Bling Bling Baby
New trends in photography: the exhibition 鈥淏ling Bling Baby鈥 will present the new, colourful world of photography. From Glam Fashion to nature poems, from the ironic representation to pop portraits 鈥 the past few years have seen the emergence of a fascinating canon of images which celebrate the artificial and do not shy away from kitsch. The international group exhibition, curated by Nadine Barth, combines the most interesting new approaches from the field of photography, it introduces new and familiar names and carries us off to a sweet, surreal, glittering and incredibly fresh cosmos.
Be it roaring stags, alpenglow lights or sunsets 鈥 exaggeration has remained a popular form of artistic expression ever since the Romantic period. The glorification of the trivial and of sentimental exuberance has led to a particular visual vocabulary within photography. Guy Bourdin was the first to use dazzling colours and bizarre settings for his fashion shoots.
David LaChapelle, Miles Aldridge and Pierre et Gilles successfully continued this flirt with pop. Subsequently we can identify a younger generation of artists who are employing their fantasy and the power of colours to explore the limits of this medium: the Dutch Ruud van Empel who places ideal figures in front of heavenly backgrounds, the Moroccan Hassan Hajjaj who supplements pattern-mix hipster portraits with found objects 谩 la Warhol, the English Jason McGlade, who arranges humans, flowers and animals on a glass scanner, the duo Christto & Andrew from Doha who design entire wall worlds with their bizarre motifs 鈥 or the Swedish couple Inka & Niclas whose kitschy rock art also includes the frame.
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New trends in photography: the exhibition 鈥淏ling Bling Baby鈥 will present the new, colourful world of photography. From Glam Fashion to nature poems, from the ironic representation to pop portraits 鈥 the past few years have seen the emergence of a fascinating canon of images which celebrate the artificial and do not shy away from kitsch. The international group exhibition, curated by Nadine Barth, combines the most interesting new approaches from the field of photography, it introduces new and familiar names and carries us off to a sweet, surreal, glittering and incredibly fresh cosmos.
Be it roaring stags, alpenglow lights or sunsets 鈥 exaggeration has remained a popular form of artistic expression ever since the Romantic period. The glorification of the trivial and of sentimental exuberance has led to a particular visual vocabulary within photography. Guy Bourdin was the first to use dazzling colours and bizarre settings for his fashion shoots.
David LaChapelle, Miles Aldridge and Pierre et Gilles successfully continued this flirt with pop. Subsequently we can identify a younger generation of artists who are employing their fantasy and the power of colours to explore the limits of this medium: the Dutch Ruud van Empel who places ideal figures in front of heavenly backgrounds, the Moroccan Hassan Hajjaj who supplements pattern-mix hipster portraits with found objects 谩 la Warhol, the English Jason McGlade, who arranges humans, flowers and animals on a glass scanner, the duo Christto & Andrew from Doha who design entire wall worlds with their bizarre motifs 鈥 or the Swedish couple Inka & Niclas whose kitschy rock art also includes the frame.
Artists on show
- Anatol Kotte
- Bela Borsodi
- Carolin Saage
- Christto & Andrew
- Daniel Sannwald
- David Drebin
- David LaChapelle
- Esther Haase
- Hassan Hajjaj
- Inka & Niclas
- Izima Kaoru
- Jason McGlade
- Kourtney Roy
- Mariano Vivanco
- Mark Kimber
- Markus Henttonen
- Martin Schoeller
- Matt Henry
- Maxime Ballesteros
- Mike Schreiber
- Miles Aldridge
- Mi-Zo
- Olivo Barbieri
- Pierre et Gilles
- Pierre Winther
- Polixeni Papapetrou
- Rankin
- Ruud van Empel
- Sarah Illenberger
- Sarah Malakoff
- Stefano Cerio
- Suresh Nataraja
- Wing Shya
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