APRESENTAÇÃO DO PROJETO DE INVESTIGAÇÃO VISUAL SPACES OF CHANGE (VSC) NA ESCOLA SUPERIOR DE MEDIA, ARTES E DESIGN (ESMAD)

 
 

APRESENTAÇÃO DO PROJETO DE INVESTIGAÇÃO VISUAL SPACES OF CHANGE (VSC) NA ESCOLA SUPERIOR DE MEDIA, ARTES E DESIGN (ESMAD) 

Realizou-se no dia 30 de janeiro no Auditório da ESMAD a apresentação de um conjunto de iniciativas promovidas no âmbito do projeto Visual Spaces of Change (VSC). A presidente da ESMAD, Olívia da Silva, deu início à sessão de apresentação do VSC, introduzindo este projecto enquanto iniciativa estratégica perante uma plateia composta por alunos pertencentes a vários ciclos de estudo da ESMAD, bem como por alguns membros do seu corpo docente. 

O coordenador do projeto VSC, Pedro Leão Neto, enquadrou as questões nucleares deste projeto de investigação, enfatizando o potencial da Fotografia e da Imagem para revelar aspetos identitários de comunidades, arquiteturas e territórios, ao tornar visíveis diferentes modos de apropriação e transformação que ocorrem no espaço urbano. Apoiado nos resultados preliminares deste projeto nas suas diversas vertentes, foram apresentados vários exemplos concretos de exploração criativa da fotografia e do desenho que ilustram as suas capacidades de comunicação, potenciadas pelo uso de tecnologias de informação e combinando a Imagem com diversas formas de expressão artística. 

Neste contexto, foi apresentado também o Concurso Internacional de Ideias para a criação de um Expositor e Projetor Móvel para a exibição de projetos de fotografia contemporânea, cujo vencedor terá a oportunidade de construir e implementar o protótipo da solução escolhida para o projeto VSC. Foi ainda lançado o desafio a estudantes, artistas e investigadores a participar na candidatura aberta para participação no 1º workshop sobre Percursos Alternativos: Arquitectura, Fotografia e Dança. A sessão contou também com a apresentação do Projeto de Fotografia “Uma linha na paisagem”, desenvolvido por Ana Sofia Santos, alumni do Mestrado em Comunicação Audiovisual, no âmbito da Residência Artística da Póvoa de Varzim. 

Estiveram presentes nesta sessão um conjunto significativo de instituições, organizações, investigadores, docentes e autores com interesses nas temáticas do projecto VSC - arquitetura, fotografia, produção cultural e artística, entre eles Luís Diamantino, Vice-Presidente da Câmara Municipal da Póvoa do Varzim, Lurdes Alves, Vice-Presidente da Câmara Municipal de Vila do Conde, Álvaro Moreira, Chefe de Divisão de Património e Museus da Câmara Municipal de Santo Tirso, bem como Mónica Guerreiro, Directora Municipal de Cultura e da Ciência da Câmara Municipal do Porto, confirmando assim a relevância desta iniciativa no movimento de abertura da academia à sociedade, fomentando maior interação social entre académicos, artistas, curadores e representantes de diversas instituições públicas para além dos seus espaços de atuação tradicionais, ampliando a sua capacidade de participação no domínio público, sendo este um objetivo comum do CEAU - FAUP e da ESMAD - UniMAD, bem como do projeto Visual Spaces of Change.

 A apresentação pública destas iniciativas pretende assim contribuir para abrir caminhos inovadores de investigação e comunicação visual sobre arquitetura e espaço público, com foco em dinâmicas emergentes de transformação urbana, através da produção de narrativas visuais sobre como as diferentes arquiteturas, espaços e territórios da Área Metropolitana do Porto são vividos e transformados pelas diversas pessoas, culturas e grupos sociais que a constituem enquanto sociedade ativa e participante no processo de constante formação e transformação da sua identidade colectiva.

Ver PDF de apresentação

Fotografia por Eduardo Silva
Texto por Eduardo Silva e José Barbedo

 

U.Porto lança concurso de desenho e fotografia

 
 

U.PORTO LANÇA CONCURSO DE FOTOGRAFIA E DESENHO


Encontrar “Um ‘outro olhar’ sobre cada Faculdade e a forma como se relaciona com a Cidade”. Passa por aí o objetivo e o desafio lançado lançado a todos os estudantes e investigadores da Universidade do Porto que queiram participar no concurso internacional de Desenho e Fotografia (DPIc) – Espaço e Identidade nas Faculdades da U. Porto: Visual Spaces of Change (VSC). O concurso foi lançado no dia 23 de janeiro e está aberto até 31 de julho de 2019.

Ver mais

 

Ben Reader in conversation with Bastien Rousseau

 
 
 
 

Ben Reader in conversation with Bastien Rousseau


Ben Reader is a Cornish painter currently based in Porto. His first artist book Lyonesse, inspired by early nineteenth century Japanese erotica (Shunga) and Cornish maritime culture and mythologies, was recently launched on the occasion of his first solo exhibition in Portugal. This interview was conducted online by the means of a popular messaging app over two days.


Those already familiar with your work may notice a change in your painting technique, perhaps lighter than two years ago.

Indeed, the panels in the book (in terms of pallet) are lighter and playful. The surroundings have a great influence on my works: the London portraits have an evident dim and slightly monochromatic filter whereas the book holds the buddings of Cornish spring.

I guess I meant in your recent paintings as well. I know you have had kept that London style when you and I met in residency at Deliceiras 18 in Porto. The portrait you had made of myself was alike.

