As part of my exhibition, Let This Be A Sign, at Swiss Cottage Gallery I will be leading a tour of the show and a placard making workshop on Saturday 16 June, 2 – 4.30pm.

I will be joined by Guy Atkins, from the Save Our Placards project.

The workshop is suitable for all ages and is FREE!

You can reserve tickets on the London Festival of Photography here or share information on the Facebook page here.

Here are a few to get you inspired….

 

I am exhibiting a new body of work as part of the London Festival of Photography running throughout June. Let This Be A Sign is on show at the Swiss Cottage Gallery and explores the economic, political and social effects of the recent UK recession.

Here are some installation shots-

Alongside the exhibition, a participatory space has been set up where visitors are invited to share their thoughts and experiences. Why not get involved?

If you would like the opportunity to share your experiences of the recession and its effects, you can leave a message on the Public Wall in the gallery, or via twitter using the hashtag #LetThisBeASign.

Here is the exhibition text:

One of the ways we remember an economic crisis is through its images. When we recall Depression-era America, we think of the black-and-white portraits of men in bread lines wearing placards that beg for work. Recalling Thatcher’s Britain, we see news pictures of the miners’ strike or stolen moments from the inside of dole offices. While barely a day goes by without more grim economic news, the current recession has been largely invisible, perhaps due to the challenges of representing abstract monetary systems or because the outward signs of today’s economic struggles are hard to capture without resorting to cliché, even though the eventual effects – a lost job, a vanishing pension, cut backs to social services – are intensely personal and painful.

Over the past eighteen months Simon Roberts, who was commissioned as the official Election Artist by the House of Commons in 2010, has attempted to cut through the statistics and abstractions to explore different ways of representing the effects of these changes on the landscape. In this new series of work he follows in the humanist tradition – employed by some of the most influential British documentary photographers of the last century – whilst incorporating the signs, iconography and language that have become so much a part of this ‘era of austerity’.

His approach is multi-disciplinary, using video, text and objects such as protest banners, as well as digital collages, in an attempt to record our new predicament. The Credit Crunch Lexicon, for example, is a text-based work, which draws upon the diversity of economic, political and philosophical terminology that has now become part of our vernacular.  Arranged alphabetically to create a form of concrete poetry, the words and phrases scrutinize the miasma of rhetoric, hyperbole and, sometimes contradictory terms used to describe the credit crunch. In other pieces Roberts captures the more visible manifestations of economic change, from the omnipresent sales signs in shop windows and shuttered high street stores to the increase in union strikes, student sit-ins and the manifestation of the Occupy encampments which focused its protest against corporate greed.  There are photographs, too, taken inside city halls around the country, where the 2011/12 annual budgets were agreed and major cuts signed off.

This exhibition aims to convey a multitude of voices and provide an incisive depiction of contemporary British reality. Our means of organising protests and campaigns may have become more technologically sophisticated, but our means of self-expression: camps, banners, graffiti remains straightforward, rooted as they are in our personal experience, our sense of justice, our vulnerability and our expectations of those in positions of power.

As is common in his practice, Roberts has added a collaborative element to this exhibition encouraging public participation.

As the new financial year progresses with continued chaos in the Eurozone and recovery slower than predicted, there is no guarantee that the fiscal landscape will improve. In this sense, Roberts’ work is unresolved. The installation is ongoing, mutable and subject to all of our fears and desires.

A colour newspaper, conceived and published by Roberts, will be available during the exhibition.

Embracing the spirit of patriotism accompanying the upcoming Olympics and the Queen’s Diamond Jubilee, The Great British Public will present images from photographers working the length and breadth of the British Isles documenting the daily life, work and rituals of the British in their many incarnations. A focus on street photography will be complimented by intimate documentary studies and portraits from a range of established practitioners including John Angerson, Nick Cunard, Peter Dench, Liz Hingley, Zed Nelson, Martin Parr, Ben Roberts, Simon Roberts, Arnhel de Serra, Chris Steele-Perkins, Ewen Spencer, Homer Sykes and Giulietta Verdon-Roe. This multidisciplinary exhibition will celebrate the extremes and quirks of life on our islands; from military funeral parades to centenarians; from pomp and pageantry to cottage industries; from Hackney in London to the most northernmost island of Orkney in Scotland, via New Brighton, the Black Country and beyond—all explored through print and multimedia in a large-scale exhibition across two sites, Dog Eared Gallery and St Pancras International.

