Skip to main content

Posts

billboard

Abstract art  photographs of torn signage are limited in that they simply nab a language that painters had to figure out and create from nothing. But anyway. I glimpsed this decrepit billboard while on a bus ride over at the coast. It was for a fraction of a second and my instantaneous reading was wow!  largely based on shapes and scale. There was something animalistic, savage going on. I won't be more specific as I'm not sure my reading holds up very well in hindsight, but it's still there somewhat, I think. At the end of the line, having prevaricated too long whether to get off en route, I ran back (in my non-runner fashion) through unfamiliar streets, navigating by shops I could recall, until I turned a corner and was slightly amazed to find I had found it. I haven't managed to get a good picture of it, the light was behind and to one side for one thing. Whatever. And now captured it doesn't have the eye-pop surprise of seeing something for an instant and have it...

mushy peas and chips, Cleethorpes

Tiny hopscotch game by traffic-choked road, Grimsby

Construction industry training equipment

upstairs window

Thomas Barrow (1938-2024): Cancellations

Derek Eller gallery show, review by Loring on Collectordaily here

Katy Grannan: Damla, Agate Beach, CA, (2025)

The moment she took this photograph is actually on the  video on the Fraenkel gallery website. Not only was it taken with a medium format analogue camera (meaning she only had a few moments to get off the shot) but I doubt the timing, what with the distant birds, and the breaking of the small wave, could have been bettered if she had been shooting 25 frames per second with a digital DSLR.

Katy Grannan (b. 1969)

I've no title on this photograph by Grannan, coming across it on eBay, the image on a show invite from 2008.

Source sub 3.1

the city up above