studio katalogue paleis van mieris 30 june 2016

Transcription

studio katalogue paleis van mieris 30 june 2016
PA L E I S V A N M I E R I S
30 JUNE 2016
MONOTONE ISSUE
MONOTONE ISSUE
STUDIO KATALOGUE
IN COL ABORATION WITH
W U N D E R W A L D & PA L E I S V A N M I E R I S
M O N O TO N E I S S U E
MONOTONE ISSUE
MONOTONE ISSUE
30 June, Amsterdam
Paleis van Mieris
02
03
04
05
INDEX
16.WAVE
58
17.CIRCLE
60
18
COLUMN
22
PARADOXALOGUE
BY MEREL KAMP
64
03.BEGGAR
COLUMN
24
FOREWORD
08
01.WALL
16
02.CUBE
06
04.MESSAGE
28
0 5 . S K I N
30
06.MIND
32
07.HOUSE
34
08.HILLS
36
09.LIGHT
38
10.AVENUE
40
11.SQUARE
42
12.CHAIR
50
13.WINDOW
52
14.GL ASS
54
15.SHAPE
56
18. SMOKE
68
19.PAPER
76
20.MADNESS
78
21.CREAM
80
22. MIRROR
82
23.LEAF
84
24.BOOKS
86
25.WARP
88
26.HEAVEN
90
27.BOSS
94
28.GLOW
96
29.HOLIDAY
98
30.FL ASH
100
COLOPHON
107
MONOTONE ISSUE
MONOTONE ISSUE
YELLOW PAL ACE
BY JORD HOMAN
07
Foreword
The assignments
and the
photographers
in this catalogue
are made for
each other.
Each of the photographers in this Katalog began with
an assignment. A catalogue is always hungry for ideas
that are timely and original and has to be satisfied at
a tremendous speed. There was no time for reflection.
Deadlines can be the worst part of a working on a
project – mostly, they are the best part. You launch a
project into orbit without second-guessing yourself,
MONOTONE ISSUE
MONOTONE ISSUE
By Studio Katalogue
because you have to get it done.
The rigorous pace keeps you on your toes and
demands a rapid-fire process of decision making.
Whether matching photographers to this assignment,
committing to a creative approach, or brainstorming
about a concept, you have to cut to the chase.
08
09
This can be liberating. The adrenaline-fueled
atmosphere helps with the crystallization of ideas.
Given that there’s not much for pondering, the tricky
part is figuring out how to carve out the necessary for
Making the Katalog was a team sport. One person
takes the first leap with an idea. Another builds on
it, and then another, until the idea is clear enough to
bring the photographers, who will capture the idea
MONOTONE ISSUE
MONOTONE ISSUE
creative space thinking.
in shapes and of course the monotone color. The
assignments and the photographers in this catalogue
are made for each other. It proves that everyone is a
photographer.
M O N O TO N E I S S U E
PALEIS VAN MIERIS
PHOTO BY: MANOUK VAN DER KOOIJ
10
11
MONOTONE ISSUE
PALEIS VAN MIERIS
PHOTO BY: BRYAN VAN DER MARK
12
13
MONOTONE ISSUE
MONOTONE ISSUE
P I C T U R E S B Y YO U
PALEIS VAN MIERIS
PHOTO BY: MANOUK VAN DER KOOIJ
14
15
01. Wall
PHOTO BY:
Merapi Obermayer
and Martijn van Dijk is asserted as a
This photograph by
question rather than answers, a strategy
MONOTONE ISSUE
MONOTONE ISSUE
Merapi Obermayer
Martijn van Dijk
in keeping with a growing disbelief
that it is possible to present conclusions
without involving the reader in the
photographers’ attempt to understand.
16
17
02. Cube
PHOTO BY:
This photograph by
Fredie Beckmans and
Joseph Jessen is asserted as a question
rather than answers, a strategy in
MONOTONE ISSUE
MONOTONE ISSUE
Fredie Beckmans
Joseph Jessen
keeping with a growing disbelief that
it is possible to present conclusions
without involving the reader in the
photographers’ attempt to understand.