You can view a slideshow of photographs featured in the exhibition on Time Magazine website here.

In conjunction with the exhibition:
The Great British Public Talk
Central St Martins, 25 June, 7 to 9.30pm
Join Chris Steele-Perkins, Homer Sykes, Peter Dench and Liz Hingley for a fascinating and lively discussion about the work they have on show in The Great British Public exhibition, their creative influences and their experiences photographing the British. Each photographer will present his or her work and discuss it within the context of the show, followed by a Q&A session. More information on how to book can be found here.

My photograph ‘Vegetable seller, Bilibino, Russia, 2004’ is featured in the Beyond Words: Photography in The New Yorker exhibition currently on show at the Ullens Center for Contemporary Art in Beijing.

The exhibition features more than one hundred works by some 65 photographers from across the globe. Although the photographs have been gathered from a wide range of sources – including studios, galleries, archives, and private collections – and range chronologically from 1890 to 2010, every image was published in The New Yorker between 1992 and 2010, a formative period in the magazine’s history. The work in this exhibition was selected by co-curators Elisabeth Biondi and Cay Sophie Rabinowitz exclusively for the Ullens Center for Contemporary Art in Beijing.

The polls have closed, the votes have been counted and the results are in for this year’s Museums at Night. It can be revealed that I’m heading to the Working Class Movement Library, Salford.

Why not join us?

Come along to the Library between 1 and 4pm on Saturday 19 May and we’ll add your story to the Library’s unique collection.

Bring yourself and an object that sums up what you do or is important to your cause. Simon will take your picture or a quick video clip and that’s it.

We’ll add your story to the Working Class Movement Library – Salford’s unique collection that captures over 200 years of the stories and struggles of ordinary people’s efforts to improve their world. From women campaigning to get the vote to people banding together to improve their working conditions – this is your history.

You can also find out what you’ve got in common with campaigners in the past. Do you use Twitter? Two hundred years ago you would have had to use an illegal printing press to get your message out to your followers, then dismantle it and move on before the authorities caught up with you.

Are you a blogger? In 1819, cartoonists and writers produced savage satires on the horror of the Peterloo Massacre. They didn’t circulate quite as fast as protest songs on YouTube do today, but they had the same impassioned impact.

Got something you can share straightaway? Add a picture to our Flickr site http://www.flickr.com/groups/1938946@N24/.

More details of the event here.

From strikes and protests to tailors and the Spanish Civil War, the Working Class Movement Library tells the story of 200 years of campaigning. During an event on Saturday 19th May I will help the library celebrate the image, drawing inspiration from the stories of past campaigns archived in the library. These, and the public’s photographic responses, will be used by the library to debate the power of pictures and writing to move and to persuade.

Working people have always struggled to get their voices heard. The Working Class Movement Library records over 200 years of organising and campaigning by ordinary men and women. Our collection provides a rich insight into working people’s daily lives as well as their thoughts, hopes, fears and the roles they played in the significant events of their time.

Why not join us?

Mary Jane Opie, Self portrait as a huntsman, 2005 (100 x 150 cm)

THE ENGLISH WAY Curated by Craig Patrick Edwards and Derek Curtis

The Aubin Gallery is pleased to present: The English Way, an exhibition uniting six artists – Claire Clutterbuck, Dmitri Galitzine, Mary Jane Opie, Simon Roberts, Andy Sewell and Kraig Wilson – all with an interest in our national identity, and the English countryside – who are questioning what it means to be English in the 21st century.

More information about the opening night here.

The United Kingdom is slowly dissolving, with both the impending Scottish referendum on independence – and our faltering position within Europe – causing national discomfort. The emergence of the coalition government is symptomatic of the fact that trusted left-right structures; represented by Conservative and Labour politicians, no longer seem relevant.

Where does this political dilemma leave our collective sense of English national identity? This theme of political uncertainty is captured in award-winning photographer Simon Roberts’ 2011 three-channel video: Landscapes of Innocence & Experience – to be shown in London for journey across the UK during the official four-week campaigning period for the 2010 general election.

