Keith Arnatt

Keith Arnatt (1930 – 2008) was a British conceptual artist who stuied at the Oxford School of Art and later at the Royal Academy Schools in London. In the late 1960s/early 1970s Arnatt produced several conceptual self-portraits. In 1968 Arnatt produced Invisible Hole Revealed by the Shadow of the Artist. Although notionally a self-portrait, what Arnatt was exploring was the veracity of photography as a medium. Quoted in John Roberts, The Impossible Document: Photography and Conceptual Art in Britain 1966–1976, Arnatt stated ‘I was beginning to become aware of the unreliability of photographic evidence and began to play with that … Continue reading Keith Arnatt

Assignment 3 – Kyle Thompson

I have been trying to think of how to approach this assignment given the restrictions imposed by the coronoavirus lock down. My tutor and I discussed self-portraiture during my last tutorial and although I was initially reluctant, I am now warming to the idea. My tutor provided some links to photographers who have worked in this field; some like Francesca Woodman and Keith Arnatt I wrote about as part of my Contaxt and Narrative blog. The others, Robert Mapplethorpe and Ray Billingham I am aware of but need to research further. In addition to well-known photographers who have worked in … Continue reading Assignment 3 – Kyle Thompson

Dawoud Bey – Harlem, USA

I attended an online study event, The Politics of Portraiture, given by Arpita Shah and one of the photographers whose work was featured, and which we discussed, was Dawoud Bey. The work we looked at was his series Harlem, USA. Born in 1953 and growing up in Queens, New York; Bey started taking photographs at the age of 16 having been inspired by seeing the work of James Van Der Zee (1886 – 1983). Van Der Zee documented Harlem over sixty years and his work was featured in the contentious 1969 exhibition at the Metropolitan Museum in New York, Harlem … Continue reading Dawoud Bey – Harlem, USA