Fiona Pardington
#Photographe
- Festival
AIPAD 2011 - New York
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The AIPAD Photography Show New York, will be presented by the Association of International Photography Art Dealers (AIPAD) from March 17 through 20, 2011. More than 75 of the world’s leading fine art photography galleries will present a wide range of museum-quality work including contemporary, modern, and 19th century photographs, as well as photo-based art, video, and new media, at the Park Avenue Armory in New York City. The 31st edition of The AIPAD Photography Show New York will open with a Gala Preview on March 16 to benefit the John Szarkowski Fund, an endowment for photography acquisitions at The Museum of Modern Art in New York City. The AIPAD Photography Show New York is the longest running and foremost exhibition of fine art photography.&... - Exposition
Fiona Pardington ..... Immortally Yours, at Suite Gallery
{Suite} Gallery is pleased to present ... Immortally Yours by Fiona Pardington, featuring six works made recently while the artist was in Paris completing a Laureate Artistic Creations Project with the Musee du Quai Branly.
“I bought the flowers at the Porte de Clingancourt flea market in Paris and photographed them where I was staying in Rue des Levis, Villiers, Paris, in May this year.
The flowers were remnants from an estate of a milliner who had died at an advanced age. They were in a plastic bag, squashed under a whole lot of old books and ephemera up one of the side streets at the markets. I had been researching a museum collection in Paris of haute couture hand made flowers. When I got to Paris I was unable to access the collection because the museum was being moved out of the city. I went looking... - Exposition
Te Whare o Kāi Tahu - Neil Pardington
Neil Pardington’s latest series Te Whare o K?i Tahu. Photographed at three locations in Otago, New Zealand – Moeraki, Puketeraki and Otakou – these images are inspired by Neil’s K?i Tahu whakapapa and the unique intersection of M?ori and European culture in the construction and design of these whare.
In this series Neil continues to examine the nature of buildings as the recipients of stories and memories, and as safe places to store treasured objects. There is a strong sense of the past and tradition among the Te Whare o K?i Tahu works. For many they may seem to be from another time, another world – almost museum-like – creating a distance between the viewer and the subject.
There is also something uncanny about the Te Whare o K?i Tahu images. While they are devoid of peopl...
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