COUVE E CORAGEM BY LIOBA KEUCK

 

COUVE E CORAGEM BY LIOBA KEUCK

by Guido Borgers

Lioba Keuck, born 1983,  is a German photographer who studied Fine Arts and Photography in Münster and Dortmund, Germany.  In 2010 she came to Lisbon to enroll at FBAUL (Faculdade de Belas Artes Universidade Lisboa).

During her stay in Portugal she was touched by Urban Gardens in the city´s periphery. The challenging lifestyle of the gardeners and their daily self-sufficient struggle caught her attention, she found her protagonists and went along with them for two years.

COUVE E CORAGEM has won several awards and was exhibited internationally.

Urban areas and their residents are facing big challenges in these days. Today for the first time in history the majority of the world‘s inhabitants now live in urban environments. But what happens if the structures providing sufficient food, housing, health and labour for all those people fail?

Lisbon´s urban farmers respond directly to their situation. They tell a simple, yet powerful  story from the margins.

The land between their social housing quarters is unused public space. Effectively a wasteland it is considered private due to the spontaneous annexation and agricultural reappropriation by the people.

This wasteland becomes the only refuge in which they trust and where they can directly profit from their abilities. On those underused territories the effects of urban pauperization are counteracted by supplying a additional socioeconomic surplus and creating self-made jobs for the families occupying them. And eventually the latter achieve greater physical and mental well being.

COUVE E CORAGEM depicts crucial aspects of the human being of our time: globalisation, migration from the countryside and the backlash of historic dependencies as well as it contemplates the deeper need for self-fulfllment in everyday existence.

The photographer´s approach is basically journalistic, but she crosses it with different artistic strategies. Her main narrative thread is told documentary and focusses on her protagonists whom she follows through the process of gardening from planting to harvesting and from cultivation to bulldozing of the land.

Direct portraits break this format and show the peasant´s identity, dignity and pride. Further there are pictures of fences taken by night: boundaries constructed from waste material extracted by the flash from the usual manner of reading. Here the conditions of these gardens can be seen clearly: they are marginal, fragile and precarious. And tomorrow they could easily be destroyed. But yet strong enough to give those farmers their "own“ space.

Lioba Keuck´s publication emphasises the actual significance of her story by coming along as a precious journal. Inward original quotes give the farmers a voice to describe the reality that lies within their "hortas“.

Not only in times of crisis we better listen carefully.

 

REVIEW: BEING AND BECOMING BY VIRGÍLIO FERREIRA

 

REVIEW: BEING AND BECOMING BY VIRGÍLIO FERREIRA

by Pedro Leão Neto

Both formal and conceptual, Virgílio Ferreira’s photography work creates a modern poetry of its own, which inquires our present time in a critical and imaginative way, and, in this case in particular, the Portuguese diaspora around the world.
In the series Being and Becoming, here published in the “scopio Projects” collection1, the enigmatic quality of the images, the double exposures and the final diptychs compositions unbound the author from the rigid conventions of realism and of traditional photographic composition. This specific exploration of the photographic medium is very interesting: the multi-exposures and the assemblage of different forms create a very personal and fictional visual narrative about territories, time and the meaning of human life in this world.
Virgílio Ferreira’s series is an open work2, a poetic imagery structured in diptychs, which place, side by side, unconventional images, making Portuguese diaspora’s time, memory and existence collapse. Thus, it challenges in new ways the limits of indexation of the photographic image and the memory process instigated by the photograph.
Virgílio Ferreira’s technical treatment and elegance make his visual narratives aesthetically unique, possessing an identity and poetry of their own. It is worth mentioning how Virgílio’s work, particularly since Daily Pilgrims, has been strongly positioning itself in the international arena of ‘contemporary art’. The author continuously reinvents his expression by creatively exploring the medium of photography to better convey his feelings and critical stance towards our multifaceted and complex world and, in this case, the psychological and existential world of people coming from the Portuguese diaspora.
Virgílio is also a photographer artist to whom the formal and technical aspects of photography play an important role and significantly define the conceptual universe of his projects. This means he is closer to the technical treatment and aesthetics of someone like, for example, Harry Callahan3, who experimented with collages and multiple exposures, or to the work of more recent authors, who, despite their
differences, have in common the fact that they apply to photography their artistic and plastic strategies in order to question reality and culture. This is the case of contemporary artists as Idris Khan, who, with his multiple exposures, strips temporal signifiers and blurs time and space in Bernd and Hilla Becher’s images of industrial gas works4; Uta Bath’s blurred streetscapes5; or Helen Sear’s innovative use of image superimposition. All these authors share with Virgílio the use of novel and experimental strategies to question the process of vision itself and to challenge our cultural certainties, our historical time, our awareness. Virgílio Ferreira’s work also embodies, in its own way, the idea that documentary photography integrating an artistic or fictional approach plays an important role in projects that try to critically understand the values and life of our time.
Within this individual and contemporary photographic framework, Virgílio Ferreira is not only capable of going beyond traditional representation, when understood as an indexicality and visual accuracy towards its subject, but he is also able to offer us a hint of the spiritual and existential portrait of its subject matter. Photography, as we know, is not a medium capable of depicting reality accurately. Virgílio Ferreira’s series embodies this very contemporary idea because it defies certainty with a set of images that create both a social documentary and an artistic visual narrative, addressing the Portuguese migratory universe in a metaphoric and indeterminate way. Thus, it is an open social art work where each of us can create our story revealing more than what is just real, making us feel and understand in a very personal and poetical way how Portuguese diaspora and life are part of a global world.

 

TERRITORY

 

TERRITORY 

BY ÁLVARO DOMINGUES

“As a graphic register of correspondence between two spaces, whose explicit outcome is a space of representation, mapping is a deceptively simple activity. To map is in one way or another to take the measure of a world, and more than merely take it, to figure the measure so taken in such a way that it may be communicated between people, places or times. The measure of mapping is not restricted to the mathematical; it may equally be spiritual, political or moral. By the same token, the mapping’s record is not confined to the archival; it includes the remembered, the imagined, the contemplated. The world figured through mapping may thus be material or immaterial, actual or desired, whole or part, in various ways experienced, remembered or projected. (…) [Maps’] apparent stability and their aesthetics of closure and finality dissolve with but a little reflection into recognition of their partiality and provisionality, their embodiment of intention, their imaginative and creative capacities, their mythical qualities, their appeal to reverie, their ability to record and stimulate anxiety, their silences and theirpowers of deception." Denis Cosgrove1

There is nothing like going back to Prehistory to feel the true primeval fascination that maps have. If we have the feeling, nowadays, that maps don’t embrace the complexity of the real world, maps of ancient times and territories, indecipherable as they are, free us from that strain and make us more willing for the register of pure representation.

Maps, just like any other representation, carry with them reality and the minds of men and their way of thinking. While some will try to decipher the graphics of paths, rivers, water springs, fields and other physical spaces of the works and days, others will find magical meanings, cosmic signs or just a combination of lines, circles and dots. As we don’t have any other records of the time and culture that has produced the representation of the Valcamonica “map”, interpretation will always be highly precarious and hopelessly bound by rationalities that are surely not the ones who have drawn it.2 We don’t know what it represents or even what was meant to be represented.