18
19
MONOTONE ISSUE
MONOTONE ISSUE
20
21
03. Beggar
MONOTONE ISSUE
MONOTONE ISSUE
Dyllan Vugts and
Olga Oostermeijer made
a wonderful and classic
image. You can see the
faint residue of the subjects
against the background.
You can’t keep your eye
off of it.
22
PHOTO BY:
Dyllan Vugts
Olga Oostermeijer
23
Entering Mieris's Palace you enter an unexpected industrial
In 1748 Copenhagen's master city planner decided it's
leftover contrasting the posh neighbourhood it shares it's
city needed a yellow palace, a large mansion which was
street with. Once an art dépot of the Rijksmuseum, it remains
acquired by the royal family. Why the city planner chose
filled with culture, but now alive. Here and there yellow spots
yellow to be the dominant colour of the exterior in unknown
have been created: curated birthmarks of this magazine. I'm
but it wouldn't be surprising if the positive associations were
at a little yellow table right at the middle of this Katalog. I'm
taken into consideration. Apart from the aforementioned
surrounded by a sponateous meetup of friends. A toddler tries
associations of culture wisdom, gentleness, and happiness,
to steal the potato chips. A couple of banana's are laying in
the Chinese apparantly also think of harmony and glory
front of me. An old lady asks if she may take one. Someone
when yellow appears. Qualities a royal wouldn't mind to
asks me why everything is yellow.
be associated with. Or anyone else for that matter. Unless
you're American. Then you won't think of harmony and glory.
The etymological root of the word yellow means "bright,
Apparantly, if you're American, you'll think of cowardice. But
gleaming". It also means: to scream, to cry out. Maybe
then, Americans don't have yellow palaces.
this Katalog is yellow because it wants to cry out it exists?
MONOTONE ISSUE - COLUMN
MONOTONE ISSUE - COLUMN
Yellow Palace
Or maybe the Katalog just likes the colour. According to
Wikipedia yellow is associated with positive emotions like
happiness and sponteneaty. In China they associate yellow
with culture and wisdom. Yellow fits this cultural palace.
The etymological root of the word
yellow means "bright, gleaming".
Jord Homan
www.jordhoman.nl
24
25
MONOTONE ISSUE
MONOTONE ISSUE
PALEIS VAN MIERIS
PHOTO BY: BRECHJE TROMP
26
27
04. Message
MONOTONE ISSUE
MONOTONE ISSUE
Maarten Kuijpers and
Leonie Bos work with a
resolute, fully formed
idea of what they want to
do, and once they have
an idea, they remain
committed to it.
PHOTO BY:
Maarten Kuijpers
Leonie Bos
28
29
05. Skin
PHOTO BY:
Roye Matthew
and Henk Wijnen, wanted to
For this image,
achieve a balance of point
MONOTONE ISSUE
MONOTONE ISSUE
Roye Matthew
Henk Wijnen
of view. They have the ability
to go straight to the heart of
what’s going on in an isolated
situation.
30
31
06. Mind
PHOTO BY:
Andrew Wright and Tamar Pool
brought a poetic, photo-journalistic
eye to this image of geometric
MONOTONE ISSUE
MONOTONE ISSUE
Andrew Wright
Tamar Pool
shapes.
32
33
07. House
MONOTONE ISSUE
MONOTONE ISSUE
Lisa Brandes and Anne
Wright are maximalists:
when they are shooting,
they work with a vast
amount of gear and a
coterie of a dozen or so
people. The end result is
breathtaking.
34
PHOTO BY:
Lisa Brandes
Anne Wright
35
08. Hills
PHOTO BY:
Christina Brandes
and Sara Japenga & baby Enno
This image by
suggests a morally higher
MONOTONE ISSUE
MONOTONE ISSUE
Christina Brandes
Sara Japenga & baby Enno
viewpoint than the usual
bystander would see. The
objects depicted here could
all have been “actors” in an
Edward Hopper painting.
36
37
09. Light
PHOTO BY:
This photograph by
and
Judith Veenendaal
Harry Heyink is fuelled by the
restlessness and yearning of a longtime
MONOTONE ISSUE
MONOTONE ISSUE
Judith Veenendaal
Harry Heyink
expatriate. They seem to tilt the camera
and keep everything off-kilter and
moving.