Sure. So concerning the recent paintings: I have remained with a heavy opaque application. This is intensified also by the medium of oil. With the book, however, I have allowed to carry my style in a different street. Taking from the floating dilated simplicity of Japanese Shunga, I applied the richness to the book sparingly, giving the voyeur space to imagine. In this new work I have experimented with creating intense imagery though isolating focal points.

Hence the lightness in style which is similar to Ukiyo-e, the low-key erotic comics production popular during the Edo era in Japan, which has influenced the emergence of later manga. I have noticed quite a few humourous traits placed here and there. Do you enjoy mocking painting (the art form) thus, perhaps as a way to disregard it, even possibly with a disruptive eye?

I would say that I use the medium as an instrument of pleasure! It is after all a means of producing illusions, and if one feels amused then the work has succeeded.

Which has become a rather rare approach to so-called art making. Artists often take on the money-success-fame-glamour game with a deep focus on 'the conversation' happening across the globe and the aesthetic to be sold through specific channels. This performance has become an art form of its own kind.

Yes, but we must not forget individual satisfaction: the book is unhindered by popular genre because it is the first of its own. Alike to the name of an old shunga‘pillow book’, I do not expect the readers to be divulging their unique passages but covertly snatching the copies – similarly to the mysterious disappearance of the first edition from the opening exhibition! (Yes, this did happen.)

Do you feel the urge to make stuff like painting or drawing?

Yes of course as I am a painter, I wouldn't present anything half baked, I must enjoy the work as much as the viewer.

Funny enough, I would have thought of you to be nonchalant towards producing paintings. Although I reckon that the urge about which I am questioning you do apply to the making of your books, Lyonesse and Ictis!

You are right, the stimulating erotic overtone of the book does help to guide the unrelenting hand of the artist, like a dangling carrot tied to a goat. The explorations of sex infiltrate even the geographic bones of the book's landscape.

Do 'the geographic bones of the book's landscape' refer to the narrative or the actual landscape drawn as the ‘metamorphological’ continuation of the body, like a planet without firmament?

Good question. The skeleton refers to the construction of the book. In order to animate the characters, to simulate life they must first have a geography to reside in. This geography can also grow and bear fruit, and in places mimic the interior sexual scenes. And yes, by building this structure, the limits of this little universe are also set – the island contains the voyeur. The other celestial bodies will be revealed in the later volumes!

Exhibition Lyonesse was on view until January 26th 2019 at Junta de Freguesia do Bonfim, Porto, Portugal
Exhibition views © Bastien Rousseau Book snapshots © Ben Reader
Ben Reader’s studio is located in Porto Bonfim at Travessa de Anselmo, Braancamp 48, 4000-085 Porto, Portugal

For order inquiries and studio visits, do contact mrbenreader@gmail.com
instagram @readerben


Bastien Rousseau is a French curator based in Porto whose current work and research focus on the affective experience provided by artist books.

 

Apresentação Pública VSC

 
VSC com texto.jpg

Visual Spaces of Change (VSC) 

Apresentação do projeto colaborativo de investigação em arquitetura, arte, imagem e inovação. 


Irá realizar-se no próximo dia 30 de janeiro na ESMAD, quarta-feira, a apresentação pública do projeto Visual Spaces of Change (VSC). 
O coordenador do projeto, Pedro Leão Neto, irá enquadrar este projeto de investigação, que pretende criar uma rede de espaços e instituições públicas com a missão de comunicar de forma crítica e inovadora, dinâmicas de transformação e apropriação do espaço público na área metropolitana do Porto. 
Ainda neste contexto, irá ser apresentado o Concurso para Estrutura Portátil de Exposição e o 5.º Congresso Internacional On The Surface: Photography On Architecture — “Visual Spaces of Change: unveiling the publicness of urban space”. 
A apresentação decorre no anfiteatro b301 pelas 16.30h.

 

East End Archive

 
 

EAST END ARCHIVE

BY CHRIS DORLEY-BROWN


In 1984, Chris Dorley-Brown, a British photographer and curator, started to photograph the corners of East London with several multiple exposures, which gave the possibility of creating a dream-like scenery composed by several narratives happening at the same time. The long term project is a reflection on how those are places of brief interactions and intersections and shows the ever changing side of East London.

The archive is a wide ranging colour record made with medium format colour negative film and, after 2006, digital cameras. Numbering around 8000 images, the archive is expanding it’s scope to include the outer east London boroughs. The pictures study architecture, public events, civic life, portraits, development of housing and social services. Elements of the archive are collected and held by various London Borough archives, the Museum of London, Barts Hospital, BBC and several private collections.

 

APRESENTAÇÃO REITORIA VSC

 
 

APRESENTAÇÃO REITORIA VSC

Foi realizada na Reitoria da Universidade do Porto (U.P.) dia 23 de Janeiro a apresentação de um conjunto de iniciativas promovidas no âmbito do projeto Visual Spaces of Change (VSC). A Vice-Reitora para a Cultura, Museus e Edições da U.P., Fátima Vieira, introduziu o tema do Concurso Internacional de Desenho e Fotografia, Espaço e Identidade das 14 Faculdades da U.P, resumindo e justificando a pertinência do tema a uma questão fundamental: o que somos e o que queremos ser enquanto coletivo pertencente a essa instituição centenária que é a Universidade do Porto. 

O coordenador do projeto VSC, Pedro Leão Neto, enquadrou estes questionamentos no âmbito deste projeto de investigação, enfatizando o potencial da Fotografia e da Imagem para revelar aspetos identitários de comunidades, arquiteturas e territórios, tornando visíveis diferentes modos de apropriação e transformação que ocorrem no espaço urbano. Apoiado nos resultados preliminares deste projeto nas suas diversas vertentes, foram apresentadas diversas exemplos concretos de exploração criativa da fotografia e do desenho, suas potencialidades de comunicação com uso de tecnologias de informação, e o uso combinado da Imagem com diversas formas de expressão artística. 

