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Julie Margaret Cameron (1815 -1879 ): Annie, (1864)

A photogr aph of Annie Philpot, a neighbour, and described by Cameron as ' My first success. This Photograph was taken by me at 1 p.m. Friday Jan. 29th. Printed—Toned—fixed and framed all by me & given as it is now by 8 p.m. this same day .' In 1873 Cameron and her husband (age 81) left Freshwater for Ceylon with ' a cow, Cameron's photographic equipment, and two coffins, in case such items should not be available in the East '. Collectordaily review here .

Another Place: independent photography publisher

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Richard Ansett: Grayson Perry at The Wallace Collection, (2025)

R Ansett

Tarrah Krjanak (b. 1979): Sister Rock/Rock that Tries to Forget, (2020)

Runner up in the 2025 Deutsche Börse; Tarrah Krajnak (born, Peru) is shortlisted for the exhibition “Shadowings. A Catalogue of Attitudes for Estranged Daughters” at Huis Marseille, Amsterdam (28 October 2023 – 3 March 2024). The Peruvian-American artist bends time and blurs the lines between staged self-portraiture and performance, self and other, fact and fiction. The nominated exhibition brings together her most important work spanning twenty years. Krajnak consistently uses the camera as a research tool and takes a conceptual approach to the rematerialisation of photography. Krajnak is deeply invested in the craft and processes of photography. She continues to print all of her own photographs, using methods including pigment prints from colour film, silver gelatin prints, cyanotypes and anthotypes (images made using plant-based light-sensitive materials).  Krajnak’s own body appears often, and her production sites move between the studio, fieldwork and darkroom. Krajnak turns h...

Alber Oehlen (b. 1954): untitled, (2020)

190cm x 190cm

Richard Serra (1938 - 2024): One Ton Prop, (1969)

It was too cold to go and watch the cricket this Sunday so I've been doing the little undone things about the house, diverting myself from approaching the precipice of actually properly starting one of the big things I've been planning to do, which will take several months.  Fortunately crisis averted upon picking up Thames & Hudson's ' First Works by 362 artists '.  The dipping in led to something Richard Serra wrote that is relateable about his early work with four large lead plates (480 lbs each); What was satisfying about the piece was that the aesthetic came from the solution of the problem and nothing extraneous was necessary. The piece satisfied all the problems of what an aesthetic solution could be without having to go outside the limitations and counter-limitations that it set up for itself. For me, having resumed image making after a few months out, this helps confirm the thinking I've found myself doing over the last few days. The sensibility to ...

Lewis Baltz (1945-2014): Park City 14 February-7 March 1981, 4 East 77 Street New York

Lewis Baltz at Castelli, 1981. Of all his books, Park City is the big one and coming across this poster for the original exhibition of the photographs at Castelli Gallery is a treat on a Saturday morning nearly 45 years later. Leo Castelli was one of the leading gallerists for contemporary painting at the time having given Jasper Johns, Roy Lichtenstein, and Frank Stella, among others, their first one-man shows. But it was actually his wife, Antoinette, who brought Baltz to his attention.  Photography as a medium had little to no credibility in the mainstream art world and while things were slowly starting to change it was Baltz's educated thinking that made him a more easy fit into the discourse at the high end. I got to hear him present this work a year later in England in a sparsely attended seminar room at Trent Polytechnic. No-one liked it. It took a week or two before I realised he had changed my life.

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Pauline Boty (1938-1966): self-portrait in stained glass, (c. 1958)

wiki here

Paul Devaux: Les Ombres (the Shadows), (1965)