Maps are always to some degree “terra incognita”; disclosing and hiding what you intend to objectify and everything else that escapes that simplification. In 16th-century Europe, among the narratives of newly discovered lands and the “findings” of the navigators, the learned knowledge of cartographers, information and misinformation, there were endless problems and contradictions that had to be represented: the antipodes, the sea that boiled in the Torrid Zone, the tracts of inhabited land (the ecumene), longitude calculations, the representations of the world by ancient authors and by the medieval imaginary, the Eldorado, the Amazons and other mythical inhabitants from the ends of the earth, the bizarre, the monstrous and the exotic, and so on. Everything led to an intense cartographic production, a sense of bewilderment coming from the knowledge of the new limits of the world and of its wonders. Cartography was like “painting the world” [a “pintura do mundo”3]: “(…) a map is ‘a social construction of the world expressed through the medium of cartography’. Far from holding up a simple mirror of nature that is true or false, maps redescribe the world – like any other document – in terms of relation of power and of cultural practices, preferences and priorities. What we read on a map is as much related to an invisible social world and to ideology as it is to phenomena seen and measured in the landscape. Maps always show more than an unmediated sum of a set of techniques”.4 

Using cartography to talk about territory means to accept the game of mirrors between reality and representation, according to the well-known formula in photography and in the mind of the photographer – as in the case of Joan Fontcuberta, where we can see that reality is the only part of fiction that we can prove it is there, presented as real. Thus, to fictionalize reality is a requirement without which reality remains opaque and indistinct, therefore, nonexistent.5 The same is stated in Roland Barthes’s thesis, where the camera lucida is a mediator capable of organizing meanings for the chaos in reality.6

The relationship between photography and cartography is pretty obvious: the representation of reality relies on choices, codifications, conventions, protocols, observation tools, where reality itself melts away. This filtering process, of (re)cognition or strangeness, but also of building a collective consensus on the way we look and interpret, continues in the modes of distribution and reception of those representations. Sign, signifier and signified proceed in a somewhat complex path, confirming that we can only interpret images by using memories of other images.

The question of fiction and representation is particularly relevant here since it is not possible to create a “fact” or a statement of facts that can define territory. Within the polysemy that defines the subject territory or the adjective territorial, or even the verb to territorialize, everything ends up being related to territorialized matters, that work as devices for creating meaning, as narratives about who we are collectively, how we live together, how we show our well-being and distress in that life together. That is why territory is recurrently in crisis.

Regarding the crisis of objectivity about what “nature” and “natural crises” may be, Bruno Latour insists on the distinction between matters of fact and matters of concern. In the first case, “facts” would be pure objects, things, “risk-free”, discreet, with clear boundaries, with their qualities and content perfectly recognizable by their essential properties – It belonged without any possible question to the world of things, a world made up of persistent, stubborn, non-mental entities defined by strict laws of causality, efficacy, profitability, and truth7. In the case of matters of concern, on the contrary, facts do not hold that purity; they are entangled in a web of controversies, circumstances and contexts which they reveal and which they are part of. B. Latour states the case of the controversy around the use of asbestos in Fibre Cement: as a crystal-clear scientific fact, asbestos’s physical and chemical properties, when out of the aseptic labs equipped for science, are entangled in a web of questions. The factual properties of the material (highly resistant to traction, fireproof, not subject to chemical decomposition, non-oxidizable…) turn to a “hairy stone” entangled in countless public health issues, business interests, engineering issues, etc.: “once an ideal inert material, it became a nightmarish imbroglio of law, hygiene, and risk. This type of matters of fact still constitutes a large part of the population of the ordinary world in which we live”8. As Latour ironically adds, these types of occurrences – the most frequent when it comes to arguing about the outcomes of science, the way those outcomes are explained and, above all, employed – are like weeds having their way in a French garden, with its perfectly trimmed modern, plain, clean bushes blurring the landscape.

This image is an example of how much more complex it is (the illusion of) objectifying “territory”. Besides the heavily entangled array of scientific “facts” that territory holds – a true wikipedia of Nature, from particle physics to the indeterminacy theory, that alone would be enough to become a shaggy, hairy business –, political ecology feels the need to bring out the political dimension in the territory as a battlefield between humans and non-humans: “When the most frenetic of the ecologists cry out, quaking: ‘Nature is going to die’, they do not know how right they are. Thank God, nature is going to die. Yes, the great Pan is dead. After the death of God and the death of man, nature, too, had to give up the ghost. It was time: we were about to be unable to engage in politics any more at all”9.

We have to imagine cartography as the representation of “territorial facts”. At the same time, we have to think of how far we are in terms of acknowledging the difference between reality (as a collection of facts) and fiction (as representation or even making up facts), and how little we know about what is represented and representation itself and, above all, what one thing does to another.

This game of mirrors is particularly clear in the hybrids facts/narratives/representations about “the city” and in the permanent crisis in which the “city” (for some an undeniable, crystal clear, quasi-timeless fact; for others an endless poetic overflow) got itself muddled up. In direct proportion, the distance between the “good urban shape” imagery and urbanization in its multifarious morphologies deepens. That’s why cartographic representation remains inaccurate, although the clarity and easy access to satellite images, to all the evidence of Google Earth, or even to GIS, Geographic Information System. Moreover, the illusion of accuracy and thoroughness of GIS has turned cartography into a high-resolution unknowledge tool, a black box that records everything and, as such, manipulates everything according a hierarchy of facts and relations between physical, metaphysical, natural and supernatural facts.

This crisis, measured by the widening gap between reality and representation, becomes even greater when the way we look at things is contaminated by “reason”, as a normative attitude committed to order all urban facts in a single uniform narrative – namely the narrative of urban planning and its lexicon, taxonomies, its reasons, institutions, simplifications, beliefs, to name just a few.

That’s how territory is. If we replace the thing by any of its traces – which is in itself an exercise where images, representations, perceptions, content, signifiers, signifieds, and also simplifications are expanded, – the illusion of consensus (just like the persistence of the controversy), sanction the continuous existence of things, realities and fictions that were summoned for that purpose. The overabundance of matters that feeds territory’s vague concept10 has an exponential relationship with the proliferation of meanings and controversies – the true fundamental substance of territory11.

The (pseudo-)concepts of territory inhabit a web of connections that define them, as in the case of the matters of fact/matters of concern that we have seen before. So, when we ask questions about the unstable meaning of territory, we should also be questioning its role and what is conveyed by the discourse on territory and its representation: who are its interlocutors and in what context, what conflicts are hidden behind the words or images and what individual or collective concerns go along with it; who is the speech addressed to and under what reasons or even who is put aside or just simply ignored.

Although the telluric meaning that usually comes attached to it, territory or territories are like Aristophanes’s clouds: they can assume any given shape, they can change themselves, and they can be ethereal, generous or even threatening; they can ultimately be nothing but rhetoric, vague and transient figurations to seduce both the wind and the listeners.

Thus, territory becomes an intelligibility and reality-reading device of extreme voracity; it is omnivorous. It feeds of almost everything and has the advantage of rendering visible (showing or representing it as an objectification strategy in itself) any matter subjected to a process of “territorialization” (as for instance, the equivalent to mis en paysage12 in the debate about landscape). The means used by these signification processes travel a long way, ranging from “artialization”13 – see the diversity of authors, genres, themes, etc. in photography – to numerous “scientification discourses”. In the wide and structured field of science, these find several instances and platforms of belief and legitimation and, in environmental issues, they find a powerful political argument with great social acceptance, at least of its most general statements.