Neste contexto, foi apresentado também o Concurso internacional de ideias para a criação de um Expositor e Projetor Móvel para a exibição de projeto de fotografia contemporânea, cujo vencedor terá a oportunidade de construir e implementar o protótipo da solução escolhida para o projeto VSC. Foi ainda lançado o desafio a estudantes, artistas e investigadores a participar na candidatura aberta para participação no 1º workshop sobre Percursos Alternativos: Arquitectura, Fotografia e Dança. 

A apresentação pública destas iniciativas pretende assim contribuir para abrir caminhos inovadores de investigação e comunicação visual sobre arquitetura e espaço público, com foco em dinâmicas emergentes de transformação urbana, através da produção de narrativas visuais sobre como as diferentes arquiteturas, espaços e territórios da U.P. são utilizados, vividos e transformados pelas diversas pessoas, culturas e grupos sociais que a constituem enquanto sociedade ativa e participante no processo de constante formação e transformação da sua identidade colectiva.

O amplo espectro de representantes das várias faculdades da U.P que participaram desta apresentação pública demonstram o interesse suscitado por esta iniciativa, que deu espaço no final da sucessão a contributos diversos mas convergentes quanto à vontade de abrir cada vez mais a academia à sociedade, contribuindo assim para ampliar a capacidade da Universidade para participar na vida cultural da cidade do Porto e projetar os seus valores culturais e património  socioambiental à escala regional e internacional.

Ver PDF Apresentação

Fotografia por Eduardo Silva
Texto por José Barbedo

 

APRESENTAÇÃO PÚBLICA | 23 JANEIRO | REITORIA DA U.PORTO

 
Proposta Banner Apresentação.jpg

APRESENTAÇÃO PÚBLICA

DPIc - Concurso Internacional de Desenho e Fotografia: Espaço e Identidade nas Faculdades da U. Porto e Estrutura Portátil de exposição de Imagens para Espaços de Mudança Visual - Concurso de Ideias e Anúncio do 5º Congresso Internacional: On the Surface: Photography on Architecture VSC - Unveiling the publicness of urban space

Na próxima quarta feira, dia 23 de janeiro, realiza-se na Reitoria U.Porto, a apresentação pública dos concursos DPIc - Concurso Internacional de Desenho e Fotografia: Espaço e Identidade nas Faculdades da U. Porto e Concurso de Ideias - Estrutura Portátil de exposição de Imagens para Espaços de Mudança Visual, bem como o anúncio do 5º Congresso Internacional ON THE SURFACE: PHOTOGRAPHY ON ARCHITECTURE - “Visual Spaces of Change: unveiling the publicness of urban space”

A iniciativa, de entrada livre, é organizada pela Reitoria da U. Porto e o Centro de Comunicação e Representação Espacial (CCRE / CEAU / FAUP), no âmbito do projecto Visual Spaces of Change - VSC, referência POCI-01-0145-FEDER-030605, financiado por fundos nacionais através da FCT/MCTES e cofinanciado pelo Fundo Europeu de Desenvolvimento Regional (FEDER) através do COMPETE – Programa Operacional Competitividade e Internacionalização (POCI). 

O tema nuclear do Concurso Internacional de Desenho e Fotografia (DPIc) sobre a Identidade das 14 Faculdades da U. Porto: Visual Spaces of Change (VSC) é a ideia de Utopia e Espaços Visuais de Mudança (VSC) e é dirigido a todos os estudantes das 14 Faculdades da U. Porto – estudantes de 1.º, 2.º e 3.º Ciclos ou jovens investigadores pertencentes a qualquer instituição de ensino superior e / ou investigação da U. Porto. 

O concurso de ideias Estrutura Portátil de exposição de Imagens para Espaços de Mudança Visual desafia estudantes de arquitectura, artistas e equipas multidisciplinares a conceber uma estrutura multi-funcional portátil que permita a projeção e exposição de imagens através de módulos facilmente montados nos locais de exibição do projeto Visual Spaces of Change (VSC) - projeto de investigação coordenado pelo Centro de Comunicação e Representação Espacial (CCRE), integrado no centro de I&D da FAUP (CEAU) Universidade do Porto (UPorto), em consórcio com a Universidade do Minho (com a participação do Centro ALGORITMI e Lab2PT - UMinho). 

VISUAL SPACES OF CHANGE - VSC é a primeira etapa de um projeto de Arquitetura, Arte, Imagem e Inovação sobre dinâmicas emergentes de mudança na Área Metropolitana do Porto (AMP). Projetos de Fotografia Contemporânea (CPP) serão desenvolvidos e implementados em locais específicos, concebidos como "narrativas visuais" que interferem intencionalmente com o território metropolitano num exercício de representação autorreflexiva de seu próprio processo de mudança urbana. Esta rede de espaços públicos e coletivos constituirá um "Museu Aberto" na AMP, estimulando instituições artísticas e culturais a ampliar seu alcance e participação no espaço público.

 

Soil

 
 

SOIL

BY MARGARITA YOKO NIKITAKI

Athens is condensed, homogeneous and grey. 
Although it is surrounded by four large mountains and built around a number of hills, the bare ground can hardly be seen anymore. The new soil is concrete and so is the new horizon.


