EVENTS & EXHIBITIONS


Exhibitions, Art Fairs, Book Launches, Public Art Installations, etc

The Photography Show 2024 AIPAD

THE PARK AVENUE ARMORY

25 - 28 April 2024 

643 Park Ave, New York, NY 10065
Park Avenue Armory, New York City

Booth P10

Thursday, April 25:
12pm VIP Opening
5-8pm Evening Preview


Friday, April 26:
12pm Fair Opens
5pm - 8pm Night of Photography

 

Saturday, April 27:
12pm - 7pm

Sunday, April 28:
12pm - 5pm

Blues People

Express Newark

20 February - 19 July 2024

Blues People has always meant a great deal to me. It was a dramatic self-confirmation, as a personal intellectual and artistic “presence,” but also as the expression of a set of ideas and measures that I have carried with me for many years. Most, even until today.  –Amiri Baraka

Inspired by the 60th anniversary of the acclaimed book Blues People: Negro Music in White America by writer, poet, and political activist Leroi Jones, who later renamed himself Amiri Baraka, visual artists – Derrick Adams, Adama Delphine Fawundu, Adebunmi Gbadebo, Cesar Melgar, and Accra Shepp – have reimagined a pivotal work of theirs and created five newly commissioned art installations in Express Newark that explore what it means to be “Blues People” in the twenty-first century.

NYC Through the Decades: A Collaboration with LinkNYC


Museum of the City of New York

13 October - 30 November 2023

On view starting Friday, October 13, in honor of the Museum’s Birthday Weekend, selections from the Museum’s collection will be featured on LinkNYC kiosk screens throughout the five boroughs in a new collaboration. NYC Through the Decades highlights images from each decade of the Museum’s tenure, 1920–2020 and includes historic photography studios such as the Wurts Brothers, as well as modern artists like Sally Davies, Joseph Maida, and Harvey Wang.

Celebrating the City


Museum Of The City Of New York

18 February 2022 - 9 January 202

Celebrating the City: Recent Photography Acquisitions from the Joy of Giving Something highlights a gift that has dramatically advanced the Museum’s already exceptional photography collection. Juxtaposing striking recent images with work by some of the 20th century’s most important photographers, including the Museum’s first images by Robert Frank and William Klein, the exhibition is a moving celebration of the power of photography to capture New York and New Yorkers.

New York City may always be in flux, but shared activities and experiences connect New Yorkers across time and space. For more than a century, many of the world’s best photographers have used their cameras to capture iconic scenes of New Yorkers in action – from mundane daily routines to special events of gathering and ritual. They have sought out the deeply personal moments that occur within this city of millions and have capture both the “New Yorkiness” of its inhabitants and he ways New York experiences are linked to the larger human condition.

The photographs in this gallery are arranged into themes that capture these quintessential New York moments without consideration to chronology. The images allow us to see a range of photographic styles applied to experiences that are common to so many New Yorkers, while also highlighting the ever-changing state of the city over many decades.

People Watching: Contemporary Photography Since 1965

Bowdoin College Art Museum

24 June - 5 November 2023

This exhibition explores the phenomenon of “people watching” as a recreational activity, an act of surveillance, a type of harassment, a sign of empathy, and a documentary form of expression. In the wake of the global pandemic of 2020, when social distancing and shelter in place orders have transformed our understanding of public space and our relationship to others, this exhibition will bring together a selection of contemporary photographs that investigate the myriad ways in which artists have represented individuals on the street, at home and at work, in the studio, and encountered during documentary or journalistic assignments.

Since the advent of photography in the nineteenth century, artists have used the camera to look at—and to look with—the human subjects in their midst. They have made a practice centered on the figure one of the medium’s leading genres. This interest in bodies in public and private space has only increased in recent decades with the development of new camera technologies and distribution systems. “People watching” is about noticing difference, but also about attempts to find common ground, an idea that is especially poignant at this historic moment.

