Photography Exhibition on Abandoned Spaces
Lightstalker | 06.02.2009 14:31 | Culture | Ecology | Free Spaces
'Waiting Room' Photography Exhibition. Response to multi-million pound regeneration projects. Check out the taster pictures.
'Waiting Rooms'
Six photographers will exhibit images and installations responding to abandoned spaces in The Bear gallery, Camberwell from the 11th to the 15th of February.
The group has produced a collection of work to express their discontent at the slash and burn tactics employed by multi-million pound regeneration projects in our cities.
The stories of now inconvenient communities are being slowly buried beneath designer apartments and ill-judged infrastructure. Throwaway culture, integral to modern consumerism, seeps into attitudes towards private and public spaces; homes, hospitals, schools. No longer desirable to city developers and contractors they are simply rubbed out, glossed over and built on.
'Waiting Rooms' show the findings of the six as they explore the interim period for these forgotten places; between habitation and demolition. Embracing the Situanist spirit of 'the derive'[1] they have taken distinct lines of enquiry leading them from failed housing projects to reclaimed autonomous zones.
[1] The implication that cities have constant currents and vortexes which strongly discourage spontaneous entry and exit from certain points. We can disregard established routes and hop through holes, exposing predominately unlit corners of activity.
Magnus Andersson, Tom Groves, Hannah Lucy Jones, Robert Logan, Ben Pearson, John Weall
Preview Wednesday 11th February 6-9pm Preview
Thursday 12th February 6-9pm
Friday 13th February 6-10pm
Saturday 14th February 1-6pm
Sunday 15th February 2-6pm
The Bear, 296a Camberwell New Road, Camberwell, London SE5 http://www.thebear-freehouse.co.uk/
Six photographers will exhibit images and installations responding to abandoned spaces in The Bear gallery, Camberwell from the 11th to the 15th of February.
The group has produced a collection of work to express their discontent at the slash and burn tactics employed by multi-million pound regeneration projects in our cities.
The stories of now inconvenient communities are being slowly buried beneath designer apartments and ill-judged infrastructure. Throwaway culture, integral to modern consumerism, seeps into attitudes towards private and public spaces; homes, hospitals, schools. No longer desirable to city developers and contractors they are simply rubbed out, glossed over and built on.
'Waiting Rooms' show the findings of the six as they explore the interim period for these forgotten places; between habitation and demolition. Embracing the Situanist spirit of 'the derive'[1] they have taken distinct lines of enquiry leading them from failed housing projects to reclaimed autonomous zones.
[1] The implication that cities have constant currents and vortexes which strongly discourage spontaneous entry and exit from certain points. We can disregard established routes and hop through holes, exposing predominately unlit corners of activity.
Magnus Andersson, Tom Groves, Hannah Lucy Jones, Robert Logan, Ben Pearson, John Weall
Preview Wednesday 11th February 6-9pm Preview
Thursday 12th February 6-9pm
Friday 13th February 6-10pm
Saturday 14th February 1-6pm
Sunday 15th February 2-6pm
The Bear, 296a Camberwell New Road, Camberwell, London SE5 http://www.thebear-freehouse.co.uk/
Lightstalker
Comments
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Psychogeography - that old chestnut
07.02.2009 00:41
"Embracing the Situanist spirit of 'the derive' they have taken distinct lines of enquiry leading them from failed housing projects to reclaimed autonomous zones".
More psychogeography! Just what the world needs.
Surely exhibiting in a gallery in Camberwell is part of the gentrification and regenerative process.
At least the Situs gave up on drifts and then art and moved on to a more radical total critique of modern day society and all its alienations
If you must drfit the check out
WHY PSYCHOGEOGRAPHY? A good text -
"Psychogeography is not a substitute for class struggle, but a tool of class struggle. When kids from council estates wander into posh housing areas they are immediately harassed by the police. They get accused of being burglars even before they had a chance to break into the first house. The police impose a rationality: they force us to explain why we are at a particular place. They only accept conventional explanations in terms of economic activity (even visiting relatives boils down to economics, as the family is precisely the conjunction of private life with the economic sphere). Psychogeography is always an uneconomic, even anti-economic, activity".
http://www.uncarved.org/turb/articles/whylpa.html
Chtcheglov
adf
08.02.2009 13:27
going to see
Twerp
09.02.2009 15:00
"...If you must drfit the check out..."
If you're going to be such a supercilious ponce don't criticize someone's spelling only to make even graver mistakes in your own post - it makes you appear both arrogant and radically idiotic. And, just because you may lack entirely the capacity to be moved or radicalised by art, it doesn't mean that others are so encumbered. There's no reason why artistic statements about society cannot co-exist and compliment traditional forms of activism. Stop being such a joyless prig.
Franz Posture
e-mail: shaman.cornith@googlemail.com
close but no cigar
10.02.2009 00:02
complement complement complement
with compliments....
stickler