Blog - September 2008

Welcome to the new Living Art blog, this is where we will post the latest news and events relevent to our natural world.

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Mon 22nd Sep 08 Personal Places: Photography by Paul Hill

Personal Places: Photography by Paul Hill

In the 1970s, following a successful career in photo-journalism, Paul moved to rural Derbyshire with his young family; from this point on he made only photographs that were personally relevant to him. Paul has used landscape, family, wildlife, pets and other immediate elements in his environment as the subject matter for a continuing personal odyssey.

Paul Hill is best known for his iconic book White Peak Dark Peak, published in 1990, which drew praise from across art, photography and landscape protection greats such as Hamish Fulton, Fay Godwin and Brian Redhead. Whilst it certainly represents the core of his practice: fine grained black and white shots focusing on gestures and marks in the landscape, highlighting issues such as access to land or exclusion and often following views through the seasons, this current exhibition at Derby Museum shows us a much richer palate of Paul’s work.

Personal Places by Paul Hill

Starting with his photojournalism in the 1960s and ending with a recent move into colour and digital work, it follows themes rather than chronographies. It is clear that Paul’s work is a continuing odyssey but with connecting threads which link closely to where he lives and roams, to his family and a deep rooted love for, and a desire to protect the Peak. Issues such as the controversial and tragedy-riven construction of Carsington Reservoir and neo-druidical travellers’ camps on Stanton Moor have a strong prominence in his work. The images are beautiful but often enigmatic, with symbols (sometimes literally: e.g. road signs) that tell a more complex story. Other more abstract work focuses on scenes from everyday family life (often featuring his daughter Sam) but with new angles and insights. A strong series of shots features exotic Peak District animals, such as mountain hares and wallabies, and their impermanence through time and territories.

Sadly, loss also guides the final images which reflect the latter stages of his wife Angela’s unsuccessful fight against cancer. Moving again into semi-abstraction, simple, brightly coloured images of sofa surfaces and a bath mat with talcum powdered footprints – the mundane landscapes of her declining existence – speak powerfully of Paul’s way of coping (through photography) with his greatest loss. Happily, his photographic quest has continued and, although this show has strong elements of a retrospective, a further show drawing again on his archive and new work is due in Birmingham.

Original and limited edition Paul Hill prints are available from Living Art (see www.living-art.org.uk). A few signed copies of White Peak Dark Peak are also available, together with other Paul Hill books.

Personal Places runs from 6th September - 26th October 2008 at Derby Museum and Gallery.

Tue 2nd Sep 08 Symphony Gears Up with Rohan

Symphony Gears Up with Rohan

Living Art is proud to announce a forthcoming presentation of Symphony for the Mountains in association with Rohan.

There will be an audio visual presentation and exhibition of limited-edition art prints from the Symphony for the Mountains exhibition at Rohan Guildford, 224-226 High Street, Guildford, Surrey, GU1 3JD on Thursday 18 September 2008 – 6.30pm to 8.30pm.

The audio visual presentation commences at 7.15pm and refreshments will be available. To reserve your place, please telephone 01483 304752.

Symphony for the Mountains is a celebration of some of the world’s most inaccessible mountain landscapes from some of the country’s top mountaineers, outdoor
photographers, painters and writers. The work sets out to express the human experience and spiritual gains from time spent in the world’s greatest mountain ranges through the use of photographs, paintings and words. The range of images aims to express the enormous breadth of experiences and vistas witnessed in these wild locations. From the harmonious and healing properties of being above the clouds to the extreme conditions and emotions of world mountaineering. Canvases from the exhibition will be available for purchase on the night at a discount, for Rohan enthusiasts, of 10% off the normal price.

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