However, the inevitable ever-changing nature of territory – as well as the supposed “deterritorialization”, which is nothing but the name given to multiple ruptures and metamorphoses in the endless building-process of territoriality – provides it with unstable, fragile, vulnerable, conflicting contents, which can be highly dramatized. The permanent tension between preservation/destruction, stability/threat, pleasure/discontent, acceptance/denial, uncertainty, etc., creates a similarly endless tension, which finds in its own social diversity and contradiction a source of agonic consciousness and rationality, eager for confrontation, negotiation, normativity, imposition, penalty,… in order to regulate this conflicting relation14.

This is why political practices and discourse on territory are extremely useful to understand what is really at stake when we talk about territory and how to act upon and through territory. The politicization of territory makes it possible to socially and geographically re-centre the idea of “public space” as a device of argument and conflict, of implication/belonging to a social collective, of negotiation and deliberation of issues, actors, social structure of current fields, arguments, powers and counter-powers, of those who are implicated and excluded, of the action of the State upon matters of provision and regulation of goods and public services, of the commodification of landscape, of the media involvement, of the “places/territories” of landscape. Conflict and war are some of the most radical expressions of the territory as an arena for political dispute15.

 

1 Denis COSGROVE, ed.(1999) Mappings, Reaktion Books Ltd, London, p1-2

2 Catherine Delano SMITH, (1982), The Emergence of “Maps” in European Rock Art: a Prehistoric Preoccupation with Place, Imago Mundi, Vol.34, pp. 9–25. A. FOSSATI 2002, Landscape Representations on Boulders and Menhirs in the Valcamonica-Valtellina Area, Alpine Italy, in G. NASH & C. Chippindale (eds.), European Landscapes of Rock-Art, Routledge, London, pp. 93–115. Emmanuel ANATI (s/d), “The way of life recorded in the Rock Art of Valcamonica”, http://www.ssfpa.se/pdf/2008/anati_adorant08.pdf in www.rockartscandinavia.se/pdf/2008/anati_adorant08.pdf. See also E. ANATI (2008), The Civilization of Rocks, Capo di Ponte – Edizioni del Centro Camuno di Studi Prestorici, Brescia.

3 BPMP, Biblioteca Pública Municipal do Porto (1992), A pintura do mundo: Geografia portuguesa e Cartografia dos séculos XVI a XVIII: catálogo da exposição, Câmara Municipal do Porto, Porto. Jean-Marc BESSE (2003), Les grandeurs de la terre: aspects du savoir géographique à la renaissance, Ed. ENS, Paris.

4 J. B. HARLEY (2001), The New Nature of Maps. Essays in the History of Cartography. Baltimore: The John Hopkins University Press,. p.35–36 in Daniela M. FIALHO (2006), “Arte e Cartografia”, Seminário Arte e Cidade, PPG-AU – Faculdade de Arquitetura / PPG-AV – Escola de Belas Artes / PPG-LL – Instituto de Letras,

S. Salvador da Baia in www.arteecidade.ufba.br/st3_DMF.pdf. See also J.B. HARLEY; David WOODWARD (1987) (eds), The History of Cartography, Volume 5: Cartography in the Nineteenth Century, Chicago and London: University of Chicago, pp.5/36

5 Cf. Joan FONTCUBERTA (1997), El Beso de Judas – Fotografía y Verdad, Ed. G.Gili , Barcelona 1997, p.17.

6 Roland BARTHES (1980), La chambre claire: note sur la photographie, Cahiers du cinéma, Ed. Gallimard – Le Seuil, Paris. Roland BARTHES (1967), “Sémiologie et Urbanisme”, in L’Aventure Sémiologique, Ed. du Seuil, Paris, 1985.

7 Bruno LATOUR (2004), Politics of Nature, Harvard University Press, London, pp.22-24 (1st ed., Paris, 1999).

8 Idem, ibidem, p.23.

9 Idem, ibidem, p.25-26.

10 Alain BOURDIN (2011), O Urbanismo Depois da Crise, Livros Horizonte, Lisboa.

11 For a similar discussion regarding “landscape”, see Álvaro DOMINGUES (2012), Paisagens Transgénicas/Transgenic Landscapes, in P BANDEIRA; P. CATRICA (ed), Missão Fotográfica Paisagem Transgénica, EAUM, FCG, Guimarães 2012, Imprensa Nacional Casa da Moeda, Lisboa.

12 Pierre DONADIEU (2002), La société paysagiste, Actes Sud – ENSP. Cf. Bernard DEBARDIEUX (2007), “Actualité politique du paysage”, Revue de Géographie alpine, n.° 4, on the “empaysagement des sociétés occidentales”.

13 ROGER, A. (1997), Court traité du paysage, Ed. Gallimard, Bibliothèque des Sciences Humaines, Paris.

14 Cf. José Manuel Martín MORILLAS (2003), Los sentidos de la violência, Universidad de Granada, Granada.

15 João FERRÂO (2011), O Ordenamento do Território como Política Pública, Fundação Calouste Gulbenkian, Lisboa. Anne SGARD (2002) “Le paysage dans l’action publique: du patrimoine au bien commun”, Cahiers de Géographie du Québec, déc. 2002, n.° spécial, vol. 46, n.° 129. Yves LACOSTE (1976), La géographie, ça sert, d’abord, à faire la guerre, Maspero, Paris.

 

see the entire article in the issue 3 of scopio international photography magazine: territory

 

LA MAISON EST UN HABITAT A DEMECANISER

 

LA MAISON EST UN HABITAT A DEMECANISER

   BY NUNO GRANDE

The sentence that provides the title for this article is engraved in the ceiling of Casa do Conto’s loft, a renewal project for “arts & residence”, urdertaken in Porto by the architecture atelier Pedra Líquida, to which I am associated. As it can be easily understood, the title comes from the well-know epithet by Le Corbusier – la maison est une machine a habiter –, and it tries to “deconstruct” it by antinomy. (Re)created by me, the title sentence encloses other mes- sages, from other authors, about the concept of “house” or about the story of “that” house in particular1, which are also engraved on different ceilings there. Curiously, the idea for my textual contribution arose far from Porto’s environment: it occurred to me in 2009, on a visit to Veit Stratmann’s house, located in the Parisian Beaubourg, near Centre Georges Pompi- dou. This artist lives in a modest loft apartment, in a residential quarter which offers combined spaces for housing and for atelier at reasonable prices and in a flexible way. The quarter was planned during the urban reconversion of Marais, from the mid-1970s on, in order to desacral- ize the architectonic and urbanistic principles inherited by modern functionalism (as in Centre Georges Pompidou’s project), and to repopulate – or “gentrify” – the Marais with new inhabit- ants associated with the world of cultural creation and consumption.

Thus, in the city where Le Corbusier wrote his well-known epithet, around the 1920s2, the pre- text for undergoing its conceptual “deconstruction” arose: it doesn’t make sense anymore to look at a house as a standardized and monofunctional life machine, like the Modern Move- ment instructed. On the contrary, a house, whatever its dimension may be, must be a place of multiple possibilities, interactions and sequences between different life circumstances. Veit Stratmann’s studio, in Paris, is exactly like this; Casa do Conto, in Porto, will hopefully be like this.

