Richard I or one big curl? Sculptor Nick Hornby unveils equine sculpture in the heart of Westminster
By Admin in Art World News
Saints Art Harbinder Singh VP-Marketing & Strategy
Saints Art, PR & Strategic Communication agencies, has appointed veteran advertising and marketing expert Harbinder Singh as its Vice President for Marketing and Strategy. In his new role at Saints Art, Singh will lead the agency’s marketing & outreach campaigns while strategizing process optimization for maximal profitability, supporting business partnerships, and strengthening operational efficiency.
Puneet Sharma, Co-Founder and Director, Saints Art said, “We are glad to get Harbinder on board, for he brings on the table an immensely rich experience of more than 3 decades and a deep understanding of diverse markets. We are confident that he will help us attain our growth objectives while delivering excellent results in terms of marketing strategies and positioning.”
Harbinder Singh, said, “Saints Art has over the years evolved as one of India’s most reputed PR agencies, handling PR mandates and procuring due share of voice for multiple leading brands across varied industries and domains. It gives me immense pleasure to join the team, and look forward to working with all stakeholders to position our services as a leader in the industry.”
For editorial related queries, reach us at edit@eventfaqs.com
In his new role Singh will lead the agency’s marketing & outreach campaigns while strategizing process for maximal profitability, business partnerships & strengthening operational efficiency.
By Admin in Photography
By Admin in Art World News
Angewandte Festival 2023
June 27–30, 2023
University of Applied Arts Vienna
Oskar-Kokoschka-Platz 2
1010 Vienna
Austria
T +43 1 711332160
For the fifth year the University of Applied Arts Vienna presents in the course of the Angewandte Festival all that evolves, fails and succeeds during the past academic year. From June 27 to 30, 2023, we will open our buildings and invite visitors to various exhibitions and a full program of guided tours, performances, discussions, readings and more that underlines what will be shown in the artistic departments. This year’s visual design was developed by students of the department of Graphics and Marketing and deals with the appropriation of the university buildings itself through tags, messages and drawings. The University is a place to experiment and to critically engage with current societal and political conditions by means of artistic strategies, art and research. This year’s concept for the Oskar-Kokoschka-Platz in front of the main building of Angewandte by Jakob Lena Knebl transforms the street into a “Baumschule” (tree nursery). In collaboration with a local gardening school of Vienna young trees will temporarily create a different atmosphere and quality of stay at the square, showing the potential of urban greening to deal with issues such as climate challenges.
Exhibitions in the main university buildings as well as in venues around the city will be accompanied by a multidisciplinary program. Information about the program will be available online at angewandtefestival.at from mid June.
Exhibitions in the main university buildings of the departments of the Angewandte
Tuesday, June 27 to Friday, June 30, daily from 11am to 9pm
Oskar-Kokoschka-Platz 2, 1010 Vienna / Vordere Zollamtsstraße 7, 1030 Vienna / Georg-Coch-Platz 2, 1010 Vienna (Former Postal Savings Bank)
Exhibitions in the city
Various exhibitions are located in different districts of the city: : 1, 3, 7, 20.
Program
Book / Discourse / Film / Guided Tour / Intervention / Reading / Performance / Sound / Tour / Werkstätten (Workshops) / Workshop
AAA Summer 23 (Angewandte Abschluss Arbeiten)
The majority of the final projects are exhibited in the university buildings as part of the festival. Since winter semester 21/22 the final projects of Angewandte are presented digitally at aaa.dieangewandte.at—the website grows with each semester.
For further information or questions about the Angewandte Festival 2023 please feel free to get in touch: =(c=c.charCodeAt(0)+13)?c:c-26);});return false”>angewandte.festival [at] uni-ak.ac.at or =(c=c.charCodeAt(0)+13)?c:c-26);});return false”>info [at] uni-ak.ac.at.
By Admin in Photography
The finalists of 2023’s Drone Photography Awards are a mix of abstract, colourful and downright jaw-dropping images from around the world.
Whether it’s urban areas from above, striking nature shots in all its wildness, or people captured in their rawest of moments, these images are among the most captivating the appear in the competition.
Shown here under the ‘urban’ category is finalist ”Playground” by Sebastian Piórek.
“A playground full of joy hidden somewhere deep in the south of Poland shows its beauty in the first flash of sun from above,” Piórek wrote.
“This region is known for its mines and strongly urban character of architecture, so such a colourful playground is a kind of pearl from the ground and also from the air”.
By Admin in Photography
Earth.Org has been proud to host our Global Wildlife & Natural World Photography Competition, and a sincere thank you to all those who entered the 2023 edition. We received entries from nearly 1,000 talented photographers, conservationists, wildlife enthusiasts, and explorers from across the world who all share a passion for the environment and uncovering our planet’s natural beauty. Here are the winners and runner-ups of this year’s competition, showcasing the stunning and powerful scenes depicting the human impacts on the environment and wildlife, as well as the efforts people are doing to lead the change.
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The Earth.Org Climate Crisis Photography Competition 2024 has already kicked off! Make sure to follow us on social media for updates.
If you would like to become a part of our global movement and mission, consider becoming an EO photographer. Earth.Org’s official photographers and their content will be regularly featured in our articles and our Instagram and Facebook posts. There is no financial commitment. When we post one of your photographs, we will inform you and ask you to repost the article or post on your Instagram story.
By Admin in Printmaking
By Admin in Photography
Matt Brealey/Alex Jones/Juliette LetortStudents of this year’s Photojournalism and Documentary masters course at the London College of Communication present their final projects to the public this week.
“The work takes us on a visual exploration of some of the crucial issues of the day, from the personal to the global; from notions of identity, home and unthinkable loss to the wider environmental issues of housing and energy; as well as the lyrical exploration of feminism and an examination of witchcraft,” says course leader Aletheia Casey.
You can see the work as part of the Free Range Graduate showcase at the Truman Brewery in London until 25 June.
Here we present a selection of the projects alongside the thoughts of the photographers.


