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Huxley-Parlour
United Kingdom
Registrace 20. 08. 2014
Huxley-Parlour Gallery, founded in London in 2010, is a forward-thinking modern and contemporary art gallery with a dynamic roster of artists that reflects an inclusive view of recent art history. The gallery is committed to creating a welcoming, educational environment founded on industry-leading expertise, considered curation, integrity and innovation.
Our CZcams channel provides exclusive interviews with artists, short documentaries and unique exhibition videos.
www.huxleyparlour.com
Our CZcams channel provides exclusive interviews with artists, short documentaries and unique exhibition videos.
www.huxleyparlour.com
Kate Gottgens in the Studio
Acclaimed South African artist Kate Gottgens discusses her new body of work, made for her debut exhibition at Huxley-Parlour, A String of Signs. In reappropriating historic imagery, Gottgens seeks to reduce time to a single moment, captured in a single frame of past, present and future. Using intense colour and washes or veils of paint she disturbs and effaces her scenes and figures, resisting the fixity or certainty of objecthood and subjecthood.
Filmed at her Cape Town studio, Gottgens elaborates on her artistic process and how personal experience draw her to themes of suburbia, ennui and collapse.
Filmed at her Cape Town studio, Gottgens elaborates on her artistic process and how personal experience draw her to themes of suburbia, ennui and collapse.
zhlédnutí: 0
Video
Alexis Rockman in the Studio
zhlédnutí 2Před 18 hodinami
Acclaimed American artist Alexis Rockman discusses his new body of work, made for his debut exhibition at Huxley-Parlour, Conflagration. The new body of work, made during 2023, continues the artist’s engagement with environmental collapse, specifically the increasing occurrence of wildfires throughout the world. Filmed at his Connecticut studio, Rockman elaborates on his artistic practice and t...
Rebecca Salter in her Studio
Před 19 hodinami
President of the Royal Academy of the Arts, Rebecca Salter introduces her practice and discusses her recent work included in her debut exhibition at Huxley-Parlour, Tracing Time. Filmed at her London studio, Salter discusses her preoccupation with line and material. In particular, she elaborates on the influence of her studies in Japan and Japanese artistic traditions.
Lisa Sanditz and Samantha Hunt in conversation
zhlédnutí 205Před rokem
Lisa Sanditz discusses her upcoming exhibition at Huxley-Parlour, London with writer Samantha Hunt. Titled Evergreen, in reference to the monumental container ship that became wedged in the Suez Canal for six days in 2021, Sanditz’ exhibition explores the intersection of consumerism, nationalism and the natural world.
Catherine Repko : Gatherer
zhlédnutí 551Před rokem
In 2022, Huxley-Parlour presented Gatherer: an exhibition of work by London-based artist, Catherine Repko. Using an emphasis on reduced forms and negative space, Repko explores the intersection between documentary and painting, memory and obfuscation, to create nostalgic and painterly tableaux. The exhibition title, Gatherer, references the archaic practice of gathering as a framework through w...
Emma Fineman: Encounters at HUXLEY-PARLOUR
zhlédnutí 518Před rokem
London-based artist Emma Fineman introduces her 2022 solo exhibition, Encounters. The title, Encounters, refers to a modern hierarchy of images in which ideas of space, communication, and touch - both physical and metaphorical - are contested. Speaking about her work, Fineman says: “I am most interested in the gaps and the slippages, places where things don’t always align and that often encoura...
Madeleine Bialke, Long Summer. Shown at HUXLEY-PARLOUR in 2021
zhlédnutí 138Před rokem
In 2021, Huxley-Parlour presented Long Summer, a solo presentation of 14 new paintings by New York based artist, Madeleine Bialke. It was Bialke’s first UK solo exhibition, and her most personal exhibition to date. The paintings in Long Summer take imaginative departure from Bialke’s time at her family’s cabin in the Adirondacks during the first summer of the pandemic. Recovering from Lyme Dise...
Tobias Bradford Introduces 'Stage Fright'
zhlédnutí 438Před 3 lety
Huxley-Parlour Gallery are delighted to announce Tobias Bradford as the third artist to exhibit in the the Huxley-Parlour Project Space. Bradford will present a robot band, who are afraid to be seen. Bradford’s practice looks at sentience and the uncanny, specifically in sculpted mechanical engineering such as puppets and robots. He is interested in debates surrounding free will, agency, and th...