Another aspect of our national identity lies in the backdrop to our lives; our landscape. For city-dwellers, the countryside represents quintessential Britishness – but this is primarily constructed through imagery – in fine art, film, television or photography. Consequently, real rural England remains something of a mystery…
Andy Sewell, described by Martin Parr as “a photographer likely to make his mark on the future of photography”, explores stereotypes associated with the countryside. Enamoured with quaintly-named villages – Sewell searches a map to find poetic place names such as: ‘Cold Christmas’, ‘Nasty’, ‘Little Gidding’, ‘Good Easter’ – then travels to these destinations and photographs what he finds there.

The English Way will offer six varying interpretations of England, by six artists, who will each reveal what it means – to them – to be English.

I’m giving an artist talk at Quay Arts centre on Isle of Wight. Book tickets online here.

You can also take part in Quay Arts’ Piers & Bridges debate and upload your photographs of the world of piers and bridges to their Facebook page: www.facebook.com/quay.arts tagging ‘Quay Arts’ and you could win a one-to-one critique session with me on Friday 11 May.

Deadline to upload your images: Tuesday 8 May


Raising funds for the 3 children of Anton Hammerl, photojournalist killed in Libya last year. An auction of contemporary prints will take at Christie’s in New York on May 15, 2012.

Signed prints will available by some of the world’s leading photographers – including Sebastiao Salgado, Alec Soth, Christopher Anderson, Ed Kashi, Yuri Kozyrev, Larry Fink, Lynsey Addario, Susan Meiselas, Ron Haviv, David Burnett, Joao Silva, Bruce Davidson, Greg Marinovich, Samuel Aranda, Roger Ballen and Vincent Laforet – will be auctioned off by Christie’s Senior Vice President Lydia Fenet.

To find out more about the auction visit the Friends of Anton website here.

Anton Hammerl, 1969-2011

Anton, 41, was a former picture editor and chief photographer for The Saturday Star in Johannesburg, South Africa. He was mentored by the late Ken Oosterbroek, member of the acclaimed South African ‘Bang Bang Club’, and worked for the Associated Press, the Sunday Independent, Reuters and the Star Newspaper.

He moved to London in 2006 where he became a freelance photographer, shooting both news and corporate work. He had gone to cover the fighting in Libya in late March as a freelancer.

Anton is survived by his three children – 11 year-old Aurora, 8 year-old Neo, and 1 year-old baby Hiro – and his wife Penny Sukhraj.

The Libyan regime repeatedly told Anton’s family that he was alive and well. The truth is Anton died on day one. It is now clear that the Gaddafi regime knew about Anton’s fate all along and chose to cover it up.

Image: Kenneth Rowntree (1915-1997) Underbank Farm, Woodlands, Ashdale, Derbyshire. 1940

This symposium at the V&A is a fantastic opportunity to explore the complex presence of the past, national identity, taste and nostalgia in relation to the Recording Britain collection of water colours and drawings produced at the start of World War II with both art historians and practicing artists. Speakers include Patrick Wright, David Heathcote, and artists Ingrid Pollard, Abigail Reynolds, Simon Roberts and Paul Scott. At the outbreak of the Second World War an ambitious scheme was set up to employ artists on the home front. The result was a collection of more than 1500 watercolours and drawings that make up a fascinating record of British lives and landscapes at a time of imminent change. Recording Britain was the brainchild of Sir Kenneth Clark, who saw it as an extension of the Official War Artist scheme. By choosing watercolour painting as the medium of record, Clark hoped that the scheme would also help to preserve this characteristic English art form – you can find out more about the scheme here.

Wave Crashing, Maggi Hambling, 2011, Oil on board, Framed 24.13 x 29.85 cm

Date for your diary…Paintings in Hospitals annual fundraising art auction will take place at Bonhams, Knightsbridge on Monday 28 May 2012, 6.30 – 8.00pm.

The inaugural PiH Contemporaries auction will feature works donated by some of the most interesting emerging artists working in Britain today alongside more established names. Among the many artists who have lent their support this year are Ian Davenport, Maggi Hambling, Alexis Harding, Jonathan Huxley, Jarik Jongman, HaYoung Kim, Ben Rivers, Simon Roberts, Tim Shaw, Jonathan Trayte and Mary Webb.

Paintings in Hospitals is a registered charity that uses art and creativity to improve the health, wellbeing and quality of life of adults and children living with illness and disability. Proceeds from the auction will enable us to continue to provide our art library at subsidised rates, ensuring everyone has access to the therapeutic benefits that art provides.

A formal email invitation will follow along with access to our online sale catalogue.

All enquiries [email protected] | 0207 407 3222