inscrivez-vous Pas encore membre ? Inscrivez-vous | Connexion Connectez-vous

 
David Spero
+0
moins
plus

| |

Partager:

Cote de popularité : 2 %

David Spero studied photography at the Royal College of Art, London. His work has been included in a number of exhibitions including Photo España (Madrid 2005), The Art of the Garden (Tate Britain 2004), and Breathless! Photography and Time (Victoria & Albert Museum 2000). His work is also housed in a number of public and private collections. Steidl will be publishing a book of recent work, titled "Churches", in Autumn 2006. ...

Lire la suite de la biographie


    BIOGRAPHIE | ACTUALITE | PHOTOS | VIDEOS | EXPOSITIONS | LIVRES |
 

EXPOSITIONS

 

LIVRES

 
  Toutes les expositions avec David Spero
  Consulter l'agenda des expositions
  Churches - David Spero


  Tous les livres avec David Spero
Acheter des livres avec David Spero
       



  Les dernières actualités concernant David Spero


  David Spero in conversation with David Campany - Contemporary Photography Artist Talks

David Spero will be in conversation with David Campany, artist, writer and reader in photography at the University of Westminster. Since the early 1990s, David Spero has worked on interconnected photography project. In his ongoing series Ball Photographs, begun in 2001, the artist introduces coloured balls into existing and transitory locations. He has...

    Lire la suite



  Churches - David Spero
The churches in this book reflect a wide and diverse range of denominations and sects that form what is often referred to as the ‘charismatic evangelical movement'. Materially and architecturally the buildings display an almost protestant ascetism quite in keeping with a spiritualist church movement reacting against secular material rationalism and consumerism. In these churches the holy spi...

    Lire la suite


  David Spero: Churches
The churches in this book demonstrate the diverse range of denominations and sects that form the Charismatic Evangelical movement today. Materially and architecturally, the buildings reflect a Spiritualist church movement reacting against secular Material Rationalism and consumerism. They feature none of the monumental architecture or symbols of status and power of the historically dominant denomi...

    Lire la suite