retrospective – The Cultural Exposé http://www.theculturalexpose.co.uk A blog from a lifestyle journo covering culture, food and style in London and beyond. Mon, 23 Jul 2018 21:50:47 +0000 en-GB hourly 1 http://www.theculturalexpose.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2011/12/cropped-logo_2017-32x32.jpg retrospective – The Cultural Exposé http://www.theculturalexpose.co.uk 32 32 Five Dope Tracks is a curation of dope music, five tracks at a time. Check out the monthly playlist each month on Spotify. retrospective – The Cultural Exposé clean episodic retrospective – The Cultural Exposé megerecooper@gmail.com megerecooper@gmail.com (retrospective – The Cultural Exposé) The Five Dope Tracks music podcast retrospective – The Cultural Exposé http://www.theculturalexpose.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/powerpress/five_dope_tracks_podcast_cover.jpg http://www.theculturalexpose.co.uk Something you should see… William Klein & Daido Moriyama at Tate Modern http://www.theculturalexpose.co.uk/arts-culture/something-you-should-see-william-klein-daido-moriyama-at-tate-modern/ http://www.theculturalexpose.co.uk/arts-culture/something-you-should-see-william-klein-daido-moriyama-at-tate-modern/#comments Mon, 15 Oct 2012 10:00:07 +0000 http://www.theculturalexpose.co.uk/?p=5605 Flights to Tokyo and New York are not exactly the cheapest these days, so an exhibition offering you the chance to explore these two great cities while remaining on UK soil, surely can’t be sniffed at? Portraits of these two cities by photographers William Klein and Daido Moriyama can currently be seen at Tate Modern […]

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Flights to Tokyo and New York are not exactly the cheapest these days, so an exhibition offering you the chance to explore these two great cities while remaining on UK soil, surely can’t be sniffed at? Portraits of these two cities by photographers William Klein and Daido Moriyama can currently be seen at Tate Modern in an exhibition that examines the relationship between the artists. On show are nearly 300 works including prints, film stills and photographic installations that capture the modern urban experience from the 1950s to now. From anti-war demonstrations to gay pride marches, a gun-toting kid to a couple holding groceries – all aspects of street life is observed.

William Klein

Originally a painter,  Klein’s distinct approach to photography – blurred or out of focus pictures, the use of high-grain film –  shares a visual affinity with Moriyama. Klein’s seminal 1956 publication Life is Good & Good for You in New York depicted the city as crude and vulgar. This was a photographic language that would resonate with Moriyama in his gritty post-war images of Tokyo. Not just a photojournalist, Klein also contributed to the fashion pages of Vogue. His use of the wide-angle lens and long exposures are some of the techniques he introduced to fashion photography.

Daido Moriyama Yokosuka

Moriyama made his name in the Japanese avant garde publication Provoke. Launched in the late 1960s, the magazine sought to counter prevailing photographic conventions with a more radical visual vocabulary. Although it only ran for three issues, Provoke is now recognised as an important turning point in Japanese photography. Issues of Provoke magazine are on display at Tate Modern, as are Klein’s Vogue pictures. Installations relating to Klein’s films Mister Freedom and Who Are You Polly Magoo also feature, as does a reconstruction of Moriyama’s studio through the arrangement of Polaroid images. Although born ten years apart, what unifies this double retrospective on two very influential photographers is more than just an aesthetic sensibility, but their love of life on the street. This really is worth a visit and it is of course, much cheaper than an air ticket. (Words: Eri Otite)

William Klein & Daido Moryiama on at Tate Modern until January 20th 2013. For more info, visit www.tate.org.uk

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Something you should see… Mel Bochner: If the Colour Changes at the Whitechapel Gallery http://www.theculturalexpose.co.uk/arts-culture/something-you-should-see-mel-bochner-if-the-colour-changes-at-the-whitechapel-gallery/ http://www.theculturalexpose.co.uk/arts-culture/something-you-should-see-mel-bochner-if-the-colour-changes-at-the-whitechapel-gallery/#comments Fri, 12 Oct 2012 10:00:07 +0000 http://www.theculturalexpose.co.uk/?p=5558 Fancy a bit of wordplay? A major retrospective of works by US artist Mel Bochner is being hosted by the Whitechapel Gallery this month. Recognised as one of the founding figures of conceptual art, the exhibition traces nearly 50 years of his work from the 1960s up until 2011. Throughout his career, Bochner has been […]

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Fancy a bit of wordplay? A major retrospective of works by US artist Mel Bochner is being hosted by the Whitechapel Gallery this month. Recognised as one of the founding figures of conceptual art, the exhibition traces nearly 50 years of his work from the 1960s up until 2011. Throughout his career, Bochner has been fascinated with language and its influence on perception. As a young artist, he created a series of portraits of friends based on synonyms taken from Roget’s Thesaurus. This early experimental work provided the foundation for his Thesaurus’ paintings – word chains painted on canvas. Recent work from this series, including Amazing! (2011), will be on show at the Whitechapel.

Babble Mel Bochner

Originally from Pennsylvania, Bochner is one of several artists who came of age in 1960s New York. He was part of an art scene that included Sol LeWitt and Eva Hesse, when conceptual art as a movement was still in its infancy. It was through his investigation into the relationship between thinking and seeing that Bochner pioneered the integration of language into visual art. Though he has explored other systems of communication in his work such as measurements, numbers and spatial relationships, all of which will be featured at the Whitechapel, language still remains a central concern – so this retrospective is definitely worth a gander. (Words: Eri Otite)

Mel Bochner: If the Colour Changes is showing at the Whitechapel Gallery, Whitechapel High Street, E1 7QX from October 12 – December 30. For more info, visit www.whitechapelgallery.org

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