vrijdag 24 juni 2016

Paradise Regained Brillant Pastiche of the Guide Rose Michelin Huit jours à Trébaumec Georges Hugnet Artists' Book


Ubu Gallery presents all summer long an in-depth exhibition exploring the richness of Georges Hugnet’s Surrealist masterpiece, Huit jours à Trébaumec. Published in 1969 by Henri Mercher, the renowned bookbinder, the book appears as a Guide Rose Micheline, a clever parody of the popular Baedeker, Guide Michelin Rouge. In Hugnet’s satire, it is not a Michelin man, but a Michelin woman serving as tour guide and leading us through the fictional “Trébaumec” or as Hugnet called it, “the little lost town in Brittany, paradise regained.” In 1947, Hugnet (1906–1974) traveled along the coast of Brittany photographing his excursions and popular tourist attractions. He was so inspired by his wanderings that he combined earlier collages with newly made ones and sequenced the 82 chosen collages into a Surrealist drama with accompanying handwritten text. The collages depict humorous, racy and grotesque situations in and around Trébaumec, a word play on “good looking guy.” A gap of 22 years followed before the publication was finally realized. The exhibition, which opens on May 19th and runs through September 30th, will feature various examples of the book, including an early maquette, one of the five deluxe copies containing 82 original photographs of the collages, and one of the 10 “semi-deluxe” copies specially bound by Mercher. Eighty-two vintage photographs of the collages acquired from the estate of Hugnet will be available for sale individually and will present the entire sequence of images from the book. Also on display will be 12 of the original collages, as well as ephemera surrounding the book.

Huit jours à Trébaumec
Year: 1969
Author: Georges Hugnet 1906 to 1974 Artist: Georges Hugnet 1906 to 1974
Publisher: Mercher
As a young boy, Georges Hugnet loved to cut newspapers into pieces and to rearrange the headlines, texts and pictures into his own 'journal'. He would make imaginative and comical collages, which he would later continue to do in his plays, poetry and (cinemato)graphical work. Hugnet found the four-sided border of a painting overly restrictive. Through the combination of various disciplines, his work features an incredible amount of diversity. It is this very richness of the imagination that he has always defended as a Dadaist and surrealist.

Sexual-symbolism
But Hugnet had the gift of letting his creativity flow within the mostly much smaller space of his photographs. In Huit jours à Trébaumec, which is supposedly a vacation diary by Hugnet for which he took 82 pictures, that creativity comes to full fruition: Hugnet made these photo collages at a later age, and was a talented 'peintre de collages'. The original photographs were taken during a trip Hugnet made along the coast of Brittany in 1947.
Because of Hugnet's collages, Huit jours à Trébaumec became an unusual vacation diary. It is a grotesque, humorous, racily illustrated imaginary travel story that takes place on the coast of Brittany. Two girls in underwear storm the castle steps, two others tumble down them naked, and a squirrel can be seen sitting on the buttock of a lady bending over. Hugnet's poetry has been characterised as sexual-symbolist, and can therefore be interpreted in many different ways. That could also apply to Huit jours à Trébaumec: the story and photo collages can be described as suggestive at the very least. The poses struck by the women, who are either partially or entirely naked, can therefore easily be imagined.

Guide Rose Micheline
The surprise one registers when reading the unusual text and seeing the strange collages of Huit jours à Trébaumec fits comfortably into the tradition of Dada and surrealism. Without even opening the book, this surprise is already caused by the edition's unusual size (40 centimetres tall and 19 centimetres wide). The book, which was published by Mercher, appeared as Guide Rose Micheline, a parody of the popular travel guide Guide Michelin Rouge. In this parody, it is not a little Michelin man, but a Michelin woman acting as a tour guide in the book.
Every set of facing pages features two photo collages on the right, accompanied by two captions on the left. Hugnet's handwriting has been reproduced here in phototype. The everyday holiday snapshots of tourist attractions have been embellished by Hugnet with magazine clippings, mainly of mannequins, women and models, but also of enormous mushrooms.

Trébaumec, paradise regained
Whoever goes looking for the town of Trébaumec will not be able to find it on any map. Trébaumec, which probably alludes to the popular French expression for 'very handsome boy' (très beau mec) is an imaginary creation of Hugnet's. He calls it 'the little lost town in Brittany, paradise regained'.

