Silent Landscapes
Images created in response to the landscapes and cultures of the Scottish isles explore notions of solitude, nature and silence.
Images created in response to the landscapes and cultures of the Scottish isles explore notions of solitude, nature and silence.
Pipilotti Rist creates kaleidoscopic multimedia environments investigating how the natural world and the body interlace with the digital age.
Elizaveta Porodina’s cinematic images invite the viewer to imagine narratives extending beyond the confines of composition.
Photography and Form foregrounds abstraction and exploits the technical abilities of the medium, investigating the use of geometry and form.
An exhibition explores the still, emotive nature of writer, photographer and director Raymond Depardon’s oeuvre.
5 to See for 4-5 November engage with notions of the collective conciousness, inspiring ideas about the creation of a greater whole.
Anne Hoerter examines new ways to exhibit botanical forms; she is also developing her portrait portfolio. We speak with the artist about her practice.
Michael Eastman’s intriguing investigations into Buenos Aires’ iconic late 19th century interiors are both haunting and surprising.
Katia Kameli’s multidisciplinary, site-specific artwork ties in to an ongoing mission to support refugees and migrants in Newcastle.
From 1950-1970, photographer Latif Al Ani documented the rich social, political and religious landscape of Iraq through his lens.
For Dutch photographer Desiree Dolron, each locale is another identity. GRIMM Gallery, Amsterdam, documents her extensive travels.
Transfiguring everyday objects into items of contemplation, Jan Groover’s photography foregrounds the banality of the quotidian.
Following the last year’s success, annual contemporary photography fair fotofever returns to the Carrousel du Louvre, Paris, for its sixth edition.
Greg Girard’s neon-lit nocturnal explorations of Hong Kong between 1974-1989 are displayed in HK:PM at Blue Lotus Gallery & Consultancy.
Known for his documentation of Cologne’s Neues Bauen movement during the 1920s, Werner Mantz’s images made the region’s architecture iconic.
La Photographie Galerie, Brussels, presents a selection of images created in some of the most remote and unforgiving locations in the world.
The presence of man-made interventions into the landscape is highlighted in State of Nature at Robert Morat Galerie, Berlin.
The damaging link between the economy and the environment is documented through photographic investigations by Olaf Otto Becker.
Through a sense of intense stillness, Axel Hütte’s atmospheric compositions connect natural landscapes with the nocturnal metropolis.