BIO

Margarita Yoko Nikitaki is a Greek-Japanese photographer based in Athens, Greece. 
She studied photography at FOCUS School of Photography in Athens and she obtained her BA degree in Graphic Design from TEI of Athens / FGAD / School of Graphic Design. She works as a freelance photographer in commercial, editorial, architectural, industrial and agricultural projects for design studios, companies and magazines. She also works as a still photographer in movie sets. Her personal work has been exhibited at Thessaloniki Biennale of Contemporary Art, National Museum of Contemporary Art (EMST), Festival Internacional de Fotografía de Tenerife, Grace Athens, Tbilisi Photo Festival, Athens Photo Festival and more. She is currently studying for her Master's degree in Social and Cultural Anthropology at Panteion University of Social and Political Studies in Athens.

www.margaritanikitaki.com

 

Interview with Anna Brody

 
 
 

INTERVIEW WITH ANNA BRODY


“So Far, I think
/
I Was Something That Lay Under The Sun And Felt It“

SCOPIO sat down to talk with Anna Brody about her most recent work, “So Far, I think / I Was Something That Lay Under The Sun And Felt It”. Brody, currently based in Tucson, Arizona, works with photography to both supplement and circumvent the shortcomings of written word. With this project, she photographs people, places and moments who are waiting to become. She hopes to honor them, and crystallize the quiet accomplishment of just being, now.

“I capture so that I can ask them, how did you become this way? Where will you go from here? Do you feel free? Do you know how beautiful you are? I experience a swelling awe at the glowing beauty of what I’m seeing; a compulsive need to capture and save these incredibly ordinary moments for posterity, web-weaving, and in fear of them slipping away from my memory.”

”So Far, I think / I Was Something That Lay Under The Sun And Felt It” is your most recent project, for how long have you been working on it?
For almost exactly a year now – I finished undergrad in November of 2017, quit a job for good reasons, broke my own heart a couple of times, grew it back together again by making new friends and seeing old friends, traveled a bit, drove myself across the country to my new home in Tucson, and started graduate school here in Arizona. It’s been a very full year!

Tell us more about this feeling of being scared of being alone, which is key to your work. What does that mean to you, and what does it feel like?
It’s not so much afraid of being alone as it is of being lonely – being lonely in crowds or around other people has to do with not feeling seen. How another person—a lover, partner, soul mate friend—can hold your non-performative, authentic self and remind you of who that is, and anchor you in that even while you’re performing in public. I think that’s why I often feel lonely in public; I realize I’m performing and I’m not being authentic, and don’t have that anchor to reference back to. Intuition is what I use when I photograph, and what anchors me to my authentic self because I can’t perform intuition, and in that sense my work acts as a partner or friend would – these images hold evidence of my authentic self, and serve to remind me of what that looks like, and to trust myself, that my intuition is worth something.  To feel seen and understood is to share your perspective on the world with someone else and to have them get it, and collecting intuitively captured pictures shows myself back to me. It mirrors my own perspective back to me because I don’t agonize over it in the moment, I’m not trying to explain it at the time I just do it, and then afterwards I see myself more clearly and I think it represents my best self in a certain way? My most open, least cynical self. And sharing that with myself makes me my own anchor. That sounds super sad on paper, but it’s true – it’s a process of intuition, understanding, and affirmation in and of myself. And hopefully, for a handful of other people who connect to my work in a non-logical, holistic and wholly authentic way.

You say you photographed to ‘circumvent and supplement the failures of our written word to express the complex’. What do you mean by that? Could you tell us a bit about your relationship with the medium of photography? When and how did it start?
Rebecca Solnit is an author and theorist who has changed the way I see the world. In one of her best-known books, Men Explain Things to Me, she states: “The tyranny of the quantifiable is partly the failure of language and discourse to describe more complex, subtle, and fluid phenomena, as well as the failure of those who shape opinions and make decisions to understand and value these slipperier things.” I believe photography—and art of any medium—can work around these shortcomings of language and discourse by allowing for imagery to represent, relate, and describe some of the many things that fall outside of what can be quantified or described with words. In doing so, art allows for meaning and value to be recognized in things that might otherwise be deemed unimportant because of their ineffable nature. In photographing the quiet unspectacular nonevents of just being, now, I can elevate and crystallize what would otherwise not be considered notable (literally, that you cannot make note of it because there aren’t the words to do so). In our culture, if you are not productive you are not valuable, and therefore not notable. Productivity is measured by the accomplishments of progress as recognized by colonial institutions that sanction the pursuit of capital above human life, joy, and freedom (especially, in the US, above the lives, joy and freedom of people of color, trans people, people with disabilities, and many other individuals who are deemed expendable in the face of the almighty dollar.) Systems of power need to quantify and categorize in order to maintain control. White supremacy, for example, requires among other things the quantification of melanin in order to construct the social (not biological) categories of race and/or ethnicity in order to maintain control over certain categories with certain ostensibly quantifiable traits. I and many other artists hope to subvert that which makes this control enactable – that which makes it so that a claim to power can be carried out with any sense of justifiable right. Question the claims by which a structure is imposed and leave it up to the viewer to bring their own vision of truth and connectivity to the work and to the world. Art, in all its subjectivity, can honor the personal history, life experience, and perspective of the viewer, and assert that they are equally as authoritative and meaningful as the intentions of the artist or what is understood culturally as truth. My working mission is that authoritative praise for quantifiable achievement should not be a precondition to appreciation; to see the ordinary and unotable as extraordinary—that is love, and that is what I aim to express and affirm.