Bibliographical description
Description:     Huit jours à Trébaumec : journal de vacances orné de 82 photographies prises par l'auteur en 1947 / Georges Hugnet ; – Paris: Mercher, 1969. - 41 pl. (100 p.). : ill. ; 40×19 cm
Printer: Dominique Viglino (Bourg-la-Reine) (text)
Ateliers Coët (Paris) (heliogravure)
Edition: 107 copies
This copy: Number 53 of 100 on Rives BFK
Typeface: De Roos
Note: Preceded by a manually set text by the editor set in De Roos type.
Note: Signed by the author and the editor.
Bibliography: Bénézit 7-249
Shelf-mark: Koopm K 326
References
Adam Biro, 'Georges Hugnet', in: Dictionnaire général du surréalisme et ses environs. Fribourg, Office du Livre, 1982, p. 210
Jean-Paul Clébert, 'Georges Hugnet', in: Dictionnaire du Surréalisme. Paris, Seuil, 1996, p. 310-311
Georges Hugnet, Pleins et déliés: Souvenirs et témoignages, 1926-1972. La Chapelle-sur-Loire, Authier, 1972
James Phillips, Georges Hugnet (1906-1974): ''Le pantalon de la fauvett'': Du dictionnaire abrégé du Surréalisme: Étude et choix de textes. Paris, Lettres Modernes, 1991























dinsdag 21 juni 2016

Nothing Happens Victor Bockris Andy Warhol Muhammad Ali Incredibly Small Photobooks Kessels Kooiker Photography


TitleNothing Happens
AuthorBockris, Victor; [Warhol, Andy]; [Ali, Muhammad]
FormatSOFTCOVER
ISBN
ISBN-13
PublisherNadada Editions
Yr. Published1978
AttributesFirst Edition, Limited Edition of 750 Copies Paperback
DescriptionVery Good Staple-bound b/w photo-illustrated wraps; 113x113mm; pp. [16], with b/w photo-illustrations showing Andy Warhol and Muhammad Ali together, printed on the recto only. Covers a little scuffed along spine and edges; rear cover dust-smudged. Inscription on inside front cover, otherwise internally clean and unmarked.



For several years, Paul Kooiker and Erik Kessels have organized evenings for friends in which they share the strangest photo books in their collections. The books shown are rarely available in regular shops, but are picked up in thrift stores and from antiquaries. The group’s fascination for these pictorial non-fiction books comes from the need to find images that exist on the fringe of regular commercial photo books. It’s only in this area that it’s possible to find images with an uncontrived quality. This constant tension makes the books interesting. It’s also worth noting that these tomes all fall within certain categories: the medical, instructional, scientific, sex, humour or propaganda. Paul Kooiker and Erik Kessels have made a selection of their finest books from within this questionable new genre. Incredibly small photobooks is the second volume (after Terribly awesome photobooks) showing this amazing collection.

PHOTOBOOKS CHALLENGING THE EDGES OF THE MEDIUM. A conversation with Paul Kooiker about two newsprint editions on photobooks, in cooperation with Erik Kessels and published by APE: Terrible Awesome Photobooks and Incredible Small Photobooks by Mirelle Thijsen (MT):



MT:
Then you also selected expensive antiquarian books, as Nothing Happens (1978) by Victor Bockris [Andy Warhol]. The sales price on Auction.fr is 300 euros. Is this booklet part of your collection?

PK:
No, that’s Erik’s…

MT:
I read a description on Abebooks.com – in fact, I am able to find there more bibliographic data on the selections than in your newspaper, Haha …Apparently Nothing Happens is a catalogue of the Whitney Museum containing portraits from the 1970s.

PK:
What you see is Andy Warhol standing next to Mohamed Ali! It is a meeting between those two icons and they look past each other. There are four to six pictures in that booklet. And that’s it. You look at two celebrities, standing awkwardly close to each other. It is a mysterious book, one of my favourites. And square booklets are often so ugly, but this one’s just right. You hardly find square books these days…














woensdag 15 juni 2016

From a dead Ox catch a Fox PIONEERS OF (DUTCH) NATURE PHOTOGRAPHY Frans Lanting Richard Tepe Charlotte Dumas Erik Kessels


FRANS LANTING | DIALOGUES WITH NATURE
This summer the Nederlands Fotomuseum in Rotterdam, The Netherlands, will present a major retrospective of Frans Lanting’s work. Born in Rotterdam, Lanting has been hailed as one of the great photographers of our time. For more than four decades, he has documented the natural world from the Amazon to Antarctica to promote understanding about the earth through images that convey a passion for nature and a sense of wonder about our living planet.

This exhibition will be the first to show the range and depth of Lanting’s work over the course of his career. It will feature images from five of his signature projects produced over a period of forty years. Lanting’s work is presented as an ongoing dialogue with nature, and this exhibition reveals how those conversations have been influenced by art and literature as much as they have been informed by science, technology, and his own experiences with wildlife and wild places on all seven continents.

