Photography: Iwan Baan and Steven Holl Architects
Photography is the art of manipulating light: its very process depends on minute changes in the electromagnetic spectrum, often barely visible to the eye. Early modernist photographers in the 1920s were the first to experiment with different ways to record and use light to dramatic effect, reviving Fox Talbot’s photogram technique to produce x-ray like images, for example, while others, like Paul Strand, preferred to incorporate natural light into their compositions.
‘Without light there is no colour. Without light there is no life,” says Ed Freeman, a landscape architect at Reardonsmith Landscape LLP, whose photograph is included in a new exhibition, ‘Design To Shape Light’, curated by lighting designer Paul Nulty, and organised by Danish lighting manufacturer Louis Poulsen. On view at Carl Hansen & Søn’s London showroom in Clerkenwell, the exhibition explores the relationship between photography, design and architecture through light in 21 photographs by leading creatives including Ab Rogers, Tony Chambers, dRMM, Steven Holl Architects and Iwan Baan.
Photography: Alex de Rijke
The selection includes photographs that have been shot on iPhones, 35mm and digital, demonstrating the possibilities of the medium now. It’s a different kind of photography exhibition, evocative and personal, each contributor sharing a unique interpretation of light, and its emotional pull. It’s all for a good cause too – each of the photographs will be made available for sale through an online auction until 26 October, with all proceeds going to the Maggie’s Barts centre at St Bartholomew’s Hospital.
There’s a moody winter shot of a Venetian lagoon, a moonlit beach, a quasi-spiritual homage to Tadao Ando’s Chichu Art Museum, and a magical picture of a bubble that took 200 attempts to get right. There are scientific approaches and those who clearly look on in awe; sunrises and sunsets are juxtaposed with artificial lights. There are chinks of light that sneak through gaps and in other images, the light radiates with a blinding force.
‘If you look very carefully you will find many details like this every day, through which you can appreciate the true beauty of light,’ urges Mark Major of Spears + Major. As a collection of images, Nulty reflects that the exhibition ‘tells a visceral story about the beauty in our everyday environment’. With the clocks about to change and winter drawing the days in, it makes for uplifting viewing. §
Photography: Tony Chambers
Photography: Claridge Architects
Photography: James French
Photography: James Newton
Photography: Ab Rogers
Photography: Jestico + Whiles
Photography: Christian Flindt
Photography: Max Fraser
Photography: Speirs + Major
Photography: Reardonsmith Landscape LLP
Information ‘Design To Shape Light’ is on view 10-26 October. Each photograph will be available for sale through a silent online auction with all proceeds going to Maggie’s Barts. For more information, visit the Maggie’s website and the Louis Poulsen website Address Carl Hansen & Søn16 Bowling Green LaneLondon EC1R 0BU View Google Maps
PHOTOGRAPHY AUCTIONS LONDON EXHIBITIONS
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