38
39
An artist duo like
Barbara Verhoef and
Ivo Schmetz is able
MONOTONE ISSUE
MONOTONE ISSUE
10. Avenue
to formalize and
essentialize a situation
so that the very specific
is elevated to a
lager level and
becomes timeless.
PHOTO BY:
Barbara Verhoef
Ivo Schmetz
40
41
MONOTONE ISSUE
MONOTONE ISSUE
11. Square
Sometimes the
slightly out-of-focus
image is the one to
go with. This image,
Arben Sinani
and Leo Wentink, is
by
absolutely alive. It
just breathes.
PHOTO BY:
Arben Sinani
Leo Wentink
42
43
MONOTONE ISSUE
MONOTONE ISSUE
PALEIS VAN MIERIS
PHOTO BY: BRECHJE TROMP
44
45
MONOTONE ISSUE
MONOTONE ISSUE
PALEIS VAN MIERIS
PHOTO BY: BRYAN VAN DER MARK
46
47
MONOTONE ISSUE
MONOTONE ISSUE
PALEIS VAN MIERIS
PHOTO BY: BRECHJE TROMP
48
49
12. Chair
PHOTO BY:
The subjects are real,
but it’s fictionalized
in the sense that
MONOTONE ISSUE
MONOTONE ISSUE
Marieke Mas
Cedric Laqvieze
Marieke Mas and
Cedric Laqvieze
exaggerated. But in the
end, the exaggeration is
what really defines this
picture.
50
51
13. Window
PHOTO BY:
The revelation of this image,
Anneke van den Berg and
Meta Siersema is located in the
by
MONOTONE ISSUE
MONOTONE ISSUE
Anneke van den Berg
Meta Siersema
telling, not just in the evidence of
what has been told.
52
53
14. Glass
PHOTO BY:
Atte de Jong and Bram van Alphen keep
the public interested. They allow their
subjects no warning that they’re being
MONOTONE ISSUE
MONOTONE ISSUE
Atte de Jong
Bram van Alphen
photographed.
54
55
15. Shape
PHOTO BY:
This famous duo
Berend Mosk and
Sanneke Boesveldt was so compelled by
this subject that they spent several years
MONOTONE ISSUE
MONOTONE ISSUE
Berend Mosk
Sanneke Boesveldt
of their lives traveling across the world,
making photographs for this project.
56
57
Looking at this
powerful picture by
MONOTONE ISSUE
MONOTONE ISSUE
16. Wave
Sacha Vermeulen and
Ralph Gommans,
you immediately know
the story, without
knowing the context.
PHOTO BY:
Sacha Vermeulen
Ralph Gommans
58
59
17. Circle
MONOTONE ISSUE
MONOTONE ISSUE
Marlous van Rooijen and
Mattijs Mollee wanted
to make a picture that
captures the sense that is
absolutely inviting and yet
otherworldly.
PHOTO BY:
Marlous van Rooijen
Mattijs Mollee
60
61
MONOTONE ISSUE
MONOTONE ISSUE
62
63
The catalogue is the perfect test to see if you're
the the-glass-is-half-empty kind of person or
the-glass-is-half-full-kind of person.
To catalogue. What do we have? How many of which?
There's always more we can pos-
go. The photographer of the initial
How much of what?
sess and achieve. We can always
photograph does her best to take
develop our skills. (There's always
a good shot and somebody else
The artist Gabriela Gründler made a book called 'My stuff' in
a chance Gabriela Gründler will
does his or her best with a brush, but
which she catalogued all her stuff: Socks, cd's, a cup with a crack,
buy a latex top!) The catalogue is
might totally screw up that shot or
some cups without cracks, four antique silver spoons, an old teddy
the perfect test to see if you're the
drawing. A psychologist once told
bear, several plants, some in better condition than others, books,
the-glass-is-half-empty kind of per-
me about a therapeutic exercise:
sunglasses, a frying pan, screws, etc. (She does not possess any-
son or the-glass-is-half-full-kind of
People were given the assignment
thing even slightly exciting –a spicy magazine, a sexy set of un-
person. Look at a catalogue; what
to start painting a wall. Halfway
derwear– or failed to catalogue these items.)
