Phil Healey: Shopocalypse
In 1968 John Berger wrote “A photograph is effective when the chosen moment which it records contains a quantum of truth.” In the urban documentary photographic work in the Shopocalypse series, Healey has been searching for a truth about the collapse in the numbers of independent shops along the high streets in London. The portraits of buildings in the series tell a story, the images symbolise how important parts of our communities can be swept away by the winds of change if we as a society don’t value them or understand their value to us.
Panizza Allmark: Seeing the Outside In: Photography, Shopping Malls and Spectacle
This talk explores Allmark’s urban photographic work, which focuses on the walkways within shopping malls. These spaces could be described as the new High Street, but undercover and intensified. My photography conveys the spectacle in shopping malls which follows the Surrealist tradition of ‘making familiar the strange and the strange familiar’.
Paul Halliday: Democracy Wall
This photographic project focuses on the materialities of urban spaces with images made in various English locations. Halliday’s starting point will be to question how theories of urban change influence the ways in which an artist approaches the subject of locale. His work problematizes ideas of documentary truth, drawing on a critique of objectivity, subjectivity and the autobiographical. Through this project, the artist questions notions of memory, eventfulness and the archive.