Who are these people you photographed? How did you approach them to be involved in your documentary project? Where was the balance between privacy and exposure?
They are a mix of friends, family, and complete strangers. I approach with honesty about my intentions, and personal vulnerability that ideally allows for the subject to feel comfortable letting down some of their own walls to create a collaborative connection that achieves that tricky balance between privacy and exposure. This doesn’t always work, but it’s so rewarding when it does that I don’t think I’ll ever stop trying. I will say here though that I don’t consider this work to be a documentary—it is social, built, and residential landscape work, but it doesn’t follow any structure or logic that is consistent or narrow enough to constitute a documentary.

Do you see a common thread in the stories you choose?
The common thread is that my work shows me what the web is that I belong to, and a feeling of belonging is priority #1 for me. When I feel like I belong, I am able to approach humanity with tenderness, hope, and humor that make it so that I can get out of bed in the morning. It’s optimism, I guess. Grief and hope, power and vulnerability, resilience and fragility, discipline and addiction. These are non-binary landmarks of humanity as it is now, as it has always been, and as it most likely will always be until our species is gone – they’re definitely common threads. 

What was most interesting for you about the people/places you photographed?
I’m always curious about the power of association and the mutability of identity according to context and available information. Photographs allow for a deep questioning of the fixed nature of meaning. It is in our nature to categorize something and then quickly move on so we are ready to assess the next situation—that’s how we evolved, and we need to take more time to allow for the understanding of this shifting and changing, how time works to change both subject and viewer. My images freeze the people places and things I see into an immutable sameness - they aren’t going anywhere they aren’t going to change but you and I will and their arrangement might and their context definitely will, and in those variables there is an endless multiplicity of meaning, identity and narrative understanding.

Would you agree that we cannot relate fully with others if we do not accept that we are all alone in this world?
Yes, although I hope we’re both wrong. 
“I was something that lay under the sun and felt it, like the pumpkins, and I did not want to be anything more. I was entirely happy. Perhaps we feel like that when we die and become a part of something entire, whether it is sun and air, or goodness and knowledge. At any rate, that is happiness; to be dissolved into something complete and great. When it comes to one, it comes as naturally as sleep.” 
— Willa Cather, My Àntonia


WEBSITE

Editor: Rita Silva

 
 

12:34

 
 

12:34

BY ANTTI “VETTIS” VETTENRANTA

When I was 12 years old, my mum wrote me a 12-page letter. In the letter, which she wrote in spite of us living together, she tried to explain why life was sometimes so difficult. How we had been affected by our parents´ divorce when I was two years old. And how the lives of us four siblings were impacted by the illness of our second youngest sister. I was going to respond to mother´s letter, but I never did. 
My first child was born on a Monday, at 12:34. A few years later, I got divorced. We had two children together. 
The youngest of my four children was born when I was 34 years old. We built a house, my 12th apartment so far. We live in four generations and in three different houses on one large plot of land in Helsinki. Now I want to live my life in such a way that divorces are no longer handed down from generation to generation, and so that my phone would ring every day when I am on old man. Maybe this series of photographs is a reply to my mother´s letter. We are bad at talking about things.

BIO
Antti Vettenranta
(b. 1976) is a staff photographer for a major magazine publishing company in Finland. In his free time, Vettenranta photographs his own projects, trying to get as close to himself as possible. He believes photography can be universal and therapeutic in the same way as medtitation: it can be exercised anywhere.   

SOCIAL MEDIA/LINKS
http://www.vettis.net/
https://www.instagram.com/vettis_photographer

 

ODE

 
 

ODE

BY EDU SILVA

EN / PT

This visual narrative isn’t another epic tale about the portuguese coastline and its heroic seamen. Those days are long gone as well as those seamen, whom are either dead or dying. Globalization and the European Union came, saw, and conquered it all. Fishing boats were dismantled and strict fishing quotas were imposed, while at the same time a massive multiplatform campaign promoting tourism in Portugal began to be implemented and disseminated, both on a nacional and international scale. And while tourism is now a booming sector in this country, labors such as fishing or sargassum harvesting are becoming dying arts. These new dynamics altered the fabric of the social landscape of the portuguese coastline, changing the morphology of this territory not only in the physical sense, but also gradually turned a once great nation of seamen into a fleet of waiters and nondescript caretakers willing to tend to the needs of the tourists (foreign and domestic alike). 
The truth of the matter is that in this admirable and innocuous new world, there is no place for heroes and danger anymore. All that’s left are the old tales about the portuguese coastline, stories that still make us daydream about a place that once was the starting point to adventure.
Indeed, this is a difficult conjuncture to make a living off the sea. But there are still a few people who are bold enough to resist the tides of change and dare to fight for their right to live yet another day in this fabled place. 
This visual essay is an ode dedicated to the last inhabitants of the late and once great portuguese coastline.

Contact
website
instagram

 

Under Construction

 
 

UNDER CONSTRUCTION

BY ALEX ATACK

Growing up in Dubai, my parents would take my siblings and I to the UK over the summer holidays. Arriving back to the UAE after five or six weeks away, we’d look out of the window of the car on the way home from the airport and point out all of the things that had changed in the time we’d been gone; a new skyscraper would’ve started construction on what used to be an empty sand lot, or a complex of villas had been flattened to make way for a hotel, or what used to be small roundabout was now on it’s way to becoming a spaghetti junction.

We’d play football in Safa Park – a huge green space with fair ground rides, ice cream stands and cafes. Then two years ago, they dug a canal right through the middle of it, bulldozing half of the park and circling a section of downtown Dubai to turn it into an island. The city changed so quickly, and it wasn’t sentimental about what it got rid of. And this is what Dubai has become known for; these construction projects are what you see on travel brochures and TV shows around the world.