 

This personal account emerges from the current debate over the process of urban and archi- tectonic rehabilitation of Porto’s downtown, and over the public policies behind it or that should be behind it. In the last decade, and using the slowness and inefficacy of previous public inter- vention processes as a pretext, the political rhetoric has refocused on the idea that the private real estate market should be the one to regulate rehabilitation standards and to define who the target audience to win back for the city’s downtown will be.

In this way, Porto’s Municipality and the Society for Urban Rehabilitation, to which the former is associated (Porto Vivo, SA), have been encouraging generic construction companies – i.e., without a specific tendency to work in the rehabilitation field – to redirect their real estate investments from the new city neighborhoods to the traditional downtown. They do so by acting as a go-between for the purchase and expropriation of several urban proprieties and by promoting the swift approval of their intervention projects. Thus, in recent years, we have seen the transfer of the current real estate promotion logic, i.e. of construction from scratch to urban rehabilitation, through: the intensive demolition of inner blocks, with the scenographic preservation of the main façades; the extemporaneous association of lots; and the construc- tion of houses which are standardized by the market (apartments T1, T2+1, T3, T4...), including, most of the times, parking storeys in the complex interior of those blocks.

The outcome is starting to show: the replacement of the old diversified urban fabric – based on a vertical property laid out into lots – by the new homogenizing and impermeable urban fabric of the blocks, as well as by a new housing offer of horizontal standardized – or “mecha- nized” – property.

 

COVA DO VAPOR

 

COVA DO VAPOR

por Álvaro Domingues

Localizadas no extremo da margem Sul do Tejo, mesmo antes do rio penetrar no grande mar oceano, Trafaria, Torrão, Cova do Vapor, parecem terras indefinidas entre a geografia da realidade e da ficção. Depois de impressionados pela massa cilíndrica dos silos de cereais, altíssimos, excessivos, logo nos perdemos na infinidade das pequenas coisas, barcos e automóveis estacionados lado a lado, gente que deambula, ora simpática, ora furtiva, barulhentos mecânicos de automóveis adaptando as máquinas em prodígios de sons e luzes, crianças ciganas, emigrantes africanos, pescadores, ruínas de fábricas, amontoados de casas apinhadas, precárias ou muito sólidas dentro de muros, materiais diversos, cores, lixo, ruas estreitas de terra e areia, ruas pavimentadas com tudo, papelões, pedaços de tijolos partidos, lajetas de betão. Não se saberia se alguém está a montar ou a desmontar tudo isto.
Convivem lado a lado o cuidado ínfimo com as coisas, as tintas frescas, as paredes imaculadas, os vasos de flores, com a ruína, os barracos e as casas devassadas, os carros velhos e a maior diversidade de sucata.
O mar rói as margens e as praias nesta língua de areia que os humanos, o vento, as ondas e as correntes foram mudando desde que há memória do mundo. O avanço das águas e a erosão constituem hoje uma ameaça constante.  

Sobram histórias trágicas destas terras de flutuante condição. O lazareto que lá foi instalado em 1565 é já um sinal da marginalidade e estigmatização.
Nos idos de 1775, um governante déspota e sem escrúpulos que os historiadores se encarregaram de mitificar, o Marquês do Pombal, mandou incendiar a Trafaria, maltratando e prendendo quem escapava e obrigando os homens a irem para o exército. O Marquês sabia que na Trafaria se escondiam, soldados desertores, ladrões e jovens refratários do serviço militar.
Depois vieram as indústrias de conserva de peixe e até uma fábrica de dinamite. A terra prosperou também com a frequência balnear por parte de alguma burguesia lisboeta e até aconteceu de a rainha vir à Trafaria no início de séc. XX inaugurar a primeira colónia balnear em Portugal. Os palheiros dos pescadores passaram a conviver com outras casas de madeira dos veraneantes sazonais vindos dos bairros populares de Lisboa.
Haveria, escolas, banda, coreto, ginásio, sociedades recreativas, bombeiros,  fortes, quarteis e presídios militares. O trabalho na indústria e na apanha da amêijoa misturava-se com os “banhistas”.

A moda de “ir a banhos à Trafaria” inaugurou a carreira do barco a vapor de onde vieram os topónimos de Cova do Vapor e Lisboa Praia. A Cova do Vapor foi-se enchendo de casas de madeira que o mar frequentemente destruía, sobretudo a partir dos anos de 1930’. Por isso havia que reconstrui-las e mudá-las de lugar. Algumas eram transportadas por juntas de bois que as puxavam.

De 1946 vem este excerto de Etienne de Gröer, polaco-russo, reputado urbanista e professor do Instituto de Urbanismo de Paris, contratado pelo governo do regime salazarista para fazer planos em Portugal:

(…) Mais para o Norte, além da Mata Nacional, encontra-se a “Cova do Vapôr”, um pequeno porto formado por uma enseada entre as dunas, perto da embocadura do Tejo.

Sobre a língua de areia que se formou entre o rio e o mar, ergueram-se minúsculas barracas de madeira, sobre estacaria, construídas nas parcelas das dunas que alugou aos seus proprietários a direcção do Porto de Lisboa. São casas de fim-de-semana ou de “camping”.

Lamento ter de dizer que tudo isto foi construído na maior desordem possível: as casinholas estão demasiado perto umas das outras e apresentam, no seu conjunto, o aspecto de uma aldeia de pretos. Não têm nem água, nem esgotos.

As águas usadas e tudo o resto deita-se na areia, que se torna progressivamente insalubre e de mau cheiro.

Antes desta pérola sobre a “aldeia de pretos”, o mesmo já tinha escrito que

“A praia da Trafaria não é conveniente para os banhos de mar, pois que as correntes do Tejo trazem para cá e acumulam em frente dela todos os despejos dos esgotos de Lisboa. (…) Construiu-se tudo em grande desordem.

Há um número exagerado de ruas, muitas das quais são demasiado estreitas, e todas elas (ou quase) não tem arranjo nenhum, nem são conservadas de qualquer maneira. Reina em muitos sítios um cheiro desagradável por falta de instalações sanitárias nas casas 1.

Há horríveis barracas, feitas com pranchas e com ferro-velho, e um grande número de casebres de todas as espécies que servem como habitação para uma grande parte da população, que por causa disso sofre de todos os danos físicos e morais. A tuberculose reina aí.”