Tobias Bradford | Stage Fright
zhlédnutí 2,1KPřed 3 lety
Huxley-Parlour Gallery are delighted to announce Tobias Bradford as the third artist to exhibit in the the Huxley-Parlour Project Space. Bradford will present a robot band, who are afraid to be seen. Bradford’s practice looks at sentience and the uncanny, specifically in sculpted mechanical engineering such as puppets and robots. He is interested in debates surrounding free will, agency, and th...
John Copeland | Heavy Reverb | at Huxley-Parlour 2021
zhlédnutí 1,3KPřed 3 lety
Huxley-Parlour gallery are delighted to present their first exhibition with American artist, John Copeland, opening in May 2021. The exhibition will include six large scale paintings, and will be Copeland’s most ideologically wrought, and formally succinct to date. John Copeland’s work is characterised by expressive mark making; thick, impasto oils, and heavily wrought scenes where exuberant br...
Daniel Gordon | Green Apples and Boots | Huxley-Parlour
zhlédnutí 1,7KPřed 3 lety
The first UK solo exhibition of American photographer, Daniel Gordon will open at Huxley-Parlour in March 2021. The exhibition includes four large-scale works, as well as fourteen intimate works that form Gordon’s latest body of work, exhibited here for the first time. Moving between two and three-dimensions, Gordon’s practice appropriates images of still-life subjects he finds on the Internet....
Gal Leshem: Looking for Rubia Tinctorum | Huxley Parlour Gallery
zhlédnutí 201Před 3 lety
Huxley-Parlour are pleased to be hosting an installation by Gal Leshem, whose practice engages with the history and politics of colour in the Middle East. Utilising video, textile and print, Leshem explores the role of local folklore and material culture in the creation of identity, belonging and orientation. The artist’s search for a particular red plant, Rubia Tinctorum, follows her own perso...
Yulia Iosilzon | Fanfarria | Exhibition Walk Through
zhlédnutí 161Před 3 lety
Explore the exhibition of Yulia Iosilzon | Fanfarria at Huxley-Parlour Gallery. See the full exhibition here: huxleyparlour.com/exhibitions/yulia-iosilzon-fanfarria/ Shown at gallery from 23 February - 27 March 2021. Huxley-Parlour are pleased to announce a solo presentation of new works by Yulia Iosilzon. The new body of work explores notions of hedonism, escapism and fantasy through the artis...
Yulia Iosilzon: Fanfarria | Huxley Parlour Gallery
zhlédnutí 510Před 3 lety
Huxley-Parlour are pleased to announce a solo presentation of new works by Yulia Iosilzon. The new body of work explores notions of hedonism, escapism and fantasy through the artist’s signature use of bold colours, and free-flowing calligraphic lines, laced with layers of symbolism and repeated motifs. Referencing fairytales and religious iconography, Iosilzon’s work uses bold colours and free-...
Pieter Hugo | La Cucaracha | Huxley-Parlour Gallery
zhlédnutí 1,6KPřed 3 lety
Huxley-Parlour gallery, London, are pleased to present La Cucaracha, new photographs by South African artist Pieter Hugo. A multifaceted study of place, the series includes a mix of individual portraits, vibrant and visceral landscapes, interior studies and still lifes, and explores death, sexuality and spirituality in Mexico. The series reflects the artist’s long-standing interest in how histo...