People Watching: Contemporary Photography since 1965 will feature more than 120 photographs taken over the last sixty years by more than four dozen leading artists from around the world. It will begin to answer such fundamental questions as “Why do we photograph other people, and ourselves?”, “What are the different types of looking?”, and “What role have contemporary photographers played in both furthering and challenging prevailing assumptions about how we understand each other?” All works in the exhibition are from the Permanent Collection of the Bowdoin College Museum of Art.

Trace - Formations of Likeness


Haus der Kunst, Munich, Germany

14 April - 23 July 2023

"The program at Haus der Kunst is focused on transdisciplinary approaches, transnational outlooks, collaborative making, re-evaluations of histories, and the presentation of work by emerging artists and by trailblazers from the recent past. The major group exhibition "Trace-Formations of Likeness" knits these various threads together." - Andrea Lissoni, Artistic Director Haus der Kunst

Examining how photographers across a range of cultures have deployed portraiture as an apparatus for critical investigation throughout the history of the medium, Trace visualises the political and cultural factors that shape individual and collective subjectivities, with a particular focus on the relation between (self-)representation and social constructions of identity. This thematically and conceptually grounded approach has guided the formation of The Walther Collection from the very beginning, and has been publicly articulated through the curatorial framework established for its inaugural exhibition by the late Okwui Enwezor (1963–2019), preeminent curator, scholar, thinker, and former Haus der Kunst director.

Dissent, Discontent, and Action: Pictures of US

The Spencer Museum of Art at The University of Kansas

18 February - 25 June 2023


The Spencer Museum collaborates with contemporary photographer Accra Shepp to share two photographic projects, Occupying Wall Street and The Covid Journals. Through these portrait series, Shepp reveals a sense of community, hope, and resilience during an era of tremendous social, political, and environmental change.

Shepp began photographing the Occupy Wall Street demonstrations in New York’s Zuccotti Park on October 1, 2011. He was drawn to the sea of individuals as a photographic subject, based in part on his observation of the crowd’s diversity: “The press said the movement was predominantly young and white. And I kept seeing Asians, Latinos, Blacks. This doesn't look so homogenous. There were people in their 60s and young children with their families. And I thought, this is what people need to see.” Working with a 4 × 5 view camera, Shepp made 20 to 30 exposures per week over an extended period, continuing to photograph demonstrators at the park and its vicinity through April 2012.

In the early days of the Covid-19 pandemic in 2020, Shepp again captured portraits of the people in his city. He used a medium-format camera to address, in his words, “what this pandemic and its shape looks like here in New York. The work also speaks to the responsibility the arts and artists have to make visible, audible—make present important historical moments and conditions.” The series began at Elmhurst Hospital, a few blocks from Shepp’s home, during a moment when this hospital was filling with patients. At that time most Americans were living in isolation and views of labor and loss associated with the virus’s impact weren’t always visible. Later that year, Shepp’s attention shifted to demonstrations and the outcry for justice after the murders of Ahmaud Arbery, Breonna Taylor, and George Floyd. Shepp explains, “In spite of isolation and hunger and in spite of contagion, and the pandemic, people raised their voices to say, ‘No more.’”

 

In uniting these two bodies of work, produced almost a decade apart, we can consider how the same issues that drove protestors to the streets in 2011 grew in relevance to our daily lives during the crisis of a global pandemic, and continue to shape society today.

A Third Look x Leporello

Artist talk and book signing

6 October 2022

6pm to 9pm

Leporello Books

Via del Pigneto,162/e, 00176

Rome, Italy

A Third Look x MiCamera

Artist talk and book signing

29 September 2022 

6:30pm to 9pm

MiCamera

via Medardo Rosso 19 - 20159 Milano

A Third Look x Skylight

Artist talk and book signing

Skylight Books

9 July 2022 

Skylight Books5pm - 7pm

Skylight Books

1818 N Vermont Ave

Los Angeles, CA 90027


Magnum Foundation & 10 x 10 Photobooks

17 - 18 June 2022


Magnum Foundation and 10×10 Photobooks are teaming up to present a two-day informal gathering where you can browse and buy LGBTQ+ photobooks and zines! CONVOKE books include A Third Look, Utopia Centerfolds At Play, Things "R" Queer, and Cherry Blossom