do you see? You either see what's
through
there or see what's missing from the
on the shoulder saying 'I will finish
The catalogue never asks why? (Why doesn’t Gabriela Gründler
pages. 'Look at all these people
that now.' Nobody gave away their
own anything slightly exciting? Is she a dull person? Is she shy?
who didn't show up tonight!'
brush gladly. Some people would-
Or frigid?) Only what. The catalogue is all about keeping. It is
someone
tapped
them
n't give away their brush at all. To-
precise. Systematic. Straightforward. Sincere. Static. (Perhaps like
Tonight's catalogue is not a ca-
night’s images aren't photographs
Gabriela Gründler?)
talogue. It is a paradox Whe-
but stills of an evening about letting
There is the desire to control.
re
go gladly, to see where it will take
There is the need for order.
all about keeping, this catalogue
There is a hint of greed.
is a record of an exercise in letting
catalogues
are
usually
MONOTONE ISSUE - COLUMN
MONOTONE ISSUE - COLUMN
Paradoxalogue
us.
There is joy in the sum of our possessions, achievements, skills, or
–in case of this evening– visitors and artistic alterations.
But there's also potential sadness.
Merel Kamp
studiomerelkamp.com
64
65
MONOTONE ISSUE
MONOTONE ISSUE
PALEIS VAN MIERIS
PHOTO BY: BRECHJE TROMP
66
67
18. Smoke
PHOTO BY:
Photography often
challenges perception.
This photograph from
MONOTONE ISSUE
MONOTONE ISSUE
Michel Penders
Lotte Klösters
Michel Penders and
Lotte Klösters requires a
stare-down, and then
more emerges from it.
68
69
PALEIS VAN MIERIS
PHOTO BY: BRECHJE TROMP
70
71
MONOTONE ISSUE
MONOTONE ISSUE
PALEIS VAN MIERIS
P H O T O B Y : A N N E M I E K V A N D I J K &
ANNEMIEKE KREUGER
BRYAN VAN DER MARK
72
73
MONOTONE ISSUE
MONOTONE ISSUE
PALEIS VAN MIERIS
PHOTO BY: BRECHJE TROMP
74
75
19. Paper
PHOTO BY:
The extravagant setup is necessary
to this work, because it allow
Annemiek van Dijk and Niels Mulder
MONOTONE ISSUE
MONOTONE ISSUE
Annemiek van Dijk
Niels Mulder
to craft their image that is deeply
consequential in an aesthetic way.
76
77
MONOTONE ISSUE
MONOTONE ISSUE
20. Madness
This picture is
metaphorically loaded,
but at the same time,
the most trivial place
imaginable. That
ambivalence is what
Denise Bachofner
and Wijnand Speelman
really got
started.
PHOTO BY:
Denise Bachofner
Wijnand Speelman
78
79
21. Cream
PHOTO BY:
Marc Slings and Rachel Janssen’s
work is thrilling to edit.
No contact sheet has the
MONOTONE ISSUE
MONOTONE ISSUE
Marc Slings
Rachel Janssen
same picture twice. That
restless energy is always there.
80
81
MONOTONE ISSUE
MONOTONE ISSUE
22. Mirror
Judith
Teensma and Nicolaas
Bloemers use a 4-by-5
The artist duo
camera, which means
that all the details are
here and because of
these details there is
nothing anonymous or
“archetypical” about
this image.
PHOTO BY:
Judith Teensma
Nicolaas Bloemers
82
83
23. Leaf
PHOTO BY:
This picture brings to mind the hues
and spirituality of Giotto.
and
Joris Tromp
Debbie Kreike are the defining
MONOTONE ISSUE
MONOTONE ISSUE
Joris Tromp
Debbie Kreike
photographers of our time, who skip
back a couple of centuries for their
inspiration.