Não vale a pena insistir. Em 2002, no Jornal Púiblico, José António Cerejo muda radicalmente o tom:

"Cuidada e delicada, feita de afectos que não marcam os bairros degradados das periferias, a Cova do Vapor está longe de ser um bairro de lata ou uma aldeia igual às outras. É uma povoação singular, é um lugar onde tudo é diferente, sem escola, centro de saúde ou vestígio de serviço público, um lugar contraditório, uma relíquia de excepção. São construções mais ou menos precárias, encavalitadas umas nas outras, expoentes de engenho e desenrascanço, às vezes sem se perceber onde é que começam umas e acabam as outras. São casas e casinhas, com apenas duas ruas de terra batida, onde estão as poucas lojas da terra, capazes de deixar passar carros; mas o labirinto dos caminhos serpenteia por todo a parte, com largura apenas para os assadores, para os canteiros da salsa e dos coentros, para um tanque de roupa ou um duche apertado. Às vezes ainda há espaço para umas couves, umas flores, umas árvores de fruto, armários, estendais, e inventivas garagens e anexos de casas." 2

Era difícil que houvesse acordo numa terra que nasceu num lugar onde existia uma fábrica de dinamite; onde o mar, o vento e a areia fazem e desfazem praias e dunas; onde a linguagem e os actos do poder oscilam entre a violência, o pitoresco e a condescendência. É quase um fado, uma maldição que só desaparece com magias e encantamentos que povoem novamente os lugares e o seu imaginário.

Com a expressão francesa Terrain Vague, Ignasi de Solà-Morales3 pretendeu capturar está espécie de luz negra que nos fascina e nos atrai para lugares que estão do lado de fora da racionalidade normativa corrente. A escolha do francês tinha uma intenção dupla: terrain, remete claramente  para  terreno edificado, para um lugar urbano, e vague, possui um duplo sentido de vazio de coisas, vazio de função e, sobretudo, vazio de sentido. Lugares incertos.


La imaginacion romântica que pervive en nuestra sensibilidade contemporânea se nutre de recuerdos y de expectativas. Extranjeros en nuestra própria pátria, extranjeros en nuestra ciudad, el habitante de la metrópoli siente los espácios no dominados por la arquitectura como reflejo de su misma inseguridad, de su vago deambular por espácios sin limites que, en su posición externa al sistema urbano de poder, de actividade, constituyen a la vez una expresion física de su temor e inseguridad, pero también una expectativa de lo outro, lo alternativo, lo utópico, lo porvenir, etc.


A ausência de uso, ou a sua indefinição,o estranhamento, a instabilidade ou baixa intensidade, e o próprio sentido ambivalente da precariedade, da ausência e da ruína – sinal de resistência, apesar de tudo, ou sinal de decrepitude progressiva – seriam ingredientes quase romântico para a construção de uma estética da liberdade, daquilo que pelo seu pouco préstimo está pronto para ser re-imaginado num campo infinito de possibilidades.
Estariamos longe da obsolescência acelerada e dos seus significados desencantados, apesar dos muitos sinais de abandono que na Cova do Vapor convivem com extremos de minúcia e dedicação nos afectos que as paredes expõem: desenhos com seixos e conchas, mosaicos coloridos, pinturas de barcos e arco-íris, nomes escritos e palavras que designam tempos felizes e mundos perfeitos.

A foto-grafia de Stefano Carnelli surpreende e dá a ver esta ambiência por múltiplos e dissonantes caminhos: sobre erva seca e terra pisada, flutuam cordas com roupa a secar; perto, uma casa simples e bastante degradada, não se sabe se usada ou abandonada; para lá de um renque de pinheiros, a escala desmesurada de um silo composto por um feixe de cilindros como tubos de um órgão gigantesco. As faixas coloridas que percorrem o silo em diagonal, ecoam o azul e branco do céu e das nuvens. Estamos pouco prevenidos para tamanhas dissonâncias.

Sobre este material instável, a fotografia, ao estabelecer um fio condutor entre significados e significantes fotográficos, constrói uma atmosfera própria que permitirá aceder a outras dobras mais escondidas; para uns, românticos, a alma desencantada das coisas, um lamento deslassado, distribuído por indícios, marcas, coisas ausentes ou fora do lugar. Para outros, é exactamente a energia da dissonância, reunindo no mesmo lugar presenças muito afastadas, aproximando-as, que é capaz de expandir os sentidos em direcção à invenção poética da realidade ou à sua expansão.

Por isso, o simples registo das coisas documentadas não é o que mais claramente se revela. O que se desprende são sobretudo sinais, marcadores, caminhos que conduzem a universos maiores e que aqui apenas se insinuam por presenças que por vezes são minúsculos resíduos ou simplificações. É isso que fica liberto para o jogo das emoções.

Depois há os rostos, as pequenas coisas dos humanos, as suas casas e os seus sonhos. Tudo parece ao mesmo tempo pobre e rico, simples e complexo, banal e extraordinário, descuidado ou meticulosamente preenchido para que nada escape à intensidade de quem aqui vive e como vive.

São lugares estranhos que parecem fora dos circuitos habituais; aparentemente esquecidos ou residuais, imprecisos, flutuantes ou vagabundos.
Poder-se-ia pensar que são coisas à margem (talvez marginais, também), inseguros por causa dos ataques do mar ou da sensação que ali se acolhem outras ameaças…, mas logo que nos deixamos conduzir pelos rostos das pessoas - esperançosos, alegres ou alheados, como nós -, pela minúcia dos espaços e das coisas domésticas, pela densidade de marcas pessoais, de memórias, de contínuo cuidado pela fragilidade de tudo, paredes, tectos, fios, electrodomésticos…, disso tudo só nos fica a sensação da falta de bens materiais preenchida por tudo aquilo que possa ocupar algum vazio por onde haja o risco de qualquer coisa se desmoronar e, num vórtice, tragar tudo.

Por isso há pedregulhos a defender as ruas de terra batida, tal como há vasos de plantas, bonecos, cores, quadros, recordações, objectos, azulejos…, toda uma saturação de coisas, acontecimentos, memórias, presenças que tenham o poder de afastar esse horror ao desaparecimento.


1 Etienne Gröer (1946), Plano de Urbanização do Concelho de Almada: análise e programa. Relatório., 1946 In Anais de Almada, 7-8 (2004-2005), pp. 151-236.

2 José António Cerejo (2002), Uma Relíquia Chamada Cova do Vapor, PÚBLICO, 28/04/2002.

3 Ignaci Solà-Morales (1995), “Terrain Vagues”, in Anyplace, Anyone Corporation, The MIT Press, N York, pp.118-123. Disponível em https://paisarquia.files.wordpress.com/2011/03/solc3a1-morales_i_terrain-vague.pdf.

 

BICYCLES IN CHINA

 

BICYCLES IN CHINA 

by Xiaomeng Zhao

Xiaomeng Zhao 赵小萌(b. Beijing,China, 1987) is a photographer based in between Beijing, China and Toronto, Canada. At the moment he is working on various topics that reflect the current massive societal changes in modern China.

 

ARTIST'S STATEMENT

China was once known as the "Kingdom of Bicycles." For decades, bicycles were used as the principal mode of transportation and were an essential part of Chinese lifestyle. The bicycle was both a cultural symbol and a shared memory for many generations.

Since the new millennium, car culture has broken into China quickly and decisively. People who live in metropolitan cities, like Beijing, have grown accustomed to the convenience and comfort of a car and eagerly keep up with the latest models. Lost in the auto boom has been the humble, dependable

bicycle. The once iconic mode of transit has been severely marginalized in the modern city. Mainstream Chinese society has lost interest in the bicycle as a way of getting around in favor of the more glamorous automobiles. Rather than a universal cultural symbol, cycling has been reduced to a sign of the socially vulnerable groups in China.

I began to wonder where all these bicycles are now. So, I set off in search of them, to discover where some of the once proud bicycles had ended up. Not surprisingly, many are dilapidated and rusty, having entirely lost their use. But some have managed to live on (a few in rather unique ways) as my series shows.

