roamed around the city in a state of wonder,” she says. “I had this epiphany that it is okay to turn my lens only to the light itself, rather than the subjects.” The fragility of light became her focus as she traveled the city, often by bike, layering her images with up to 20 multiple exposures. “The work is an homage to the traditional process,” she says, “but brings a modern viewpoint.” She has had a decades long commitment to the darkroom, and her projects, Meditations, Multiples, Series 2 and Turning Point, all speak to the meditative state of the darkroom to create unique one-of-a-kind collages. Joanne’s work is currently in the exhibition, Fundamentals, at the Black Box Gallery in London, running through October 19th.The exhibition brings together the work of nine international contemporary artists who apply historic photographic techniques to create innovative and unique artworks. The artists, many of whom work with handmade cameras, modified cameras, or no camera at all, are unified by their dedication to exploring the processes of the past and discovering novel approaches to factoring them into their practice, while redefining the very root of what photography can be.Read more
Bringing together the work of nine international contemporary artists who apply historic photographic techniques to create innovative and unique artworks, Fundamentals is presented by Black Box Projects from 8th to 19thOctober 2019 at 68 Duke Street, Mayfair, London, W1K 6JY. The artists, many of whom work with handmade cameras, modified cameras, or no camera at all, are unified by their dedication to exploring the processes of the past and discovering novel approaches to factoring them into their practice, while redefining the very root of what photography can be.
The exhibition will include such increasingly rare techniques as photograms, ambrotypes, cyanotypes, tin-types, wet-plate collodion prints and silver gelatin prints. In presenting these methods Fundamentals will provide an opportunity to examine why these rudimentary techniques have benefitted from a resurgence in popularity in today’s age of digital technology and social media.
Included among the 40 works displayed in Fundamentals are photographic images created often without cameras by melting ice crystals, the path of the sun, and dust and dirt from an almost 500 day journey affecting and distorting the film carried from the North Pole to Antarctica, while traditional techniques dating back to the very dawn of the photographic medium lend contemporary subject matter an otherworldly appearance.
All of the pieces in Fundamentals are for sale, with prices ranging from £1,000 - £30,000. Accompanying the exhibition will be a 48-page newsprint publication with an introduction by Martin Barnes, Senior Curator of Photographs, V&A, published by Ethos. www.ethos.ink
Artist Information
Ben Cauchi (New Zealand, lives in Berlin) uses the very earliest photographic techniques; the wet-collodion photographic process, producing ambrotypes (an obscure mid-19th century wet-plate photographic process) and tintypes (one-off positives on glass or metal). These are processes that date back to the dawn of photography. Cauchi has said that ‘the mechanical side of photography has never really appealed to me anywhere near as much as the alchemical.’
Joanne Dugan (USA, lives in New York) produces collages made up of silver gelatin prints created without the use of a camera. She painstakingly hand cuts and hand paints her compositions using historic printing techniques and vintage equipment to pay homage to the physical limitations and opportunities found in analogue methods. Dugan views this process as a meditative one, ‘The darkroom is, for me, a refuge from the infiltration of technology and the fastness it represents. One goal with these works is to retain visual evidence of the hand used in making them.
Adam Jeppesen (Denmark, lives in Argentina) creates work that addresses the materiality and transience of the photograph as an object. Much of Jeppesen's work is the result of a solitary 487-day journey from the North Pole to Antarcticain 2007. The journey has left visible traces and blemishes on the photographs as he carried his film and camera equipment with him on the road, where the negatives picked up grit and dust along the way. Jeppesen celebrates these imperfect elements rather than tries to hide them. Coincidence, damage and imperfection are essential elements in his work. At a time when the image has become infinitely perfectible and reproducible, Jeppesen experiments with the photograph as a unique object that is subject to the forces of change and decay.
Timo Lieber (Germany, lives in London) has, for the first time in his career, turned to the historic technique of cyanotype. C-Blue was born out of Lieber’s fascination with the Arctic and his shock at the desperately fast and potentially irreversible changes that have been caused to the environment. From lithium mines in the Atacama Desert to the world’s largest lignite open pit mine in Germany, Lieber has photographed various landscapes forever altered by resource extraction. It is the delicate fragility of the ice cap, however, that he keeps revisiting. To obtain images that chart the ice metamorphosis rather than merely document the result, Lieber returnedto the 19th century cameraless technique that utilises daylight to expose paper coated with a light-sensitive solution. Melting ice crystals reflects the light andleaves traces on the canvas. As in nature meticulous planning conflicts with the laws of physics resulting in images as unique as the combined impact of all the elements that have come together to create them.
Steve Macleod (Scotland, lives in London) is inspired by the Pictorial movement popularised in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. For a Pictorialist, a photograph, like a painting, drawing or engraving, is a way of projecting an emotional intent into the viewer's realm of imagination. His works often utilise chiaroscuro elements of light and shade creating a melancholic, expressive mood. Macleod shoots on a large-format camera with a consistently systematic and meticulous approach so that he can absorb and slow the pace of the images. He creates a stillness, a sense of extended present time through narrow depth of field and camera movements, there is an obtuse visibility of detail - the aim is to question what lies between the elements beyond and within photographs, by decelerating the process of photography, with a distilled focus on the basic principles of making.
Chris McCaw (USA, lives in California) uses hand-built cameras with vintage photographic paper as negatives.His artistic process is firmly rooted in the history of photography while simultaneously pushing the medium in new directions and recalls the work of photography pioneer, Henry Fox Talbot, combined with the slash and burn paintings of Lucio Fontana. He photographs the sun, making minutes, hours, or even many day-long exposures, that burn the sun’s path onto the paper and capture its movements against its land or sea background. Long exposures throughout a day, or over multiple days, materialise as marks and burns made directly by the sun’s light as the paper is exposed. The subject of the photograph (the sun) disrupts the idea that a photograph is simply a representation of reality. Instead it becomes a physical embodiment of the Earth’s movement and the passage of time.
Liz Nielsen (USA, lives in New York) uses a contemporary application of one of the best-known avant-garde photographic processes - the photogram - which was first mastered by Man Ray and Maholy-Nagy at the beginning of the 20thCentury. Each unique colour image is created without a camera by placing objects directly onto photographic paper and exposing them to light. 'The final outcomes are pre-planned with strong intention and formally composed,' she explains, 'but because I'm working with light, they always have some surprises. The light bleeds and spills and doesn't want to be contained.'
Bruno V. Roels (Belgium, lives in Ghent) employs the silver gelatin printing process to create images that are subsequently worked on by hand. His practice is not constrainedby the camera used, the film or technologyof thecamera used, and the paper the photographs are printed on. For him, the very act of developing and printing analogue photography offers endless ways to be artistically free.Instead of fussing over making the perfect silver gelatin print, for example, Roels believes that all printed versions of an image have value - he never shows just one perfect print, but all of them, in one composition. Some of his compositions consist of hundreds of variations of one single negative, all printed in the dark room.
Joni Sternbach (USA, lives in New York) uses both large-format film and early photographic processes to explore the present-day landscape to make environmental portraits. Her work centres on our relationship with water, contrasting some of the most desolate deserts in the American West with iconic surf beaches around the world that captures thirteen years of portraits of surfers in tintype. She works with a large-format camera and a wet-collodianprocess that must be prepared and developed in situ. The very nature of collodion is spontaneous and unpredictable. It is precisely this raw quality of the process that suits the subject matter, giving it a distinctive appearance and echoing important traditions of 19th-century anthropological photography.
For further information, press images and interview requests please contact Sam Trenerry, samtrenerry@yahoo.com/ +00 44 (0)7780 991 811