The Magic of Reality: Holland
Frans Lanting (b. Rotterdam, 1951) began making images in the 1970s, when he was studying environmental economics at Rotterdam’s Erasmus University. His first photographs were impressions of the seasons in the city’s Kralingse Bos park. Lanting was inspired by magic realism in paintings and literature, and by the work of Japanese haiku poets. His images capture the spare feeling of haikus and a sense of the otherworldly in the natural world.

A World Out of Time: Madagascar
In the 1980s Lanting was one of the first photographers to work in Madagascar after the country ended decades of self-enforced isolation from the West. During extensive fieldwork he documented wildlife and cultural traditions that had never been photographed before, and produced his first major story for National Geographic. His images opened the eyes of the world to the diversity as well as the conflicts of this island continent and fueled conservation efforts to protect Madagascar’s remarkable natural heritage.

Intimate Encounters: Eye to Eye
The photographs in Lanting’s Eye to Eye portfolio, first published in the 1990s, reveal the unique personal aesthetic he brings to wildlife photography, as well as the startling new perspective on animals his images provoke. “Mr. Lanting’s photographs take creatures that have become ordinary and familiar and transform them into haunting new visions,” writes The New York Times. In earlier projects Lanting’s images showed the relationship between animals and their worlds, including the human environment which more than ever shapes their fate today. In Eye to Eye he removed animals from the context in which they live, and brought together species and situations from around the world in order to celebrate the kinship of all animal life.

A Journey Through Time: Life
Life: A Journey Through Time is Frans Lanting’s lyrical interpretation of the history of life on Earth from the Big Bang to the present, expressed through images of the natural world that provide a window on its evolution through time. Produced over a period of seven years and first released in 2006, Lanting’s Life project was also realized as a multimedia symphony with music by American composer Philip Glass. Life is a synthesis of Lanting’s career. From his beginnings as a wildlife photographer pursuing animals one at a time his perspective grew to include their habitats, and in his iconic images, animals became ambassadors for ecosystems. Over time, biodiversity superseded ecosystems as a concept for understanding nature as a network made up of untold numbers of species, and Lanting’s vision expanded to view the collective force of all life on earth as a singular element that shapes our planet.

The Future of Life
Images from Lanting’s project to explore the state of global biodiversity at the turn of the millennium are featured in The Future of Life, along with recent photographs that explore our relationship with a natural world that has been profoundly impacted by humans. Lanting’s images speak to our conflicts with wildlife and the risks to the diversity of life as well as to new discoveries and restoration, and what it means for the fate of life on earth.

Frans Lanting’s influential work has appeared in exhibitions and publications around the world. His books have received awards and acclaim: “No one turns animals into art more completely than Frans Lanting,” writes The New Yorker. Lanting has received top honors from World Press Photo, the title of BBC Wildlife Photographer of the Year, and the Sierra Club’s Ansel Adams Award. He has been honored as a Fellow of the Royal Geographic Society in London and is a recipient of Sweden’s Lennart Nilsson Award. In 2001 H.R.H. Prince Bernhard inducted Lanting as a Knight in the Royal Order of the Golden Ark to honor his contributions to nature conservation. He serves as an Ambassador for the World Wildlife Fund and on the Leadership Council of Conservation International, and he is a Trustee of the University of California at Santa Cruz. Lanting makes his home in Santa Cruz, California, with his wife and partner, Chris Eckstrom, an editor, videographer, and former staff writer at National Geographic with whom he collaborates on fieldwork and publishing projects.


HUNTING WITH A CAMERA | PIONEERS OF DUTCH NATURE PHOTOGRAPHY
Nature is everywhere: in the forest, at the beach, on the street, and always portrayed in a myriad of photographs. Since 1873, Dutch nature lovers have enjoyed caputering the glory of the countryside in print. By bringing together the works of the earliest Dutch nature photographers, the exhibition Hunting with a Camera | Pioneers of Dutch Nature Photography is the very first exhibition of its kind to offer such a complete overview of the many marvels of the diverse Dutch landscape. Visitors can experience nature through the eyes of these photography forerunners and appreciate how important their role was in fighting for conservation. A special selection has been made from over 90,000 historic nature photos that the museum has in its collection, and these will be shown to the public for the first time. Through these exclusive photographs, we can marvel at the inventive photography techniques that were used to capture plants, animals and unique landscapes, some of which are now rare or even extinct in the Netherlands.

The very first photographs of nature Through Hunting with a Camera | Pioneers of Dutch Nature Photography we can experience the magnificence of nature captured on film throughout the Netherlands during the 1900s. These historic images show landscapes where roads were scarce and populated only by walkers, cyclists or horse-drawn carts. The pioneers frequently trained their camera lenses on birds, and over 40 species of bird can be seen in the exhibition including threatened species such as the stone curlew, the great reed warbler, the little bittern and the purple heron. Be surrounded by dozens of sharply focused, beautifully staged photos of flowers and plants in ‘De Tuin van Tepe’ (Tepe Gardens).