When I had the chance, I would ask the owners of some old bicycles how they felt about their fallen vehicles. Why did they hang on to these pitiful things? "Maybe one day I'll make use of it," they often replied. We all know that will never happen. But their answer reminded me of an old Beijing saying, "a dog's life is better than no life." The quote speaks for both the bicycles and their owners.

Bicycles are the witnesses and victims of a major societal transition in China. The present fate of these objects is a reflection of how the Chinese, as individuals, are coping with the seismic shifts that their lives, and their country, is undergoing every day.

 

INTERVIEW: PAULO CATRICA

 

ENTREVISTA: PAULO CATRICA

Estas entrevistas oferecem-nos um espaço de exploração e reflexão sobre o nosso tempo e sobre o mundo da arquitetura e da fotografia, vista como documento ou como arte. Constituem uma série única, com a presença de treze autores que concordaram falar sobre si mesmos e sobre o seu trabalho partilhando as suas ideias e experiências.

Paulo Catrica (nascido em 1965, Lisboa; com morada em Lisboa) estudou Fotografia (Ar.Co., Lisboa, 1985) e História (Universidade Lusíada, 1992). Fez um mestrado em Imagem e Comunicação no Departamento de Fotografia do Goldsmith's College e um Doutoramento em Estudos Audiovisuais na Escola de Arte e Mídia (University of Westminster), onde desenvolveu pesquisa no programa New Towns / UK 1946-1970s. Expôs no Centro Português de Fotografia, na Finnish Photography Triennal e na Fundação Calouste Gulbenkian em Londres, entre outros locais. Publicou o seu trabalho em livros e revistas nacionais e internacionais, participou em diversas exposições individuais e coletivas, e colaborou diversas vezes com Scopio editions: foi autor convidado na secção 'Projetos' da SCOPIO MAGAZINE above ground: city; foi palestrante no congresso SOBRE A SUPERFÍCIE : Espaço público e imagens arquitectónicas; foi orador convidado para a segunda sessão do Ciclo de Conferências CFM + DTW, com "A realização de fotografias urbanas e arquitectónicas, Fotografias do século XIX e os discursos de arquitectura e urbanismo".

O trabalho de Paulo Catrica em paisagens urbanas e arquitetura é uma síntese original que oferece uma perspectiva nova e perspicaz das realidades passadas e  recentes da cidade híbrida. As diversas séries que publicou em 1 2/3 SCOPIO MAGAZINE above ground: city mostram claramente como Paulo Catrica está focado no tema do espaço público e da vida na cidade, entendendo criticamente o mundo multifacetado que existe nas cidades. Está claro o seu entendimento perspicaz dos espaços arquitetônicos e dos seus usos ao longo do tempo. Catrica tem um grande interesse em história, e o seu trabalho sobre paisagem urbana e arquitetura têm uma vertente pós-modernista muito própria.

Este Clip foi editado a partir da entrevista original. 2018
 

Mais informações em http://nasuperficie.ccre-online.com e nas publicações Scopio Editons

 

Coordenação

Pedro Leão Neto  (CCRE - CEAU – FAUP / scopio Editions)

Entrevistador: Sandra Teixeira 

Video e Edição da entrevista original: Sandra Teixeira

Clip da Entrevista e Edição online para scopio Network: Sandra Teixeira (scopio Editions)

 

INTERVIEW: MARIELA APOLLONIO

 

ENTREVISTA: MARIELA APOLLONIO

Entrevista realizadas durante a 4ª EDIÇÃO da CONFERÊNCIA INTERNACIONAL NA SUPERFÍCIE - FAUP | Setembro de 2016

Outros autores entrevistados: Anna Fox | Karen Knorr  | Marco Iuliano | Paolo Rosselli  | Mariela Apollonio | Pedro Bandeira | Ângela Ferreira | Carlos Lobo | José Pedro Cortes | Lara Jacinto | Mariela Apollonio | Olívia da Silva | Walter Costa

Estas entrevistas oferecem-nos um espaço de exploração e reflexão sobre o nosso tempo e sobre o mundo da arquitetura e da fotografia, vista como documento ou como arte. Constituem uma série única, com a presença de treze autores que concordaram falar sobre si mesmos e sobre o seu trabalho partilhando as suas ideias e experiências.

ler entrevistas em Inglês (read in english)

 

Elena Morón é arquiteta e Professora Assitente na Universidade de Sevilha. Participou como oradora em vários congressos e conferências internacionais. O seu trabalho foi reconhecido com os prêmios mais destacados e, a maioria deles, foram publicados em prestigiadas revistas profissionais. É uma das principais investigadoras do projeto " Tiempo y color. Formación y cambio de los paisajes cromáticos" (2003-2006); "CO3. Hacia una nueva relación entre arquitectura y color" (2009-2012) e "Imagénes del passado, historia del futuro "(2005-2007). Os seus livros recentes são K:emptnisse, Kehrer Verlag (2015) – vencedor do German Photobook Award (2016); A_ Chroma (2012) – selecionado o melhor livro de ano PhotoEspaña 2013; Sintagmas cromáticos (2012), Tras el muro blanco (2010). Exibiu o seu trabalho em exposições individuais no WarmUp Space, Guangzhou, 201; Galeria Fitzrovia, 2015; Fundação Valentín Madaraga, 2015; Copenhaga, 2013 (Photofestival); Paris, 2012 (Colegio de España); Sevilla, 2012 (Galería Cavenem); e em exposições coletivas no Instituto Cervantes, Dublin, 2015; Asab One, Milano, 2014; Kolga Tbilisi Photo, 2014; UNED, "5 años de fotografía contemporánea andaluza ", Madrid, 2014; Museo Nacional Reina Sofía, "Libros que son fotos", Madrid, 2014; Madrid, Amsterdão, Nova Iorque, Miami, Florença, Buenos Aires, Prémio Picglaze, 2013-2014; Sony World Award, Londres, 2013; Unseen Photo Air, Amesterdão, 2012; entre outras.

Este Clip foi editado a partir da entrevista original realizada durante a 4ª EDIÇÃO DA CONFERÊNCIA INTERNACIONAL NA SUPERFÍCIE: FOTOGRAFIA E ARQUITETURA, ATRAVESSANDO FRONTEIRAS E DESLOCANDO LIMITES. FAUP. Setembro de 2016
 

Mais informações sobre a conferência aqui: http://nasuperficie.ccre-online.com e nas publicações Scopio Editons e catálogo Na superfície: Espaço público e imagens arquitetônicas em Debate   

 

Coordenação

Pedro Leão Neto  (CCRE - CEAU – FAUP / scopio Editions)

Entrevistador: Camilo Rebelo  

Video e Edição da entrevista original: ESMAD/P.Porto

Clip da Entrevista e Edição online para scopio Network: Jiôn Kiim (scopio Editions) e Sandra Teixeira (scopio Editions)

 

ENTREVISTA: JOSÉ PEDRO CORTES

 

ENTREVISTA: JOSÉ PEDRO CORTES

Entrevista realizadas durante a 4ª EDIÇÃO da CONFERÊNCIA INTERNACIONAL NA SUPERFÍCIE - FAUP | Setembro de 2016