 

Free | Friday 1pm–6pm • Saturday 11am–6pm

 

Magnum Foundation

59 East 4th Street, 7W 
New York, New York 10003 United States

Convoke X Pride Parade of Books


International Center of Photography

79 Essex, Lower East Side

21 - 22 May 2022


Presented in partnership with The Photography Show: Presented by AIPAD, ICP Photobook Fest will include leading photobook publishers and photographers showcasing their latest image-based books as well as online programming and in-person book signings.

 

CONVOKE book signings will include Joseph Maida’s A Third Look, Accra Shepp’s Radical Justice: Lifting Every Voice, and Caroline Tompkins and Molly Matalon's Far From All That Allows.


@josephmaida Sat 1pm
@accrashepp Sat 2pm
@cahlinetompkins, @mollymatalon Sun 1pm

Convoke X ICP PHOTOBOOK FEST

Accra Shepp in conversation with Sean Corcoran, Curator of Prints and Photographs at the Museum of the City of New York

  • Tuesday, April 26, 2022

  • 5:00 PM  7:00 PM

  • The Art Institute of Chicago

  • ZOOM TALK

Convoke X The Art Institute of Chicago


Salon #57, Accra Shepp

April 21 @ 6:30 pm – 8:30 pm EDT

Join us for an in-person salon with photographer Accra Shepp discussing his new photobook, Radical Justice: Lifting Every Voice(Convoke, 2022)

Convoke X 10 x 10 photobooks salon

Things "R" Queer x Capture Photography Festival

Public Art Installation, Vancouver, CA

1 April - 31 August 2022 

Joseph Maida’s Things “R” Queer series uses still life photography to express queer identity and reflect upon contemporary material culture. With saturated colours that pop, the images make palpable the references in Maida’s work to pop art, camp culture, food porn, advertising campaigns, and kawaii culture (a Japanese term for “cuteness”). Maida queries the aesthetic approach of documentary, or “straight,” photography by playing with scale, perception, stasis, and movement. By reorienting the functions of the pictured objects, these subversive tableaux offer visual cues to suggest playfulness, leisure, indulgence, and gender fluidity. Installed at Olympic Village Station, each image is printed at larger-than-life scale, radiating eye-catching colours and humorous juxtapositions.

This ongoing series began in the artist’s studio as an exercise to “make a photo a day” and share it on the social media platform Instagram. By mixing his artworks into the feed of everyday, autobiographical moments, Maida uses Instagram to consider and re-evaluate the distribution and consumption of their work. Since 2014, Things “R” Queer has had many lives, circulating on social media, in publications and exhibitions, on postcards, as NFTs (non-fungible tokens), and now as a public art installation. In contrast to a painting or sculpture, the varied presentation of this body of work highlights that the life of a photograph does not exist as one but as multiples. Maida takes this idea of plurality further by adding new images to and creating novel experiential contexts for the series, ensuring its meaning remains fluid.

Presented in partnership with Canada Line Public Art Program – InTransit BC

Radical Justice x The SVA Theatre NYC

1 April 2022 

Photographer Accra Shepp discusses his work with feminist activist, scholar, author, and contributing Critic at Large for The New York Times, Salamishah Tillet on the occasion of Shepp’s first monograph Radical Justice: Lifting Every Voice. Shepp's book brings together two bodies of socially engaged photographic portraiture that document New York City’s Occupy Wall Street movement starting in 2011 and the BLM protests since 2020 with a foreword by Tillet.

