kumimonster: (Default)

i am going to this tomorrow.
Thursday nights the Barbican remains open until 10pm and also hosts a series of happenings and films.
Anyone wanna go? i have a membership but not sure if my discount applies to ppl going with me - though maybe if i book tix online beforehand.

At 7pm, on 15 January, the featured talk in association with the War exhibition is:

The Image of War in a Digital Age

15 January 2009

Redgrave Suite, Level 4
Tickets: £3
Time:7pm

How has the making and circulation of digital images of war affected the way that we see them and the way in which they are used? A comparison of Vietnam and Iraq as image wars. With Julian Stallabrass, Curator, Brighton Photo Biennial and Reader in Art History, Courtauld Institute.

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This Is War! Robert Capa at Work
Gerda Taro
On the Subject of War

Barbican Art Gallery reflects on conflict and its visual representation.

17 October 2008 - 25 January 2009 / 20:00, 18:00, 22:00
Barbican Art Gallery


Tickets: Advance online tickets £6
At Box Office £8/6 concessions

kumimonster: (headhold)
I have one day to see this
October 21 (arriving from vienna on 20th, flying to San Francisco on 22nd)
Anyone want to go with?

---------------------------------

This Is War! Robert Capa at Work
Gerda Taro
On the Subject of War

Barbican Art Gallery reflects on conflict and its visual representation.

17 October 2008 - 25 January 2009 / 20:00, 18:00, 22:00
Barbican Art Gallery


Seven years after the West’s ‘War on Terror’ began in Afghanistan, Barbican Art Gallery reflects on conflict and its visual representation, in a series of interrelated exhibitions.

This Is War!
Robert Capa at work

Robert Capa (1913–1954) is one of the leading photographers of the twentieth century and defined how modern warfare was photographed.

This exhibition, which includes over 150 images, some never-before-seen photographs and newly discovered documents, illuminates Capa’s working process and features many of the photographs that have become iconic images of war.

The exhibition features six of his most important war stories; The Falling Soldier and The Battle of Rio Segre, both capturing the Spanish Civil War; the Sino-Japanese War; American troops landing in Normandy on D-Day; and the liberation of Leipzig, including images of the last man shot in World War II.

In 1936, just a month into the Republican struggle against General Franco’s fascist army, Capa made the most famous image of the Spanish Civil War, Death of a Loyalist Militiaman, now generally known as The Falling Soldier. It was to become the ultimate symbol of the Spanish Loyalist fight and has been dogged by controversy ever since.

For the first time, this exhibition reveals all the known images taken by Capa on that day, including newly discovered negatives which re-surfaced in 2007. These images may shed new light onto the ongoing debate about whether Capa fabricated the most famous war photograph of all time.

Gerda Taro
a retrospective

The talented and groundbreaking German photographer, Gerda Taro (1910–1937) spent her brief but dramatic career photographing the Spanish Civil War alongside Robert Capa, her lover and collaborator. She was one of the first female photographers to work on the frontline and the first to be killed in action in 1937, aged just 26, whilst covering the battle for the city of Brunete.

Taro’s unflinching images of the casualties of war, distinguished by her experimentation with the dynamic camera angles of New Vision photography, are a remarkable contribution to the tradition of war photography. This is the first exhibition of her work in the UK.

On the Subject of War
artistic responses to Iraq & Afghanistan

Conditions of war have changed since the 1930s and 1940s, but the potential of war photography to shape politics, opinion and lives, remains real.

On the Subject of War presents some of the most significant works of international contemporary art made in the context of current events in Iraq and Afghanistan: Omer Fast’s The Casting, (2007); Geert van Kesteren’s Why Mister, Why?, (2004) and Baghdad Calling, (2008); Paul Chan’s Tin Drum Trilogy, (2002–05) and An-My Lê’s 29 Palms, (2006) and Events Ashore, (2005–08).

Each artist reflects on the subjects of war and their experience of conflict – whether as victims, combatants, perpetrators or observers. At the same time, each considers how visual imagery mediates our experience and understanding of conflict, and questions the capacity of art to effect change in a time of war.

More info:
https://www.barbican.org.uk/music/event-detail.asp?ID=8029


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kumimonster: (Default)
dammit. i had today off and according to [livejournal.com profile] craigclare  robert capa has a show in london.
well, he does, but not until later this month.
i'll have to catch it on my return.

New Photos Shed Light on Robert Capa’s Falling Soldier

LONDON—A 70-year debate over the authenticity of a Robert Capa photograph dating back to the Spanish Civil War (1936–39) may have been settled by an upcoming exhibition, reports the Independent (London). The release of the picture, Death of a Loyalist Militiaman, made the then-22-year old Capa’s reputation; he went on to co-found the agency Magnum Photos and become a celebrated war photographer. In the years since its original publication, however, the famed photograph of a militiaman tumbling backward in his moment of death has been suspected by art experts to be a staged event.

An exhibition at the Barbican Centre in London, “This is War! Robert Capa at Work,” marks the first time that all the images taken by Capa on September 5, 1936, the date of the famed image, will be collectively displayed. A recent audit of all the negatives held by the International Center of Photography in New York has unearthed previously unknown film taken by both Capa and his lover Gerda Taro on that day. The new pictures, some of which include the immortalized soldier, Frederico Borrell Garcia, 24, have led the curators to believe that Capa's "Falling Soldier" is authentic, but that the death occurred during an exercise rather than during combat.

“Looking at the photos it is clear that it is not the heat of battle," said Cynthia Young, the curator of the show.  “It is likely the soldiers were carrying out an exercise either for Capa or themselves.”

(from artinfo.com)


And From the telegraph:

Robert Capa 'faked' war photo new evidence produced

Also From the Guardian:

The camera never lies. But photographers can and do: A stunning new twist in the story of Capa's iconic war image shows that authenticity is more than just an artistic criterion

 

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