PRESS RELEASE | Amsterdam, 23 February 2011
Antiphotojournalism
1 April - 8 June 2011
Photojournalism is in the midst of a remarkable, and singularly
unexpected, renaissance. New practices, strategies, viewpoints,
techniques, and agents have radically transformed the institutions
and the fundamental concepts of the field. Whilst it has become
fashionable to lament the death of photojournalism, actual events
suggest that something quite different is taking place. The group
exhibition Antiphotojournalism charts these new
developments in exciting ways.
Included is work by Broomberg & Chanarin, Mauro Andrizzi,
Jonathan Cavender, Robbie Wright, Shane McDonald, Hito Steyerl,
Ariella Azoulay, Paul Lowe, Goran Galic & Gian-Reto Gredig,
Laura Kurgan, Renzo Martens, Kadir van Lohuizen, Allan Sekula, Phil
Collins, Walid Raad/The Atlas Group, Paul Fusco, Gilles Peress and
Susan Meiselas. Compilations by Sohrab Mohebbi, Eyal Weizman, with
Yazan Khalili and Tony Chakar.
New methods of reporting the news, new imaginations of what the
news might be, have challenged the hegemonic figure of the
photojournalist at its core and given birth to the most interesting
ideas. This critical approach is called, following Allan Sekula,
'antiphotojournalism'. It has a multiplicity of forms, such as
film, video, slides, web-based presentations and many more.
Antiphotojournalism provides a profound and passionate
fidelity to the image, unleashed from the demands of the
traditional approach of photojournalism. It is freed to ask other
questions, to make other claims, to tell other stories. Sometimes
the gesture is reflective. Sometimes the desire is evidentiary not
in the old sense of simply offering the 'evidence' of images to an
assumedly homogenous public opinion, but in a much more precise
way: photographs have become evidence in war crimes tribunals.
Sometimes the innovation is technological, whether it involves
working with the hi-tech resources of advanced satellite imagery or
the low-tech crowd-sourcing of participatory protest imaging.
Sometimes the practices are archival. And sometimes the question is
simply whether we even need images at all.
The exhibition juxtaposes reportages by established Magnum
practitioners with material from autonomous artists and even
amateurs. The works can be viewed in a myriad of ways, from slide
shows to YouTube films, from music videos to satellite imagery and
archival material.
Antiphotojournalism is curated by Carles Guerra and Thomas
Keenan. The exhibition is produced by the City of Barcelona,
Institut de Cultura: La Virreina Centre de la Imatge.
Because of Foam Lab: COUP the last day of the
exhibition 'Antiphotojournalism', will follow a special programme.
The museum will be open from 8 am until midnight. Outside the
normal opening hours of 10 am - 6 pm the entrance fee will be
reduced to 5 euros.