They’ve had to keep up this rate of construction to mirror the city’s transient, expanding population. But because of it, residents live amongst an unusual landscape – a pattern of urban decay means that the peripheries of the city resemble a graveyard of half-funded construction projects. And in the city centres, land is constantly re-purposed for new construction ventures, meaning that the face of the city changes almost literally over night.

Shot over two years on whichever camera I had on me, this project is about the half-built spaces, and looks at how Dubai’s residents live amongst them.


Contact:

http://www.alexatack.com/

 

CLOSED CITIES

 
 

CLOSED CITIES

BY GREGOR SAILER

SYNOPSIS
Closed Cities (2009–2012)

In his impressive photo series Gregor Sailer examines the forms taken by closed cities in Siberia, Azerbaijan, Qatar, Chile, Algeria / Western Sahara and Argentina. The term closed city was originally coined for the Soviet Union, where, for various reasons, the existence of numerous towns was long kept secret. Some of them were not officially "opened up" and added to maps until the early years of this century. Even today, there are still artificially created urban zones across the globe that are hermetically sealed off from the outside world either by walls or by the hostile landscape that surrounds them. These might be places where raw materials are extracted, military sites, refugee camps – or gated communities for the affluent. Such time-limited forms of urban settlement strikingly illustrate the turning point humanity is facing at the beginning of the 21st century in view of dwindling resources, climate change, political conflicts and the yearning for unqualified security.

BIOGRAPHY
Gregor Sailer was born in 1980 in the city of Tyrol, Austria where he currently lives and works.
Between 2002 and 2007, Sailer studied communication design, with a focus on photography and experimental film, at the Dortmund University of Applied Sciences and Arts (Germany).
In 2015 he was granted his master’s degree in photographic studies from the same institution. He has since received numerous international awards and produced several publications and exhibitions in New York, Washington D.C., Paris, Berlin, Frankfurt, Munich, Barcelona, Vienna, Prague, and Budapest.

CONTACT
info@gregorsailer.com

 

2º Ciclo de debates AAI2Lab - Entrevista a Pedro Leão Neto

 
 
 
 

ENTREVISTA A PEDRO LEÃO NETO

O 2º Ciclo de debates Arquitectura, Arte, Imagem e Inovação (AAI2), organizado pelo CCRE / CEAU / FAUP e pelo AAi2 Lab, realizou-se em Dezembro de 2018 no U.Porto Media Innovation Labs, e teve como foco a apresentação do projeto Visual Spaces of Changes (VSC).

Pedro Leão Neto, coordenador do grupo de investigação CCRE , do grupo de investigação de Fotografia SCOPIO e Professor de CFM e CAAD na FAUP, fala um pouco sobre o projeto Visual Spaces of Change (VSC).

 

2ND EDITION OF THE AAI DEBATES AT MIL-UP

 
 

EN / PT

2ND EDITION OF THE AAI DEBATES AT MIL-UP

On the past 12th of December the second series of the AAI debates - Architecture, Art and Image took place at the Media Inovation Laboratories of the University of Porto (MIL-UP), in which scopio Editions was part of the organization together with the research group CCRE - CEAU from the Faculty of Architecture of the University of Porto (FAUP), MIL-UP and the Laboratory of Architecture, Art, Image and Inovation (AAi2Lab).The second edition of AAI was dedicated to the project Visual Spaces of Change. After the presentation of the project by Pedro Leão Neto, two roundtables have been held along the day.

The theme of the morning's round table was "Image and Transformation of Public Space: the use of Photograph as an Instrument to Research and Question the City" - in this debate opened to a full audience, several research papers were presented in the scope of documentary photography and (FBAUP), followed by interventions by Manuela Matos Monteiro (SPACE MIRA), José Miguel Rodrigues (FAUP), Pedro Bandeira (Faculty of Architecture U.Minho), Luís Gonzaga (Center ALGORITMI U.Minho) and Pedro Moura (Metro do Porto).

In the afternoon, the second roundtable was presented with the theme "Visual Research Methods and Transdisciplinary Approaches for the Construction of Bridges Between Architecture, Art And Image." This table was attended by and presented by architects, photographers, academics, curators and artists such as Daniel Moreira and Rita Castro Neves, Andreia Garcia (Architect and Curator), Isa Clara Neves (Investigadora de Pós Doutoramento / Ces), Susana Lourenço Marques and José Carneiro (FBAUP), Francisco Adão da Fonseca and Pedro Jervel (SKREI), Lara Jacinto (Photographer), David Viana (CM Porto) and Manuela Pinto (MIL / New Media for Heritage Lab).

The VSC presentation and subsequent debates, besides other things, allowed to explore diverse ways of how contemporary photography can be explored as a meaningful instrument of research about contemporary processes of urban change, producing visual synthesis about how architectures, places and spaces are used and lived, rendering visible aspects which are difficult to perceive without the purposeful use of image and photography.The wide range of institutions, organizations, groups, researchers and authors with an interest in architecture, cultural and artistic production, from inside and outside the academia world, that participated in this second edition of AAI debates confirmed the relevance of this initiative for opening academia to society, fostering greater social interaction among researchers, artists and curators beyond their traditionally circumscribed spaces of action, expanding their capacity to participate in the public domain, which is a common objective of the AAI debates, the MIL-UP Laboratories and the project Visual Spaces of Change.

 

Paradise Fell

 
 

PARADISE FELL

BY DARSH SENEVIRATNE

Synopsis
Being raised by a Sri Lankan father meant pieces of his culture were scattered throughout our home and daily life. It has been strange but intriguing to watch how all these parts of my upbringing are now weaving their way into my everyday interactions in the cultural climate of Australia.

