Archives for posts with tag: Exhibition

Interior of Postmodernism: Style and Subversion Exhibition at the V&A Museum. Photo: Dezeen

Gehry House, by Frank Gehry, Santa Monica. Photograph featured in V&A Postmodernism Exhibition. Photo: Quintin Lake

My photo of  Frank Gehry’s Santa Monica house is printed alongside other icons of  deconstructionist architecture by Venturi, Scott Brown and Associates. The curators were keen to include Gehry’s residence as it symbolizes an “early venture in bricolage and the postmodern”. The house built in 1978 represented the first and radical steps of Deconstructivist movement in architecture more info and photos on the building.

My personal sentiments on postmodernism which developed as an architecture student are encapsulated by Alastair Sooke who wrote in the Telegraph

Charles Jencks, the architectural theorist credited with inventing the term “postmodernism”, once pointed out that what is exciting and avant-garde one moment tends to feel like old hat the next. No doubt he is right: younger generations often berate the immediate past to assert their own identity. Even so, walking through the V&A’s new exhibition, which traces the rise and fall of postmodernism across different disciplines during the Seventies and Eighties, I was tempted to ask: has there ever been a more irritating movement in the history of art and design?”

Postmodernism: Style and Subversion 1970-1990
24 September 2011 – 15 January 2012 at V&A South Kensington info

Concert Hall, from Pripyat: 21 Year after Chernobyl Series © Quintin Lake

I’m delighted to be participating in this exhibition & event, here’s the blurb:

UNINTENTION explores the ways in which creativity can manipulate and reinvent the purpose behind ideas, objects, web-sharing, personal and world events. Works include a satirical rehash of a presidential television broadcast by filmmaker Chris Morris; as well as an immersive display of projected stills from the collection Pripyat: 21 Years After Chernobyl by architectural photographer Quintin Lake, documenting both the initial aftermath of the nuclear disaster and the change in its environment since.

Along with the show as a whole, the works use existing material by changing their original intentions; a leaders broadcast becomes a skilled re-edit ridden with satire; the aftermath of a nuclear disaster, via its documentation, inevitably becomes a collection of photographic art. Other new and existing works in the show will include; the focus of normal practical objects being turned into pieces of visual art; a short video art piece encompassing a well known graffiti love-note from the walls of the infamous Park Hill flats in Sheffield; and various pieces looking at Internet Memes and considering their place in the art world.

UNINTENTION  @ WCS | Wolstenholme Creative Space | 11 Wolstenholme Square | Liverpool | L1 4JJ

Preview | 28 September 2011, 6-9pm

Exhibition | 29 September – 2 October 2011, 12-4pm

Admission FREE

UNINTENTION Closing Night Event | 2 October 2011

7pm | The Light Bulb Conspiracy  Admission FREE

Film collective, Tea and Two Slice, present The Light Bulb Conspiracy documentary screening + free tea and toast!

8:30pm | Ruins Alone + live performances  Admission £4

In partnership with WCS, I Am Your Barber, Postmusic and Samzidat present live performances from:

RUINS ALONE (skin graft) Legendary Japanese drum god, showcasingp;the works of Ruins, Koenjihyakkei in his mind melting solo performance

STIG NOISE DIY mariachi trumpet fuelled noise nonsense since 1998

BARBEROS Duel drumming, synth wielding, spandex sporting electro doom jazz noise hollering perverts

The live performances will also include live visuals by video artist Sam Wiehl, manipulating Internet Memes once again reinventing their intention and allowing the meme to evolve within the art gallery setting.

Further Info:

www.wolstenholmecreativespace.com/unintention

http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=273447039348731

Romanticism in the Urban Environment, Portico Gallery, Manchester

A silver birch tree grows through the floor on the terrace of Hotel Polissia. The hammer and sickle is visible atop the distant apartments. Photo © Quintin Lake

The exhibition will feature eleven of my photographs fom the series “Pripyat: 21 years after Chernobyl”  see more

Romanticism in the Urban Environment A multi-disciplinary exhibition of works by selected Fellows of the Royal Society of Arts. 

The theme of this exhibition is the urban landscape. The city can be seen as a living museum of past and present voices and ambitions… a romantic view of this landscape will be manifest in the artists’ emotional response to the history, the present, the future, the people and the vistas of the city.

This two-month long exhibition has been jointly curated by Charlotte Wand (for the Portico) and Lotte Karlsen (FRSA) and will feature work by: Adam Aaronson, Frank Creber,  PJ Crook,  Fiona Heron, Lotte Karlsen, Quintin Lake, Agnieszka Mlicka, Martin Stynes, Alan Yates

Exhibition Details:

The Portico Gallery, 57 Mosley Street, Manchester, M2 3HY
Previewing on Wednesday 6th July 2011, 6.00pm-8.00pm
Continues until Friday 26th August 2011
Monday – Friday, 9.30am – 4.30pm
Thursday late night until 7.30pm
Admission free

Anish Kapoor, C-Curve 2007, Stainless steel, 220 x 770 x 300 cm. Installation view of Serpentine Gallery exhibition Turning the World Upside Down, Kensington Gardens, London 28 September 2010 - 13 March 2011 (reflection of photographer digitally removed). Photo: Quintin Lake

Anish Kapoor, C-Curve 2007, Stainless steel. Detail of Installation. Photo: Quintin Lake

Anish Kapoor, C-Curve 2007, Stainless steel. Installation view. Photo: Quintin Lake

Anish Kapoor, C-Curve 2007, Stainless steel, 220 x 770 x 300 cm. Installation view of Serpentine Gallery exhibition Turning the World Upside Down, Kensington Gardens, London 28 September 2010 – 13 March 2011

VIEW MORE / BUY PRINTS / LICENSE IMAGES of the sculpture Anish Kapoor, C-Curve here >>