Mud Season | Lisa Sanditz: Exhibition Walk Through
zhlédnutí 138Před 3 lety
Mud Season | Lisa Sanditz: Exhibition Walk Through
Paul Graham A1: Exhibition Walk Through
zhlédnutí 301Před 3 lety
Paul Graham A1: Exhibition Walk Through
Jonas Pequeno | /ˈfəʊli/ | Huxley-Parlour Gallery
zhlédnutí 227Před 3 lety
Jonas Pequeno | /ˈfəʊli/ | Huxley-Parlour Gallery
Exhibition Walk Through of Ella Walker | Cosmati Floor and Wax Fruit
zhlédnutí 471Před 4 lety
Exhibition Walk Through of Ella Walker | Cosmati Floor and Wax Fruit
Masters of Photography 2019: Alec Soth
zhlédnutí 102Před 4 lety
Masters of Photography 2019: Alec Soth
Masters of Photography 2019: Herb Ritts
zhlédnutí 216Před 4 lety
Masters of Photography 2019: Herb Ritts
Masters of Photography 2019: Joel Sternfeld
zhlédnutí 124Před 4 lety
Masters of Photography 2019: Joel Sternfeld
Masters of Photography 2019: David Hockney
zhlédnutí 39Před 4 lety
Masters of Photography 2019: David Hockney
Masters of Photography 2019: Andy Warhol
zhlédnutí 24Před 4 lety
Masters of Photography 2019: Andy Warhol
Masters of Photography 2019: Bernd and Hilla Becher
zhlédnutí 135Před 4 lety
Masters of Photography 2019: Bernd and Hilla Becher
Masters of Photography 2019: Robert Mapplethorpe
zhlédnutí 71Před 4 lety
Masters of Photography 2019: Robert Mapplethorpe
Masters of Photography 2019: Henri Cartier-Bresson 'Salerno, Italy'
zhlédnutí 55Před 4 lety
Masters of Photography 2019: Henri Cartier-Bresson 'Salerno, Italy'
Masters of Photography 2019: David Bailey
zhlédnutí 17Před 4 lety
Masters of Photography 2019: David Bailey
Masters of Photography 2019: Arnold Newman
zhlédnutí 68Před 4 lety
Masters of Photography 2019: Arnold Newman
Academic thinking and parlance is stultifying. It's all an extension of a padded PHD thesis. I mean, good for them, but what a crashing bore.
so cool!
✨✨
He´s great!
I personally don't take to it. Art has to look good.
Mr, Wang is really an artist, he takes pictures according to his emotion and mood. Very good to learn about this side of China.
It’s incredible how evocative the Steichen prints are with a character as evasive as Garbo.
no sorry, he is a fraud, the stop motions have a secret hidden depiction of how dna is created in the ribosome, even the horse rider is holding an ankh in his lap, look at the back drops of the photo series youl notice the crosses and xs ,the subjects will always be on a rug ,which acts like the ribosome conveyor belt ,then they enact the function in movement. edward muybridge is himself a protein infusion,study them its true, im not claiming it ,i had to be shown aswell.
Hido ❤️
I really like his work! great artist . paper reality. much better than vr and ar
Please, please it is SOUTH am St as in North and South, not Sutham. always was and always will be. Big mistake, the curater at the photographers gallery ex made the same mistake, I grew up in Southam St,
It's real with massive depth and it's easy to see in the competition who or what is his subject in the photograph , simply put. " I fully understand what he sees and so much more. That's why I so appreciate his photographs.
would be cool if someone does an HD upscale to 50 FPS with this video
journalist is so annoying, its impossible to watch.
Yeah, incredibly uninterested...huge hangover?
He uses every opportunity to loose the focus 😀
Amazing..
Thank you so much for this wonderful interview and all of your efforts in the greater community!
Great story! I felt a lost when these type of cameras were replaced with your everyday phone. With that said, I try to recreate the Polaroid magic and use the camera as art itself. Please visit www.thevintageaddict.com/
A True Legend....
I love his works!
I was fortunate to see Genesis in Toronto, Canada.
this is a hidden gem
Michael Kenna looking like my grandma if she won who wants to be a millionaire.
Love his work so much. Having grown up on the cape it’s amazing to see his photography of this magical place.
A wonderful interview that’s down to both parties, the interviewer asking the right questions and the interviewee giving full candid answers. Thank you very much for posting. I’ve only been back in the darkroom for the last two years and my time has been limited due to health and other factors. For some reason my images don’t have quite the same impact as Michael Kenna's and I can’t work out why. Thank you very much for posting this interview.
17:00 very important advice for creators looking to get where Michael Kenna is.
I really adore Michael's work and his process. I will admit that I take a bit of umbrage with the idea that one cannot become a true photographer without practicing it "25 hours a day". I understand where it comes from but that Pride is very off putting and I thought Michael was above such nonsense. Thanks for the interview. Again, I adore his work and much of his philosophy. Just not his prideful remarks on what it takes to be a photographer.