Drawaing inspiration from William Christenberry’s musings of rural Alabama and Lyndal Iron’s raw documentation of Sydney’s notorious Parramatta Road, my series “Paradise Fell“ aims to capture a portrait of my father’s home country of Sri Lanka - a nation struggling to define themselves in a post-war economic climate.

In only my second visit to Sri Lanka, I began a photographic exploration of the effects that the civil war and tsunami had on the landscape and its inhabitants. With an aim to visit wartom Jaffina in the north, and surfing hotspot Trincomalee and Arugambay on the east, my father and I retraced a route he had travelled with his family fifty year prior. Many areas we visited were quite sensitive: roofless, shells of houses with years of vegetation regrowth claiming back the structure; abandoned factories still manned by military checkpoints; parts of the city still inaccessible.

In a way, Sri Lanka is the quintessential battler. Rebuilding a society, both physically and psychologically, after a twenty-six year civil war and a deadly tsunami that killed over thirty thousand people is no simple task. Add to that the exponential influx of tourism and the economic politics it brings, and you have a country struggling to focus on the necessities, neglecting their people, and falling to rebuild what was so violently taken away.
Sri Lanka is going through a rapid development that it is not que ready for, and to this I wanted to turn a camera to further explore with an open-minded, positive conscience, and to shoot with respect and purpose.

Artist Statement
Darsh Seneviratne is a twenty-four year old photographer specialising in series-based work. With a passion for documentation and collection cultivated from a young age, his series range from being compiled over a few days to several years. Drawing on technical knowledge founded in traditional analogue photography, Seneviratne documents personal spaces and their inherent human interactions, collecting momentary happenings and structured portraits. These scenes compile series that seek to highlight the lasting traces of people. With a thorough focus on colour and image structure, and bound by the precision of accuracy demanded by analogue technology, Seneviratne creates these series to serve as a reflection of human interaction with per- sonal and public realms and how we perceive them.

Contact
darsh.seneviratne@gmail.com
www.cargocollective.com/darsh
@darshmallos

 

OPEN CALL Bienal'19 - Ci.CLO Bienal

 
Screenshot 2018-12-08 at 19.27.51.png

Open call | Artist Creativity Grants

Application deadline: 06.01.2019 The 2019 Ci.CLO Bienal Fotografia do Porto in partnership with the Mira Forum and with the support of the Goethe-Institut Portugal, will award two Bolsas de Criação (Artist Creativity Grants) to support the development of new work to be exhibited in the Bienal programme curated by José Maia.


The 2019 Open Call is applicable to artists who are nationals or non-Portuguese residents in Portugal, their primary media is photography and/or video and their proposal responds to the theme of the 2019 BienalAdaptation and Transition.


Calendar

Deadline for submission of proposals: 06.01.2019

Application Outcome: 14.01.2019

Project development period: 21 January to 19 April 19 2019

Exhibition: 16 May to 3 July 2019


Download notice in PDF.

Open call_CiCLOBienal_Regulamento

 

I'm Here With You

 
 

I’M HERE WITH YOU

BY GOWUN LEE

The majority of LGBTQ people in South Korea hide their true identities from their colleagues, friends and their families. Despite a recent surge in LGBTQ activism, Korea remains a very conservative country and those who come out face being disowned by family or dismissed from their employers. Many Koreans still express bitter hostility toward LGBTQ people, while others simply deny their existence. The Korean military actively hunts down gay soldiers, going so far as to mount sting operations using gay dating apps. And when someone does come out, parents and family members often choose to ignore the truth.

This project literally and metaphorically represents sexual minorities living in Korea who are forced to hide their sexual identity. The LGBTQ individuals photographed—all facing away from the camera—remind us of how Korean society continues to neglect and refuse to accept them. By creating these images, my intent is to both implicate the viewer in the nation’s larger refusal to acknowledge the identity of LGBTQ individuals and, more importantly, to spur us all to take action and change this attitude once and for all.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Gowun Lee (b. 1984) is a visual artist who utilizes photography. She explores themes of a social issue such as LGBTQ in South Korea and human relationship in conceptual ways. She moved to South Korea from New York for her ongoing project.

She received BFA in Photography from the School of Visual Arts. She has been shortlisted for Tokyo International Photo Competition, ZEISS Photography Award 2018, 2018 Aperture Summer Open: The Way We Live Now.

Her images have been featured in Open Society Foundations, The Guardian, CNN Style, Bubblegumclub, Aperture Foundation, Korean daily, Monthly photo, ZEISS LensPire, and World Photography Organization.

Her work has been included in exhibitions at the United Photo Industries Gallery in New York, Onfoto Gallery in Taiwan, SVA Chelsea Gallery in New York, Tak Gallery in Seoul, MayFlay in Seoul, Wonder Fotoday in Taiwan, Head On Photo Festival in Australia , Somerset house in London and Upcoming exhibition T3 Photo Festival in Tokyo.


Web: www.gowunlee.com
Instagram: http://instagram.com/gowunlee_



 

You don't look Native to me

 
 

YOU DON’T LOOK NATIVE TO ME

BY MARIA STURM

“You don‘t look Native to me is a quote and the title of a body of work, that shows excerpts from the lives of young Native Americans from around Pembroke, Robeson County, North Carolina, where 89% of the city’s population identifies as Native American. The town is the tribal seat of the Lumbee Indian Tribe of North Carolina, the largest state-recognized Native American tribe east of the Mississippi River, which means they are federally unrecognized and therefore have no reservation nor any monetary benefits.

