1000 Words Photography Magazine #18
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1000 Words Photography Magazine #18


Hot off the heels of our nomination in the
‘Photography Magazine of the Year’ category at the Lucie Awards 2014, we are delighted
to announce the launch of 1000 Words issue 18. This is
the last release delivered in the current format before we launch our brand new,
fully responsive website in early 2015 so stay tuned for more details!
First up, is a series from one of the most
interesting new talents to emerge from the UK photography scene in recent years,
Peter Watkins. The Unforgetting is a powerful and moving
examination of the artist’s German family history; the trauma surrounding the
loss of his mother to suicide as a child, as well as the associated notions of
time, memory and history, all bound up in the objects, places, photographs, and
narrative fictions that form its structure.
The work is accompanied by a text from Edwin Coomasaru, one of the curators of Watkins’ highly-acclaimed
exhibition at the Regency Town House as part of the Brighton Photo Fringe 2014.
There is also a portfolio dedicated to another
rising star, the American photographer Daniel
Shea
. Renowned writer and founder of Errata Editions Jeffrey Ladd sits down with Shea’s recently released photobook,
Blisner IL and finds much to celebrate in its pages. This new edition explores the post-industrial fallout of a once prosperous albeit
imaginary Southern Illinois town. It offers
a reality woven from an assembly of
disconnected locations – all with their own lineage and history – then it lends
itself as a surrogate to comment on that larger state of a country where
globalisation and demands of economy have long shifted from production.
Elsewhere, we showcase a remarkable set of
images from Cameroon’s earliest colour photo studio Photo Jeunesse, now part of
the endlessly fascinating collection of The
Archive of Modern Conflict. As independent curator and academic Duncan Wooldridge notes, the material
represents a record not only of Cameroonian society, tracing tradition and
globalisation but in its loose ends – the details of its painted sets, and the
playful activities of its sometimes quirky sitters – it tells an alternative
story of the photo studio, and its ability to represent not only the formal and
dignified version of the sitter, but the very excess that surrounds them. The
photographs were premiered back in November during Lagos Photo Festival,
Nigeria.
One of Australia’s most celebrated
photographers Bill Henson gets his
dues in our review of 1985, his latest book designed by The Entente and
published by Stanley/Barker. “Henson’s camera has the ability, through movement
and then poise, to render the best kind of sombre confusion,” writes Daniel C Blight in his paper. “Henson’s
images are subdued not in time, but over
skies and through buildings,
clouds, naked people, telephone pylons, pyramids and other familiar or
extraneous abstractions. They are seemingly underexposed, but we can’t call
them badly lit. Somewhere between the ambiguity of eventide and its gloaming
opposite, Henson is a wonderer; one whose images intentionally do whatever they
can to avoid stasis and perhaps clarity, within the confines of their static
medium.”
In a different feature
brought to you by the The Photocaptionist Federica Chiocchetti, we take
a look at The Spaghetti Tree by Lucy
Levene
, a documentary study of Bedford’s Italian community, the largest
concentration in the UK at more than 14,000 people. Attending events and
accepting invitations to people’s homes, she developed attachments and became
involved in the families’ intimate narratives. Her often witty photographs call into question mythologies of what
it means to be ‘Italian’ and the nostalgic ideal of ‘La Bella Figura’ felt by many as they try to forge an
independent identity in their new home, simultaneously revealing the tensions
in
conventional modes of portraiture; the perfect and imperfect image. 

Finally,
we send a dispatch from The Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh, United States on the
occasion of Duane Michals’ huge
retrospective exhibition, Storyteller:
The Photographs of Duane Michals.
Aaron
Schuman
provides a stirring essay, questioning how the artist has
influenced contemporary practice in reference to the current fashion for art-and
photo-historical referencing, appropriation, and photomontage, as represented
by emerging photographers such as Matt Lipps, Brendan Fowler, and Anna Ostoya.
His analysis also takes in the lessons to be found in Michals’ work, from the distinct
power of photographic sequencing, soul-searching, sincerity, and storytelling
as evinced by leading practitioners such as Alec Soth, Paul Graham and others.

Over in our dedicated Books column, Lewis Bush leafs through The Bungalow
by Dutch artist Anouk Kruithof,
which offers
an engaging and individual look at the evolving nature of photography via
images from Brad
Feurhelm
’s esoteric vernacular photography collection; Tom Claxton of Webber Represents opens the lid on Laia Abril’s much celebrated The
Epilogue,
at once a testimony and posthumous
biography of the life of Cammy Robinson, who died at 26 as a result of bulimia;
and David Moore discusses the merits
of Studio 54 by the great but somewhat under appreciated Tod Papageorge.



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