A Young Photographer Makes a Family Tree about South Africa
Aperture
by Aperturewp
4d ago
A vast and variegated holiday destination, a bottomless repository of cheap Black labor, and a site of bitterly fought wars of resistance against colonial dispossession—South Africa’s Eastern Cape is as beautiful as it is unknowable. The province occupies the moodiest quarter of the country’s coastline and stretches into the semiarid escarpment and the southern edge of the Drakensberg mountain range. Its landscape is at parts lush, rugged, pristine, and broken.  In the Johannesburg-based photographer Lindokuhle Sobekwa’s newest series Ezilalini (The Country) (2020–ongoing), the ..read more
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Kosen Ohtsubo’s Flower Planet
Aperture
by Aperturewp
4d ago
For nearly fifty years, Kosen Ohtsubo has run roughshod over the idea of ikebana as a stately practice of arranging flowers in a vase. He is known for using vegetables, when he sticks to plants at all, and he often sets his compositions in unconventional containers. His 1984 work I Am Taking a Bath Like This was arranged in his own bathroom. On one wall, a cobalt vase in a small alcove holds some flowering irises. But this is only an accent within the wild gaiety of the entire piece, in which iris leaves have been plastered across the tiled room and gather neatly in the tub below, next to an a ..read more
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Aperture Breaks Ground for New Home on Upper West Side of New York City
Aperture
by Lauren Van Natten
5d ago
On April 30, 2024, Aperture hosted a ceremonial ground-breaking at 380 Columbus Avenue to mark the commencement of construction of its new permanent home on New York’s Upper West Side, set within two floors of a historical building. Opening in early 2025, the highly visible and welcoming space signals a renewed, long-term vision for Aperture’s future—one that recognizes Aperture’s critical role in bringing together the array of artists, writers, institutions, and enthusiasts that are transformed by photography every day. While honoring Aperture’s legacy and enduring role in the field, the cel ..read more
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A Biennial in Houston Explores the Politics of Visibility
Aperture
by Aperturewp
1w ago
In the waning decades of Soviet rule in Czechoslovakia, Prague’s T-Club was an open secret. The clandestine gay nightclub had claimed its own gravitational force, tucked into a basement behind Wenceslas Square, where much of the drama of the 1968 Prague Spring and the subsequent “normalization” period were playing out. It was an anxious time, and the country was quickly sliding back into autocratic rule; there were widespread crackdowns on pro-democracy reformists and state eyes were everywhere. For patrons who were marginalized by the sitting regime for their sexuality and politics, T-Cl ..read more
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8 Photobooks that Consider How Artists Engage with the Environment
Aperture
by Aperturewp
2w ago
Robert Adams, New Housing, Reche Canyon, San Bernardino County, California, 1983 American Silence: The Photographs of Robert Adams (2021) For fifty years, Robert Adams has made compelling, provocative, and highly influential photographs that show us the wonder and fragility of the American landscape, its inherent beauty, and the inadequacy of our response to it. Photographing what Adams calls “the silence of light” of the American West, his images capture the sense of peace and harmony that nature can instill in us while questioning the desecration of that beauty by consumerism, industrializat ..read more
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Picturing Britain’s Working Class after the “End of History”
Aperture
by Aperturewp
2w ago
To get to Herbert Art Gallery from Coventry station, you must follow a series of pedestrian tunnels under an overpass toward the old city center, which was razed by the German Luftwaffe. What bombs didn’t flatten, postwar developers buried, sinking much of Coventry—like so many other towns in the Midlands—in a tangle of highways and footpaths incongruous with pedestrian habit. This was back in the 1950s, when the UK actually had a social welfare policy; even then, master-planning politicians and architects preferred to regard working-class life from an aerial view.  Rob Clayton, Lin, Care ..read more
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Announcing the 2024 Aperture Portfolio Prize Shortlist 
Aperture
by Aperturewp
2w ago
Aperture’s support of emerging photographers and other lens-based artists is a vital part of our mission. The annual Aperture Portfolio Prize aims to discover, exhibit, and publish new talents in photography—identifying contemporary trends in the field and highlighting artists whose work deserves greater recognition.  Aperture’s editors reviewed an outstanding number of submissions, and we are thrilled to announce the shortlisted artists for the 2024 Aperture Portfolio Prize:  River Claure  Janna Ireland  Abhishek Khedekar  Avion Pearce  Laila Stevens  These ..read more
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The Musicians Who Energized a Revolution in Nepal
Aperture
by Aperturewp
3w ago
When the People’s War began in Nepal, in 1996, eight-year-old Prasiit Sthapit noticed that his great-grandfather’s portrait had suddenly disappeared from the living-room wall. Later, as an adult, he realized that the picture of the mustachioed man he had assumed to be his great-grandfather was, in fact, a framed poster of Joseph Stalin. Sthapit’s grandfather, an ardent Communist, looked up to Stalin. In the decade-long, violent armed conflict between the Communist Party of Nepal (CPN-Maoist) and the state, anyone left-leaning was seen as a Maoist sympathizer, and many were arrested or, worse ..read more
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Close Encounters with Miranda July
Aperture
by Aperturewp
1M ago
On the day the world shut down, Miranda July received a strange phone call. It was Friday, March 13, 2020, and July was on her way to a café when she learned that her child’s school was going to close “indefinitely.” As she waited for a friend, stunned by the news that the pandemic scare was all too real, a telemarketer from the Philippines called with an offer for “services,” which July learned were related to promotional strategies for self-published authors. An artist and filmmaker whose breakout indie film, Me and You and Everyone We Know (2005), retains an enduring fanbase, July ..read more
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Mariko Mori’s Anime-Inspired Critique of Gender in Japan
Aperture
by Aperturewp
1M ago
It is 1994 in Tokyo and Mariko Mori is angry. She has just come out of a business meeting, and is appalled to find that intelligent women, with degrees from leading universities, are being made to serve tea while working at the office. She has recently returned from five years overseas, studying art in London at the Chelsea College of Art and Design, followed by two years in New York at the Whitney Museum’s rigorous Independent Study Program. “I was exposed to seeing the position of women in the West,” she recalled in a recent conversation with me, speaking from her home in New York. “I was sh ..read more
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