The event includes a book signing with the exclusive opportunity to purchase a copy of Radical Justice: Lifting Every Voice before its global publication dates.Presented in partnership with Canada Line Public Art Program – InTransit BC


The Polygon Gallery, Vancouver, Canada

4 March - 30 May 2021

Feast for the Eyes explores the rich history of food as one of photography’s most prevalent and enduring subjects. In an age where sharing images of food has emerged as a unique facet of contemporary culture, this exhibition offers a look at the timeless ways in which things we eat shape us and our perceptions of the world.

feast for the eyes

Featuring works by some of the most important artists of the past century, the presentation includes Nobuyoshi Araki, Guy Bourdin, Nan Goldin, Vik Muniz, Ed Ruscha, Cindy Sherman, Wolfgang Tillmans, Andy Warhol, Weegee, and 50 more. The exhibition foregrounds their images within a history of artistic, commercial, fashion, and science photography, providing an unexpected and remarkable survey of food’s central role in our lives.

 

The exhibition is organised across three key themes. “Still Life” examines how food is prepared for visual consumption, a long-standing art genre that continues to evolve over time. “Around the Table” investigates the social dynamics of eating, calling attention the rituals of cultural identity that unfold around the sharing and providing of food. The final section, “Playing with Food”, observes the role of food in performance and play, infusing food photography with humour and irony.


Hasselblad Center, Göteborg, Sweden

29 February - 23 August 2020

The exhibition shows the thrilling history of food photography from the 1850s until today within art, advertising and fashion. The genre has existed since the early days of photography but is more popular today than ever.

feast for the eyes

And so, similarly, photographs of food are rarely just about food. They hold our lives and time up to the light. As a subject that is commonly at hand, food has been and continues to be widely depicted. Today, photographing your food has never been more popular, and pictures of food-much like food itself-can raise deep-seated questions around ideas of family, tradition, class, gender, race, health, pleasure, and disgust. They can express how we live and how we value ourselves, and, at their very best, connect us to our dreams and desires.

We are what we eat. Food both fuels and shapes our physical bodies from the inside, and acts as an outward expression of our pleasures and our principles. Eating is one of the most mundane and carnal acts, yet it is also central to our rituals, religions, and celebrations. Food touches both public and private life. It can signify a lifestyle or a nation, hope or despair, hunger or excess. Ultimately, food is not only about literal taste, but also Taste with a capital T-both the way of life we aspire to and the building blocks of culture itself.

convoke x paris photo ny


1 - 5 April 2020

For the 75th anniversary of MoMA’s exhibition of Ansel Adams’ Born Free and Equal exhibition, Convoke is debuting, at Paris Photo New York, Joseph Maida’s limited edition collages, Born Free, Born Equal, which expand upon Maida’s interpretation of his reworking of Ansel Adams’ exhibition catalog.

Other framed works on view in our booth include Far From All That Allows and Utopia Centerfolds At Play.

 

Book Signings:

Born Free and Equal Book Signing by Joseph Maida, Saturday, April 4, 2020, 3pm-4pm

Utopia Centerfolds At Play Signing with Brandon Isralsky, Ina Jang, April 3, 2020, 2pm-3pm

Artist Talk / The Eyes: Ina Jang in conversation with W. H. Hunt, Friday, April 3, 2020, 3pm-4pm

Feast for the Eyes –

The Story of Food in Photography


The Photographers Gallery, London UK

19 October 2019 - 9 February 2020

Encompassing fine-art and vernacular photography, commercial and scientific images, photojournalism and fashion, the exhibition looks at the development of this form and the artistic, social and political contexts that have informed it.

Food has always been a much-photographed and consumed subject, offering a test ground for artistic experimentation and a way for artists to hone their skills. But even the most representative images of food have rarely been straightforward or objective. Food as subject matter is rich in symbolic meaning and across the history of art, has operated as a vessel for artists to explore a particular emotion, viewpoint or theme and express a range of aspirations and social constructs. With the advent of social media, interest in food photography has become widespread with the taking and sharing of images becoming an integral part of the dining experience itself, used as instant signifiers of status and exacerbating a sense of belonging and difference.