Anish Kapoor, Sky Mirror 2006, Stainless steel,1066.8 x 1066.8 cm. Installation view of Serpentine Gallery exhibition Turning the World Upside Down, Kensington Gardens. Photo: Quintin Lake

Anish Kapoor, Sky Mirror 2006, Stainless steel,1066.8 x 1066.8 cm. Detail. Photo: Quintin Lake

Anish Kapoor, Sky Mirror 2006, Stainless steel,1066.8 x 1066.8 cm. Installation view of Serpentine Gallery exhibition Turning the World Upside Down, Kensington Gardens. Photo: Quintin Lake

Anish Kapoor, Sky Mirror 2006, Stainless steel,1066.8 x 1066.8 cm. Installation view of Serpentine Gallery exhibition Turning the World Upside Down, Kensington Gardens, London 28 September 2010 – 13 March 2011.

VIEW MORE IMAGES of the Sky Mirror here >>

Anish Kapoor, Non Object (Spire) 2008, Stainless steel, 302 x 300 x 300 cm. Installation view. (barrier and path around artwork digitally removed). Photo: Quintin Lake

Anish Kapoor, Non Object (Spire) 2008, Stainless steel, 302 x 300 x 300 cm. Detail of tree reflection. Kensington Gardens, London. Photo: Quintin Lake

Anish Kapoor, Non Object (Spire) 2008, Stainless steel, 302 x 300 x 300 cm. Detail of abstract reflections of trees on side of spire. Photo: Quintin Lake

Anish Kapoor, Non Object (Spire) 2008, Stainless steel, 302 x 300 x 300 cm. Installation view of Serpentine Gallery exhibition Turning the World Upside Down in Kensington Gardens, London 28 September 2010 – 13 March 2011.

VIEW MORE IMAGES of Non Object here >>

Anish Kapoor, C-Curve 2007, Stainless steel, 220 x 770 x 300 cm. Installation view of Serpentine Gallery exhibition Turning the World Upside Down, Kensington Gardens, London 28 September 2010 - 13 March 2011 (reflection of photographer digitally removed). Photo: Quintin Lake

Anish Kapoor, C-Curve 2007, Stainless steel. Detail of Installation. Photo: Quintin Lake

Anish Kapoor, C-Curve 2007, Stainless steel. Installation view. Photo: Quintin Lake

Anish Kapoor, C-Curve 2007, Stainless steel, 220 x 770 x 300 cm. Installation view of Serpentine Gallery exhibition Turning the World Upside Down, Kensington Gardens, London 28 September 2010 – 13 March 2011

VIEW MORE IMAGES of C-Curve here >>

All images available as fine art prints or for publication / licensing contact me for pricing and to arrange use. Photographs © Quintin Lake  

Anish Kapoor, Non Object (Spire) 2008, Stainless steel, 302 x 300 x 300 cm. Installation view. (barrier and path around artwork digitally removed). Photo: Quintin Lake

Anish Kapoor, Non Object (Spire) 2008, Stainless steel, 302 x 300 x 300 cm. Detail of tree reflection. Kensington Gardens, London. Photo: Quintin Lake

Anish Kapoor, Non Object (Spire) 2008, Stainless steel, 302 x 300 x 300 cm. Detail of abstract reflections of trees on side of spire. Photo: Quintin Lake

Anish Kapoor, Non Object (Spire) 2008, Stainless steel, 302 x 300 x 300 cm. Installation view of Serpentine Gallery exhibition Turning the World Upside Down in Kensington Gardens, London 28 September 2010 – 13 March 2011.

VIEW MORE / BUY PRINTS / LICENSE IMAGES of the sculpture Anish Kapoor, Non Object here >>

Hotel Polissia Terrace, Pripyat

Pripyat: 21 Years after Chernobyl. 50×33cm, Edition of 25 + 1 A/P Quintin Lake

This photograph of Hotel Polissia in Pripyat  is one of the 50 selected images that will be traveling to the Crane Kalman Gallery in Brighton to be part of HOST @ Crane Kalman Brighton, an exhibition featuring a selection from the 3rd annual Foto8 Summer Show. This exhibition will run from the 11th to the 29th of September 2010. “Pripyat: 21 Years after Chernobyl” has been previously been exhibited at the Architectural Association, London; The Royal West of England Academy, Bristol and Host Gallery, London.

The image is for sale at £355 framed or £295 unframed in an edition of 25. To purchase a print please contact me

VIEW MORE IMAGES from Pripyat (Pripiat) 21 years after Chernobyl Series

Photography © Quintin Lake

Hotel Polissia Terrace, Pripyat

Pripyat: 21 Years after Chernobyl. A silver birch tree grows through the floor on the terrace of Hotel Polissia. The hammer and sickle is visible atop the distant building. 50×33cm, Edition of 25 + 1 A/P

Foto8 Summershow 2010, Exhibition Catalogue Cover

Foto8 Summershow 2010, Exhibition Catalogue

150 images were chosen for exhibition from Over 2500 individual images were received from photographers representing the six continents. From landscape and portraiture to documentary and fashion and everything in between, the Summershow celebrates the photographic talent of established names and aspiring photographers alike.

The Foto8 Summershow 2010 runs from 26 July to 4 September Buy Exhibition Catalogue

HOST GALLERY
1-5 Honduras Street
London EC1Y 0TH
UK

The image is for sale at £355 framed or £295 unframed in an edition of 25

VIEW MORE IMAGES from Pripyat (Pripiat) 21 years after Chernobyl

Foto8 Summershow 2010 at Host Gallery Honduras Street, London

Foto8 Summershow 2010 at Host Gallery Honduras Street, London

Foto8 Summershow 2010 at Host Gallery Honduras Street, London

Photography © Quintin Lake