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TASTE the palette.
Women In Freakout: Part 2
Women In Freakout: Part 1
Emerging Creative: Iara Djanira
The Ascent
Loosely based on Vasil Bykov’s novella ‘Sotnikov’ that Larisa read while hospitalised, the film is a Dostoyevskian essay of treachery and grit with weighted spiritual implications. Set in wartime Belorussia, it revolves around two Soviet partisans who separate from their unit while searching for provisions. Thrust against purgatorial plains of ice and sheets of snow, the partisans are captured by the Germans and interrogated. One soldier, Sotnikov, refuses to crack under torture, while the other immediately betrays information to save his own life.
Death In The Making
Using a Rollei camera to distinguish her squared photographs from Capa’s Leica images, Gerda incorporated dynamic camera angles to photograph her subjects, a technique signature to the New Vision movement.
Closely tied to Bauhaus, the movement originated shortly after the Great War. In the aftermath of this “mechanised” conflict, it aimed to view the world “solely through the camera lens”, and thus capture the innate expression and power held in everyday reality. The camera was seen as a mirror into the soul of the new industrial age.
Wise Blood
Published in 1952, the book centres around the taunted figure of Hazel Motes, a discharged WWII veteran who returns to his hometown to find it derelict and decayed. Seeing his childhood home entirely dissipated, he resolves to abandon it and any notion of the fundamentalist teachings he inherited through his long dead relatives. Instead, he decides to preach a new kind of refractory ‘Church without Christ’ that vows only to teach you the one truth: that there is no truth at all.
Still Life - Clara Peeters
Clara exacted her paintings with a didactic attention, portraying her scenes with a delicate calculation while also providing a visceral, sensuous experience to the viewer. While at first glance the placement of the objects could seem random, they are arranged in a way that the viewer is awarded a full view of every single one of them - a glorious banquet for the eyes. At the same time, her paintings maintain an air of authenticity and natural composition through her intentional details. A half-eaten pretzel, sliced through cheese, insect bitten petals, and a knife hanging from the table all provide a sense to the viewer that this is a scene that have just simply walked upon.
Emerging Creative: Sarah Fassold
Miyako Ishiuchi
For Miyako, “space is formed from the accumulation of detail”, therefore scars carry the remains of a damage like Yokosuka bears the remains of the war – a testament to what was once there.
This concept, presented through her signature, gritty and grainy photographs, has made her one of the most influential female Japanese photographers in recent history.
Cindy Sherman
‘Untitled Film Stills’ is made up of seventy photographs, sixty-nine taken from 1977 to 1980, plus one added later; that explore stereotypical female roles in scenes inspired by 1950s and ’60s Hollywood, film noir, B movies, and European art-house films. Fascinated by costume and makeup and the role it played in constructing identity, she placed herself as the subject of the images and began to explore the gender notions that come into play when portraying women on a screen.
Emerging Creative: Emily Macrander
Savushun (A Persian Requiem)
Tackling themes of loneliness, duty, marriage, and rebellion, Savushun continues to be a hallmark of the tragedy and valour that characterises the history of Iran. It continues to be Iran’s most read book to date and has been reprinted more than twenty times.
Charlotte Salomon: Life? Or Theatre
Faced with the weight of this history of finality in her family, Charlotte found herself at a cross point: “The question: whether to take her own life or to undertake something eccentric and mad.” Choosing “eccentric and mad” she embarked on a journey to create her monumental work “Life? Or Theatre”, composed of nearly early eight hundred page-size gouaches and overlays with vignettes, playful commentaries, and choruses.
María Izquierdo
One of the most outstanding figures of 20th century Latin American art, María was the first Mexican woman to have her work exhibited in the US.
Emerging Creative: Erica Pham
Mustang (2015)
Through this tale of liberation and coming-of-age, Deniz shows the untamable courage and spirit of young women, even when their femininity is sexualised. Channelling her desire to show what it means to be a girl in Turkey, Deniz creates a gripping account of sisters fighting back for their freedom like wild mustangs. It’s a precious thread of sensations and impressions, earning its nomination for Best Foreign Language Film at the 88th Academy Awards.
Dayanita Singh
After working as a photojournalist for a London based co-operative for many years, Suyanita felt that her photographs were making no difference to India’s social problems, and she could not go on “earning a living from the distress of others”. She returned home and began photographing portraits of middle-class Indian families to portray the traditional, colonial, and religious India being superimposed by an edgy Western contemporary style. As she began to gather materials for exhibitions, she would create her“book-objects”: a book, an object for display, an exhibition and a catalogue of that exhibition all in one. She would call them the museums of the future, a new type of art gallery accessible to everyone.
L.A. Woman
Roaming Hollywood boulevard, Sophie engages with the milieu of L.A., working as a photographer, dabbling in acting in Rome, and becoming a groupie. Intertwining Sophie’s story with the older women she grew up around (such as her father’s German-Jewish friend Lola), Eve creates a narrative that is both sentimental and real, gripping yet playful, and compellingly humorous and intellectual. Even when Eve drifts into the tragical side, rest assured you are never “too far from a punch line”.
Emerging Creative: Camille Burfield
Alice Neel: People Come First
Painting from a female gaze, Alice never let herself be restrained by convention, even after achieving great success, still capturing the “diversity, resilience, and passion” of the human being.