Who can you become when you put on a mask?
Disguising our true identity was a necessity for the first Morris Dancers, but the transformational power of disguise continues to be a motivating factor for this group of dancers, the Bourne Borderers (of whom I am one).
Grab some sticks, apply make-up, put on rags, bells and a hat: this way lies personal liberation.



Each year, swifts arrive in the capital after travelling from central and southern Africa, stopping for the summer to nest in roof spaces.
However, the increasing hostility of our built environment has led to their gradual disappearance from our skies.

Waiting for, hoping for, hearing and finally seeing these elusive birds is therefore an experience in recovering the senses, connecting with others, and reappreciating what – or who – is being lost from this dynamic and disoriented city.


There is this romantic notion that English mariners used to measure the sea with their outstretched arms; this was a nautical unit of depth called a faethm. It is the longest unit derived from an anatomical measurement.
To fathom is also to discover the meaning of something and understand something thoroughly, such as is the love of the sea hereditary?

I am exploring if elements of heredity, such as traits and habits, are passed down to me or if it is, in fact, nostalgia that plays on emotions and the longing for a past time or experience.


This project is a personal exploration of the word home, a term that is often difficult to define.
Is it connected to geographical locations or to our closest people?
How do the physical and the natural space relate to it?
Do our roots get weaker by taking them out and planting them elsewhere?

Maya Angelou claims that home is all those things that we carry inside us, “the shadows, the dreams, the fears and dragons of home under one’s skin”.
The images do not offer a unique answer, but invite us to pause and find our own.


Hydrogen is colourless, odourless, and highly combustible and “it cannot be photographed”.
This project was conceived as a documentary piece, intended to describe the emerging UK hydrogen industry to people outside the industry.
It has evolved into a message to industry insiders that people want to know more.

The series of colour portraits are all unnamed and by often unnamed photographers, demonstrating how little we understand about hydrogen. I was not able to photograph everyone and have relied on them being willing to send me their photographs.


This project dives into the female experience volunteering for an institution that has been around for almost 200 years, the Royal National Lifeboat Institution (RNLI).
I wanted to use this project to shine the light on women who have decided to give their time helping people at sea.

As of 2022, the figures for women in the RNLI are the following:
As a wider context, fewer than 2% of all seafarers worldwide are women.
Do these low figures come from a simple lack of interest, or from a perpetuation of societal norms that exclude females at sea?


Through a series of black and white images, accompanied by a soundtrack compiled from sounds of the night, This World Is Not Built For Us explores the visceral experience of what it is to be a woman navigating the city after dark.



Missing Katrice delves into the tragic disappearance of Katrice Lee in 1981.
It sensitively explores the profound loss, enduring trauma, and unwavering hope experienced by Katrice’s family throughout their relentless search for answers, weaving together powerful images that reflect and represent loss, trauma, and hope.
It offers the viewer a poignant and transformative journey.



The Birdman of Salonika explores the concept of reincarnation through the story of my ancestor Paul Denys Montague, a zoologist and anthropologist who flew for the Royal Flying Corps on the Macedonian Front during World War One.

