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Bright Nights opening soon at CompARTment

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Posted by andre under exhibition
Brighton Photo Biennial 2010 & Brighton Photo Fringe are just about to start. To support & celebrate the event I've joined force with 3 other artists who have all been working on similar projects (documenting the Sussex coast by night) in the last couple of years. So, collaborating with: Alex Bamford, Jean-Luc Brouard & Andrew Ford we created "Bright Nights"...  a visual installation showing long exposure photography created around full moon nights.  For a quick sample and more info please visit:  www.bright-nights.co.uk  
 
2 - 16 October 2010
CompARTment
UNIT 38 - Open Market
Marshalls Road
London Road
Brighton BN1 4JS

Opening times: 
Mon: 10.00 - 13.00
Tue to Sat: 10.00 - 18.00

Bright Nights.jpg

 

"Oceano" series is now part of the "MADE Collection"

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Posted by andre under Arts Fair

Brighton Arts Fair 2010 has just finished. Every year the organizers and curators of the "Made Collection" choose two pieces between all the artists and galleries exhibiting to celebrate the best in show. The pieces selected (between paintings, sculptures, drawings, photographs, ceramics, etc...) are then purchased directly from the artist or agent and become part of the ever growing "MADE Collection". I'm very pleased to announce that Atlantico 1, from the "Oceano" series, currently no 2 of an edition of 20, has been selected as a prize winner this year.    

 

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Vertigo series at FLAERE Gallery in London - Knightsbridge

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Posted by andre under Exhibitions

Vertigo series will be showing at the new London's Flaere Gallery in Knightsbridge, 221 Brompton Road - SW3 2EJ - from the 12th of Oct to the 12th of Nov.

Introduction by Michael Bentham". (writer, musician & film director).
 
Brazilian photographer André Lichtenberg’s award-winning opus VERTIGO presents the kind of original insight into a familiar landscape that only an outsider can achieve. 
Lichtenberg is known for exploring the voids that exist on the very margins of his subjects - often shot in remote locations - composing what he finds, with anatomical precision, into characteristically high definition, deep perspective pictures, epic in scale, and cinematic in their narrative complexity and heightened reality. VERTIGO is Lichtenberg’s personal take on Britain’s iconic capital city. 
 
Looking beyond the classic images of London endlessly reproduced and imprinted in the national and international consciousness, Lichtenberg took his camera to the top of the UK’s highest building, sited in Canary Wharf, home of the financial elite including Barclays, Credit Suisse, HSBC and Citigroup, and looked down. In the following moments, captured here, the viewer’s eye is drawn down into a visual story, both beautiful and terrifying, that explores both the connection between form and function of these late 20th-century buildings, and the financial district’s relationship with society and the wider world beyond. 
 
One striking effect of Lichtenberg’s framing of the cityscape below him is an extraordinary abstraction of scale – there are few familiar objects to give a sense of perspective, or classifiable reference points to enable the viewer to read what they are seeing. Are we looking at an enlarged microscopic image of a computer chip, or a section of circuit board? Only when a recognizable form, such as a vehicle or a road marking, is identified does the illusion of a microcosmic world fall away in an instant into the macrocosmic reality, the visceral impact of height and drop giving the name to the series. 
 
Once the viewer has been pulled into this vortex, they can reflect on what they are seeing with a new understanding born of this sudden gestalt-like switch in perception. A fascinating aspect of these towering symbols of financial prowess, is the sense that as they reach for the sky they disconnect from the earth below. Why are these corporate monoliths built on such a scale that their human creators are defined only by the uniform long shadows their distant ant-sized forms cast in the setting sun – appearing like so many models stuck on an architect’s miniature? And what do these gleaming geometrics, dominating the underlying topography to the point of obliteration - even the mighty river Thames is annexed in perfect perpendicular borders - say about the city’s relationship to the natural world? 
 
With VERTIGO Lichtenberg poses such questions with a profoundly original insight into his subject, the poetic narrative of a master storyteller, and a breathtaking aesthetic grace.
© Michael Bentham - 2010.
 

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