Photographing wild animals would be anything but easy during that time, as was apparent from the pioneers’
countless publications and diaries. The photographers disappeared into the wilderness under very basic
conditions, weighed down by the most impractical and heavy equipment. For days they would lie hidden in
bushes, tents or camouflaged huts waiting with their cameras for a special bird or a wild animal to appear. Only once back at home could they see if their images were successful. There was always the possibility of under- or overexposed pictures; they could also discover that the bird had just flown away or that the animal turned its back on the photographer just at the moment suprême.

Call for conservation
In addition to these groundbreaking photographs, the pioneers had another clear goal in mind – to make the
public aware of nature’s beauty and the absolute need to protect it. By educating the public with beautiful images of nature, the photographers hoped to instill an understanding of the importance of conservation. Their efforts were rewarded in 1905 with the establishment of the Vereniging Natuurmonumenten (Dutch Society for Nature Conservation).

In the footsteps of the pioneers
To this day, nature has remained a prevalent and popular subject in photography, which is why the Nederlands Fotomuseum will also be dedicating a small part of the exhibition to contemporary photography. In this exhibition, the museum will not be presenting nature photography in the literal sense of the word, but will show the work of artists and photographers that reflects on how we interact with nature. The exhibition will display recent work by Kim Boske (1978), Charlotte Dumas (1977), Anne Geene (1983), Erik Kessels (1966), and Luuk Wilmering (1957).

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Vanuit een dode os een vosje vangen
Rianne van Dijck
15 juni 2016

Elephants at Twilight, Botswana 1989. Foto Frans Lanting

Wie geen telelens heeft moest slim zijn. Om in de 19de eeuw een vogel, hoog in het nest, of een schuwe ree, verscholen in een dicht bos te fotograferen, had enige creativiteit en een avontuurlijke inslag nodig. Handzame fototoestellen waren er nog niet, dus bouwde een fotograaf een houten toren van een meter of 4 hoog en zeulde zijn zware plaatcamera naar boven. Of hij ging in een bootje naar een nest op het Naardermeer, statief mee, glasnegatieven, lenzen, verrekijker, schuiltentje en rubberen laarzen.

Jacht met de camera - Pioniers van de Nederlandse natuurfotografie in het Nederlands, t/m 4/9 in Nederlands Fotomuseum, Rotterdam.

De Britse gebroeders Kearton, zo’n beetje de David Attenboroughs van hun tijd, vroegen hun slager een os te slachten en die uit te hollen. In hun opgezette rund trokken ze de natuur in, om torenvalken en kieviten, herten en vosjes, door een gaatje in de kop van de os te fotograferen.

In het Nederlands Fotomuseum in Rotterdam is deze zomer een prachtige expositie te zien over de pioniers van de natuurfotografie. Het museum heeft uit de collectie een selectie gemaakt die het verhaal vertelt van de opkomst van het genre. De foto’s gunnen ons een blik op verdwenen landschappen, uit de tijd dat Nederland ontdekt dat de eigen natuur, ondanks het ontbreken van bergen en snelstromende rivieren de moeite waard is om te koesteren. En te beschermen, want door verstedelijking en industrialisatie moest steeds vaker het „liefelijke, zwijgende rijk der planten” plaatsmaken voor de „woelenden en tierenden mensch”, zoals Frederik van Eeden in 1886 schreef.


We zien hier de eerste vogelfoto, van een zwarte stern; een albumineprint gemaakt door Alexander Clark Kennedy in 1852. Een monumentale eik in Park Twickel in Delden, in 1907 gefotografeerd door Richard Tepe. En het schitterende filmpje uit 1924 van J.C. Mol, die zich toen al bezighield met timelapse-fotografie, en waarin we zien hoe een bloemknop langzaam ontluikt tot bloem.

De historische foto’s worden aangevuld met hedendaags werk van onder andere Charlotte Dumas (wolven), Kim Boske (bossen) en Erik Kessels, die foto’s van herten kocht van jagers die ‘motion detection’-camera’s gebruiken bij de jacht.



Natuurlijk hadden de pioniers uit de 19de eeuw deze techniek – het dier zorgt door eigen beweging dat er een foto wordt gemaakt – al lang zo’n soort techniek bedacht: Johannes Vijverberg ontwikkelde rond 1910 een elektrisch mechanisme waarbij door middel van twee draden in het nest de vogels zelf contact maakten met de camera waardoor het sluitermechanisme werd geactiveerd; een heuse vogelselfie.