The project invites the viewer to follow my footsteps through England, Greece and North Macedonia, where Paul once flew, and meditate on themes of memory, meaning and loss, and to also appreciate the inexorable connection that exists between the living and the dead through the eternal soul.


Battery in the Mountain documents a hydroelectric power station disguised within a Welsh mountain in Llanberis; the designers wanted to minimise the impact a large power station would make on the countryside.
The technology inside Dinorwig seems larger than life, and lies hidden underneath the rocky landscape in miles of underground caverns.

The mountain holds this extraordinary secret that shows little evidence in the environment that this engineering achievement even exists.
The landscape, the hydroelectric machinery, and the plentiful Welsh water, make this the largest rechargeable battery in the UK.


This short photographic film focuses on three young female fighters from different combat sports, at different stages of their careers, all with the same goal, to be successful, professional fighters.
The film uses a combination of about 70 of my still images, audio interviews, archive photos, and sound recordings to tell each fighter’s story.

In their own words they explain the dedication required to reach their dreams, and the sacrifices, commitment, and obstacles they have had to overcome, as they try to make their way in a male dominated arena.


This work explores the witch figure as a lens through which to rethink our relationship with women and nature, drawing parallels between the domination of women and taming of nature.
The images show women of all ages who stand strong and independent.
Unapologetic, in connection with nature in all its aspects: calm, generous, chaotic, and messy.


All photographs courtesy London College of Communication
By Admin in Photography
Exploring how humans witness each other, the Bowdoin College Museum of Art (BCMA) presents an expansive selection of photographs in a new exhibition titled People Watching: Contemporary Photography since 1965. The show examines how people look at each other: as a recreational activity, an act of surveillance, a type of harassment, a sign of empathy, and a documentary form of expression. The idea for the exhibition came together in the wake of the global pandemic of 2020, when social distancing and shelter in place orders transformed the understanding of one’s relationship to others, as well as the recent social and racial justice movements, when people were demanding to be seen, heard, and respected. The exhibition brings together a group of images from 1965 to the present that investigate the ways in which artists represent individuals on the street, at home and at work, in the studio, and during journalistic assignments. More than 120 photos are featured by almost 50 photographers from the last 60 years, including Diane Arbus, Alfredo Jaar, Sally Mann, Irving Penn, Accra Shepp, Andy Warhol, and Ai Weiwei, among others.
“We could not help but be inspired by the sudden changes to how we view each other and ourselves in 2020. With People Watching we have mined the collection for artworks that will give us and our audiences a chance to analyze the ways in which we look at each other and portray each other,” said Frank Goodyear, co-director of the museum. “In doing so, the exhibition presents important works from the museum’s diverse collection, some of which are going on view for the first time. And while People Watching is about noticing differences, it is also about attempts to find common ground, an idea that is especially poignant at this point in time.”
The exhibition features more than 40 works acquired since 2020. This selection includes works generously donated by collectors Nancy Rutter Clark, Joseph Baio, and Robert Freson, among others. It also features many photographers, whose work has only recently been added to the collection, including Adou, Jules Allen, Larry Burrows, Chan Chao, Paul D’Amato, Philip-Lorca diCorcia, Mikki Ferrill, Jona Frank, Katy Grannan, Graciela Iturbide, Rashid Johnson, Meryl McMaster, Daido Moriyama, Laurel Nakadate, and Farah Al Qasimi.
People Watching : Contemporary Photography since 1965
from June 24 to November 5, 2023
The Bowdoin College Museum of Art
245 Maine St.
Brunswick, ME 04011
www.bowdoin.edu/art-museum
Milwaukee Art Museum announces new Herzfeld Center for Photography show
Wondering what’s the importance of PDF editing software for photographers? Hop inside this guide to find out!
The loon traveled from Los Angeles to its permanent home in the Twin Cities.
A new beetle species has been named to honor a fellow Husker, bridging the worlds of academia and wildlife conservation.
Silversea, a premier brand in experiential luxury and expedition travel, recently concluded the inaugural season of its first Nova-class ship, Silver Nova,
Silversea, a premier brand in experiential luxury and expedition travel, recently concluded the inaugural season of its first Nova-class ship, Silver Nova,
The Desert Foothills Land Trust (DFLT) is proud to announce a special presentation event featuring acclaimed botanical photographer Jimmy Fike on Saturday, Oct. 12 at 6:30 p.m. at the Sanderson