Outros autores entrevistados: Anna Fox | Karen Knorr  | Marco Iuliano | Paolo Rosselli  | Mariela Apollonio | Pedro Bandeira | Ângela Ferreira | Carlos Lobo | José Pedro Cortes | Lara Jacinto | Mariela Apollonio | Olívia da Silva | Walter Costa

Estas entrevistas oferecem-nos um espaço de exploração e reflexão sobre o nosso tempo e sobre o mundo da arquitetura e da fotografia, vista como documento ou como arte. Constituem uma série única, com a presença de treze autores que concordaram falar sobre si mesmos e sobre o seu trabalho partilhando as suas ideias e experiências.

ler entrevista em Inglês

 

José Pedro Cortes (1976) Porto, Portugal. Estudou no Instituto de Arte e Design de Kent (Master of Arts in Photography) no Reino Unido. Em 2015, após 3 anos a viver em Londres, regressou a Lisboa e fez parte do Programa Gulbenkian de Criatividade e Criação Artística em Fotografia (Lisboa). Nesse mesmo ano realizou as suas primeiras exposições individuais no Centro Português de Fotografia e na Galeria Silo no Porto. Cortes foi seleccionado para as Apresentações dos Artistas Emergentes da Photo London e, em 2006, participou na exposição curricular Novos Fotógrafos 2007 da Getty Images. Outras exposições individuais incluem o Museu da Imagem (Braga, 2006), Módulo - Centro Difusor de Arte (Lisboa, 2008, 2010), White Space Gallery (Londres, 2006), CAV - Centro de Artes Visuais (Coimbra, 2013), Robert Morat Galerie (Berlim, 2015). Em 2015, como parte da exposição EDIT: Sequence / Meaning, o seu trabalho foi exibido no CGAC - Centro Galego de Arte Contemporânea, em Santiago de Compostela.

Este Clip foi editado a partir da entrevista original realizada durante a 4ª EDIÇÃO DA CONFERÊNCIA INTERNACIONAL NA SUPERFÍCIE: FOTOGRAFIA E ARQUITETURA, ATRAVESSANDO FRONTEIRAS E DESLOCANDO LIMITES. FAUP. Setembro de 2016
 

Mais informações sobre a conferência aqui: http://nasuperficie.ccre-online.com e nas publicações Scopio Editons e catálogo Na superfície: Espaço público e imagens arquitetônicas em Debate   

 

Coordenação

Pedro Leão Neto  (CCRE - CEAU – FAUP / scopio Editions)

Entrevistador: Camilo Rebelo e Gabriela Vaz-Pinheiro

Video e Edição da entrevista original: ESMAD/P.Porto

Clip da Entrevista e Edição online para scopio Network: Jiôn Kiim (scopio Editions) e Sandra Teixeira (scopio Editions)

 

INTERVIEW: PAOLO ROSSELLI

 

INTERVIEW: PAOLO ROSSELLI

Interviews conducted during the 4TH EDITION INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON THE SURFACE: PHOTOGRAPHY AND ARCHITECTURE, CROSSING BORDERS SHIFTING BOUNDARIES. FAUP. September 2016

Other interviewed authors: Anna Fox | Karen Knorr  | Marco Iuliano | Paolo Rosselli  | Philipp Schaerer | Pedro Bandeira | Ângela Ferreira | Carlos Lobo | José Pedro Cortes | Lara Jacinto | Mariela Apollonio | Olívia da Silva | Walter Costa

The interviews offer us a space for exploration and reflection about our time and the world of architecture and photography as document or art, and they constitute an exceptional and rich account of thirteen authors and their experiences and ideas. These authors have agreed to talk about themselves and their work.

read interview in Portuguese

 

Paolo Rosselli is one of the leading exponents of landscape photography in Italy since the early 1980s. His approach to architecture through photography brings a humanized and quotidian side normally not so deeply developed by the traditional approach to Architecture Photography. His photographic work and inquires cover architecture from the past towards contemporary architecture: from the Renaissance architecture in Italy towards masters of modern architecture as Giuseppe Terragni. Beside this activity he has pursued specific researches on contemporary urban landscape and on the interiors of the home, seen as a place where people leave traces of their living. He was invited to the Venice Biennial in three editions: in 1993 he exhibited groups of works on signs and messages found in the cities; in 2004 he showed an exploration on the interior of the home; lastly, in 2006, he showed a group of images of contemporary cities as Mexico, Shanghai, L.A., Istanbul, London. Recently, with the book Sandwich digital and Scena Mobile published in 2009 and In all, he is the author of around twenty books. Paolo Rosselli was a teacher of photography at the Milan Polytechnic for a brief period. He lives and works in Milano. His work offers us a richer and more profound understanding of architecture and space, by means of a vantage point and artistic strategy that results in critical images that allow a new perspective on architecture and the city.   

At the round table session moderated by Inaki Bergera, Paolo Rosselli conference “Photography Keeps an Eye on the Photographer”, probes photography and architecture worlds. The author begins by explaining how architecture is the main territory of photography and how it is linked with memory and the past, referring Atget and the importance of the City as a live theatre for photography. Issues of identity and heritage are explored when talking about the city he lives in, which is Milano, and bringing to the discussion its architecture, more specifically Bramante. The topic of perception is discussed and Paolo refers that when we think of it as the main subject of photography it may become very intricate knowing how it is both linked to subjective and material world. Referring to early renaissance art, Piero della Francesca´s Flagellation in Urbino, the author deconstruct perspective, calling our attention for the need to take some liberties in relation to this pre-conceived grid of representation if we are to use photography as an instrument to explore and understand the realities of this world more deeply. Paolo finishes his conference by putting forward the idea that in photography and other artistic expressions the best things and images produced are  the ones that are capable of reconstructing or subverting in some way the “(…) contract between its author and the real world (…)” that normally governs every form of artistic expression. 

This interview reveals the interest of Paolo Rosselli for understanding in more depth architecture photography and the role of publications in the contemporary discourse within the universe of photography and architecture. The author emphasizes the significance of publishing on paper, referring that when that happens the author is making a statement. In fact, to publish in paper involves a lot of work and requires time to think and take decisions, which is different from publishing digitally in Internet. 