84
85
24. Books
PHOTO BY:
Barbara van Beeten
and Youssef Oul-Hadj is an interesting
This photograph by
hybrid of documentary and heightened
MONOTONE ISSUE
MONOTONE ISSUE
Barbara van Beeten
Youssef Oul-Hadj
effects.
86
87
25. Warp
PHOTO BY:
Wina Wiersema and
Tjeerd Romijn wanted to get
that beautiful, painterly color.
MONOTONE ISSUE
MONOTONE ISSUE
Wina Wiersema
Tjeerd Romijn
The lights, the blurry –
it’s a cinematic and very
poetic image.
88
89
MONOTONE ISSUE
MONOTONE ISSUE
26. Heaven
When you see the
incredible amount of
color, it is like being in
a huge theater.
Floris Kingma and
Silvia Bisschop made the
impression that all this
was representation, not
real.
PHOTO BY:
Floris Kingma
Silvia Bisschop
90
91
MONOTONE ISSUE
MONOTONE ISSUE
92
93
27. Boss
PHOTO BY:
Marsha Simon and Hans Kuiper created
a pattern-on-pattern image. Even
though there’s nobody there, the objects
MONOTONE ISSUE
MONOTONE ISSUE
Marsha Simon
Hans Kuiper
themselves clearly have personality.
94
95
28. Glow
PHOTO BY:
Timon Hagen and Job Papineau‘s work
wrestles with big ideas in a traditional
way. There is an enormous irony and
MONOTONE ISSUE
MONOTONE ISSUE
Timon Hagen
Job Papineau
humor in this image that makes it very
contemporary.
96
97
29. Holiday
PHOTO BY:
Normally, you might expect pictures
Mohammad Babazadeh and
Hans Peter Schoonenberg to be about the
made by
MONOTONE ISSUE
MONOTONE ISSUE
Mohammad Babazadeh
Hans PeterSchoonenberg
beauty of order. Here, instead, is a
wonderful picture about disorder.
98
99
30. Flash
PHOTO BY:
In this photograph, there are
separate actions that all weave
Siebren Kazemier and
Marcel van den Burg never shoot just
together.
MONOTONE ISSUE
MONOTONE ISSUE
Siebren Kazemier
Marcel van den Burg
one thing, there are often several things
happening simultaneously.
100
101
MONOTONE ISSUE
MONOTONE ISSUE
PALEIS VAN MIERIS
P H O T O B Y : A N N E M I E K V A N D I J K &
ANNEMIEKE KREUGER
BRYAN VAN DER MARK
102
103
MONOTONE ISSUE
MONOTONE ISSUE
PALEIS VAN MIERIS
P H O T O B Y : A N N E M I E K V A N D I J K &
ANNEMIEKE KREUGER
BRYAN VAN DER MARK
104
105
COLOPHON
INITIATORS
DESIGN
Studio Katalogue
Wunderwald
Coby Joustra
Daniël Dagevos
Hannah Oul- Hadj
Manouk van der Kooij
Nathalie Scholten
Baukje Stamm
www.wunderwald.nl
Paleis van Mieris
SPONSORS
Bas Berger
Budgetcam - Casper Hariot
Marc van Dijk
Kerstens Wijnkopers - Marnix Kerstens
Ovidiu Spaniol
Arti et Amicitiae
Sander ter Steege
SPECIAL THANKS
COLUMNS
Annemarie Aandewiel
Jord Homan
Jette van den Berg
Merel Kamp
Suze van Bohemen
Janneke Vermeulen
Elise Cochin
MONOTONE ISSUE
MONOTONE ISSUE
DRAWINGS
Barbara Dubbeldam
LOCATION PHOTOGRAPHY
Bryan van der Mark
Brechje Tromp
Marieke van der Heijden
Vinka Struben
Nicoline van der Torre
Sarah Valk
Marianne Reinders
K A T A L O G is inspired by The New York Times Magazine Photographs,
Kathy Ryan and Gerald Marzorati, 2011
106
107
MONOTONE ISSUE
MONOTONE ISSUE
108
Katalog
proves that
everyone is a
photographer.
109
MONOTONE ISSUE
111
112
MONOTONE ISSUE