Why does it register as pride with you? I do believe when you are trying to create photographs of this calibre , then you need to work really hard. To make photography a profession which generates sufficient income, it takes really hard work. I guess he just stated the obvious. I am not trying to defend him. I am just trying defend hard work.
Love Todd Hido. Thanks for posting! 👍
I think as someone who uses both Chinese and English daily, this conversation could be so much more interesting if only his translator was passing his words more accurately emotionally
Thank you for making this video available - fascinating, beautiful work
This is gold, I love to see the interviews, I learn so much about art and photography, and English too
Thanks for this.
Who's the music by please?
Hi Pete, thanks for your question. The music we used in this video is a track called 'Passage' by Lowercase Noises.
Beetles+Huxley Thanks Guys.
if so facto?
Wonderful ! Thank you
I love his work.
BEAUTIFUL!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!ARTIST!
Ruud Van Empel's children actually do not look like symbols of innocence as much as they look like some sort of representation of Alice Miller's idea of "good" children. They have the flat affect and bodily detachment that comes with trauma. Those children represented zoning out looking dreamily at flowers or submerged with bodies underwater appear dissociated. If the symbol were innocence, I think that the artist would have brought the personalities of children through, and the children themselves would be vital and free instead of the tableaus in which they are posed here. I think that his idea that children are not really personalities yet is more a reflection of his own disembodied experience during childhood, which certainly can come with having to be good and wear Sunday's best.
Well said .
France??? You've never seen Norway!
Pretty sure he did. www.michaelkenna.net/gallery.php?id=16
Sensational stuff. A bright man
Amazing! Can't wait!
My approach to photography changed after I saw the work of Mr. Michael Kenna. Great artist and a huge inspiration for the future! Thanks for sharing yet another awesome interview with the master! :D
Like Ruth I would rather have seen the photographs as still images without an accompanying musical track - easy to turn that off but one cannot look at the photographs properly … but I'll be able to do that in your gallery :)
+George Redgrave Dear George, Thanks for the comment - personally I rather liked the music that accompanied them as it was haunting and whistful, like many of the pictures. I totally appreciate that you didn't however, and can only confirm that in the gallery there will be no music at all! We look forward to seeing you, they are amazing. Giles
A timeless series of work. Beautiful!
Lovely pictures, not sure the slideshow does them justice!
One of my favorite photographers.
So awesome :p
I enjoyed a lot Sebastiao, thank you; you are a great soul and always inspiring me! On the other hand, unprofessional filming of the interview was really distracting. The minimum expectation was to put just Sebastiao in the frame and cut the interviewer and distracting cars outside the window! The lighting was bad too!
True.
+Raika rogen Hi Nosrat and Raika, Thanks for your comments and we are glad that you enjoyed hearing what Sebastiao had to say. Apologies for the production, we simply filmed a live interview in the gallery in front of an audience - hopefully our videos are now getting better and better despite us not being professional film makers!
The Photography of , Documentation of, and Profiteering from Tragedy, Calamity, Victims, and Corpses: He is a good photographer and I like his work very much which I saw in magazines in the 1980's when I was a teenager and also an enthusiastic beginner photographer. Today, my outlook and world view is very different due to having read many books, and watched many documentaries and having a lifelong interest in photography and photographers. My question is: What can a photographer do? What can Salgado do? He clearly is passionate about his work, but he has become a celebrity, and a spokesperson, and an authority, and is influential, but the reality remains that the photographs which he says are “given to me” are auctioned, published, broadcast, and the people who are the subjects, and objects, and corpses have received nothing in return, and in fact, they are anonymous and nameless content. This whole spectacle is a hypocrisy, and the circus is orchestrated by The Hypocrites who call the shots and draw up the contracts, and give the authorizations and permissions and consider themselves Saints and their behaviour Saintly. They go to the Third World and Developing, and Least Developed Countries (LDC's), and Primitive Societies and those people end up becoming the subject of Exhibitions, Auctions, Coffee table Books, Talks, Debates, Fund-Raising, Non-Governmental Organizations, and Governmental Organizations Disbursing Public Funds. Do any of this do anything for the victims, and dead, and orphans, and devastated? Or is it all just a Spectacle? Are those people? Are they somebodies or anonymous nobodies? PERIOD.
Very,very interesting interview. Thank you for posting.
To be looked forward to ...