I am tracing their ways of self-representation, transformed through history, questions of identity with which they are confronted on a daily basis, and their reawakening pride in being Native. The work consists of portraits, along with landscapes and places, interiors, still lives, and situations. The aesthetic framework that is presented offers clues – sometimes subtle, sometimes loud – for imparting a feeling for their everyday lives.

My work engages an unfamiliar mix of concepts: a Native American tribe whose members are ignored by the outside world, who do not wear their otherness on their physique, but who are firm in their identity. Through photography, video and interviews, I am investigating what happens when social and institutional structures break down and people are forced to rely on themselves for their own resources. This raises questions to the viewer regarding one’s own identity and membership to the unspecified mainstream.

This work was started in 2011.”

Maria Sturm

Since 2011, Maria Sturm has photographed teenagers from the Lumbee tribe in and around Pembroke, North Carolina, where almost 90 percent of the population identifies as Native American. Unlike other native tribes, the Lumbee were not forced to move during colonial expansion and have subsequently maintained a strong connection to their land. Sturm’s series You Don’t Look Native to Me considers how young Native people present themselves today in relation to their identity and culture. At first glance, Sturm’s photographs might appear to depict the daily life of a community almost anywhere in America, but elements of hybridity—Halloween fangs on a child in Tuscarora regalia; dreamcatchers and a school portrait on a living room wall—signify the mixing of heritage and contemporary culture.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Maria Sturm (b. 1985, Romania) received a diploma in Photography from FH Bielefeld in 2012 and a MFA in Photography from Rhode Island School of Design. She is a Fulbright and DAAD scholar. She has won several prizes including the New York Photo Award 2012 and the DOCfield Dummy Award Barcelona 2015 with the work Be Good.

Her most recent work You don't look Native to me about the unrecognized Lumbee tribe of North Carolina was nominated for Vonovia Award, shortlisted for PhotoLondon La Fabrica Book Dummy Award and made the 2nd place at Unseen Dummy Award. It was published in British Journal of Photography and Filmbulletin and exhibited in the German Consulate New York, Clamp Art New York, Wiesbadener Fototage, Encontros da Imagem, at Artists Unlimited Bielefeld and at Aperture Foundation New York among others.

It will be next shown at Addis Foto Fest and Photo Vogue Festival.

Having met in during a month-long residency at Atelier de Visu Marseille and workshop with Antoine d'Agata in 2012 Cemre Yeşil and Maria Sturm kept in touch ever since. Their permanent exchange led them to start a collaboration and in 2014 they have photographed For Birds' Sake, a work about the Birdmen of Istanbul. This work was published as a photobook by La Fabrica Madrid and featured in Colors Magazine, The Guardian, British Journal of Photography and ZEITmagazin among others. It was exhibited during Internacional de Fotografa de Cabo Verde, FotoIstanbul, Bitume Photofest Lecce, Organ Vida International Photography Festival Zagreb, Format Festival Derby, Darmstädter Tage der Fotografie and at Daire Gallery, Sol Koffler Providence, La Fabrica Madrid, Pavlov's Dog Berlin, Deichtorhallen Hamburg and it was a finalist at PHE OjodePez Award for Human Values 2015 and Renaissance Photography Prize 2017 and nominated for Lead Awards 2016 and Henri-Nannen-Preis 2016. It was also shortlisted at Arles Author Book Award 2016 and Prix Levallois 2017.


instagram: https://instagram.com/maria__sturm/
facebook:  https://www.facebook.com/maria.sturm
twitter: https://twitter.com/maria_sturm

 

INAUGURAÇÃO/OPENING da terra acesa | sput&nik the window |

 
da Terra Acesa_T.jpg
 

É já este sábado, dia 24, a partir das 21h30, que inaugura a exposição da terra acesa de Rita Castro Neves e Daniel Moreira na sput&nik the window, no Porto. 

O som é do Gustavo Costa e o texto da exposição da Vera Lúcia Carmo.

Sinopse

Para quem se debruça sobre a paisagem, os incêndios florestais portugueses - da destruição, da má política, do lucro fácil e da má memória – são matéria sensível para trabalhar questões muito prementes sobre território, ação humana e natureza.­­

Por força dos grandes incêndios de 15 de outubro de 2017 em Pedorido, Castelo de Paiva, nas desativadas Minas do Pejão, o carvão que se encontra debaixo da terra e que está naturalmente em combustão lenta, ativa-se com o aquecimento global provocado pelo incêndio florestal, entrando em combustão acelerada visível. À destruição provocada em cima da terra corresponde uma ebulição debaixo dos pés – num movimento descontrolado e em cadeia que ameaça, com fumo e fogo, a vida à superfície.

Foi nas antigas Minas do Pejão, dentro do seu terreno vedado, e na altura a ser tratado com químicos, que com Gustavo Costa, gravámos imagens e sons com paus queimados de uma árvore que outrora pertenceu a uma mata.

da terra acesa é uma instalação realizada para o espaço da sput&nik the window, que apresenta uma paisagem e o seu avesso, para a partir da construção de uma aparência e do seu reverso pensar a destruição do território e a estrutura do comportamento humano. Assim se reacendendo feridas antigas.

Sound is by Gustavo Costa and the exhibition text by Vera Lúcia Carmo.

Inauguração no sábado 24 de Novembro de 2018 às 21h30
Último dia da exposição dia 19 de Janeiro de 2019
Rua do Bonjardim nº 1340 no Porto | sputenik169@gmail.com
Horário por marcação (919 010 716) de quinta a sábado

daniel moreira & rita castro neves
www.danielmoreira.net | www.ritacastroneves.com