 

This interview Clip was edited from the original interview conducted during the 4TH EDITION INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON THE SURFACE: PHOTOGRAPHY AND ARCHITECTURE, CROSSING BORDERS SHIFTING BOUNDARIES FAUP September 2016 

More info about the conference here: http://nasuperficie.ccre-online.com and in Scopio Editonspublications see also Sobre a superfície: Espaço público e imagens arquitetônicas em Debate  

 

Coordination 

Pedro Leão Neto  (CCRE - CEAU – FAUP / scopio Editions)

Interviewer: Inaki Bergera

Video and Editing of original interview: ESMAD/P.Porto

Interview clip and online Edition in scopio Network: Jiôn Kiim (scopio Editions) Sandra Teixeira (scopio Editions)

 

INTERVIEW: KAREN KNORR

 

INTERVIEW: KAREN KNORR

Interviews conducted during the 4TH EDITION INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON THE SURFACE: PHOTOGRAPHY AND ARCHITECTURE, CROSSING BORDERS SHIFTING BOUNDARIES. FAUP. September 2016

Other interviewed authors: 

Anna Fox | Karen Knorr| Marco Iuliano | Paolo Rosselli  | Philipp Schaerer | Pedro Bandeira | Ângela Ferreira | Carlos Lobo | José Pedro Cortes | Lara Jacinto | Mariela Apollonio | Olívia da Silva | Walter Costa

The interviews offer us a space for exploration and reflection about our time and the world of architecture and photography as document or art, and they constitute an exceptional and rich account of thirteen authors and their experiences and ideas. These authors have agreed to talk about themselves and their work.

read interview in Portuguese

Karen Knorr (b. Frankfurt am Main, Germany, 1954) explored themes that ranged from investigating the aspirations and lifestyles of a privileged minority living in one of the most affluent parts of London, Belgravia, 1979-1981, to work in India India Song, (2008-15) and work in Japan Monogatari ( 2012- 2015) work that highlighted the role of animals and their representations within art and architecture. Her photography developed a critical and playful dialogue with documentary photography using different visual and textual strategies to explore her chosen subject matter - these range from the family and lifestyle to the animal and its representation in the museum context. Knorr’s work has been exhibited worldwide and is held in both private and public collections. including Tate, London and Georges Pompidou, Paris. Her work has been published in several monographs including Punks, 2013, India Song 2014 and Belgravia. She is working on a new book with Stanley Barker on her black and white series Gentlemen due out this November in time for Paris Photo 2016. 2015 . She is a Professor of Photography at the University for Creative Arts in Farnham, Surrey. 

At her session "The Poetics of Space/ Transcultural Migrations", Karen Knorr delievers a talk on her photographic career and recent projects using architectural space as a setting with a focus on hybridity and syncretism. Focusing on her analogue work image and text series Belgravia (1979-1981) and Gentlemen (1981-1983) recent digital photographic series India Song( 2008- 2015) . Karen Knorr explores notions history and memory in her work highlighting the importance of site, space and architecture. This interview offers us what kind of idea she has about the conceptual documentary photography and its research.

This interview Clip was edited from the original interview conducted during the 4TH EDITION INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON THE SURFACE: PHOTOGRAPHY AND ARCHITECTURE, CROSSING BORDERS SHIFTING BOUNDARIES FAUP September 2016 

More info about the conference here: http://nasuperficie.ccre-online.com and in Scopio Editons publications see also Sobre a superfície: Espaço público e imagens arquitetônicas em Debate  

Coordination 

Pedro Leão Neto  (CCRE - CEAU – FAUP / scopio Editions)

Interviewer: Olivia Da Silva

Video and Editing of original interview: ESMAD/P.Porto

Interview clip and online Edition in scopio Network: Jiôn Kiim (scopio Editions) Sandra Teixeira (scopio Editions)

 

INTERVIEW: ANNA FOX

 

INTERVIEW: ANNA FOX

Interviews conducted during the 4TH EDITION INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON THE SURFACE - FAUP | September 2016

PHOTOGRAPHY AND ARCHITECTURE, CROSSING BORDERS SHIFTING BOUNDARIES

Other interviewed authors: 

Anna Fox | Karen Knorr  | Marco Iuliano | Paolo Rosselli  | Philipp Schaerer | Pedro Bandeira | Ângela Ferreira | Carlos Lobo | José Pedro Cortes | Lara Jacinto | Mariela Apollonio | Olívia da Silva | Walter Costa

The interviews offer us a space for exploration and reflection about our time and the world of architecture and photography as document or art, and they constitute an exceptional and rich account of thirteen authors and their experiences and ideas. These authors have agreed to talk about themselves and their work.

read interview in Portuguese

Anna Fox(b. 1961, Alton, UK) is a photographer with several published monographs. Fox’s fascinating study of the bizarre as well as the ordinariness of British life resulted in a combination of social observation with highly personal diary projects. Fox is a professor of Photography at University for the Creative Arts in Farnham. 

This interview allows us to understand better how she thinks about the relation and influences between the end results of an artistic photographic project and the research process, as well as the diverse artistic strategies and directions that one can take. 

Fox talks about her historical and technical research related to her recent Project, Resort 1 and 2, (2009 - 2011), which captured the holiday culture at Butlin’s, a popular chain of holiday camps in the United Kingdom that was founded to provide affordable holidays for ordinary British families. Her highly saturated colour palette emphasizes the theatricality of the Butlin’s environment. She says that research is a fundamental part in her project.

This interview Clip was edited from the original interview conducted during the 4TH EDITION INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON THE SURFACE: PHOTOGRAPHY AND ARCHITECTURE, CROSSING BORDERS SHIFTING BOUNDARIES FAUP September 2016 

More info about the conference here: http://nasuperficie.ccre-online.com and in Scopio Editonspublications see also Sobre a superfície: Espaço público e imagens arquitetônicas em Debate  

 

Coordination 

Pedro Leão Neto  (CCRE - CEAU – FAUP / scopio Editions)

Interviewer: Olivia Da Silva

Video and Editing of original interview: ESMAD/P.Porto

Interview clip and online Edition in scopio Network: Jiôn Kiim (scopio Editions) Sandra Teixeira (scopio Editions)

 

INTERVIEW: MARCO LULIANO

 

INTERVIEW: MARCO IULIANO

Interviews conducted during the 4TH EDITION INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON THE SURFACE: PHOTOGRAPHY AND ARCHITECTURE, CROSSING BORDERS SHIFTING BOUNDARIES. FAUP. September 2016

Other interviewed authors: Anna Fox | Karen Knorr  | Marco Iuliano | Paolo Rosselli  | Philipp Schaerer | Pedro Bandeira | Ângela Ferreira | Carlos Lobo | José Pedro Cortes | Lara Jacinto | Mariela Apollonio | Olívia da Silva | Walter Costa

The interviews offer us a space for exploration and reflection about our time and the world of architecture and photography as document or art, and they constitute an exceptional and rich account of thirteen authors and their experiences and ideas. These authors have agreed to talk about themselves and their work.

read interview in Portuguese

 

Marco Iuliano has a PhD in History and Theory of Architecture and is Research Director of the Centre for Architecture and the Visual Arts (CAVA) and Associate Professor at the Liverpool School of Architecture. He has published extensively on cartography, architectural photography, modern and contemporary architecture. He organised with the Royal Institute of British Architects The Colin Rowe Lecture Series on the architectural image (2016-17). 

At the Session, ´Intention/Image/Interpretation`, Marco Iuliano explores the concept of interpretation and its importance and the several stages that it may entail and how it influences our perception about the real and the images. Iuliano forwards some important questions as if the interpretation of the image is always taken into consideration at the initial stage of its conception. And if so, how? These provocative questions were the centre of the discussion in the round-table where research, academia and architectural photography were represented by different authors. 

In this interview, Marco Iuliano allows us to understand his thought about the importance of architectural photography as a significant tool for the architects education.

 

This interview Clip was edited from the original interview conducted during the 4TH EDITION INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON THE SURFACE: PHOTOGRAPHY AND ARCHITECTURE, CROSSING BORDERS SHIFTING BOUNDARIES FAUP September 2016 

More info about the conference here: http://nasuperficie.ccre-online.com and in Scopio Editonspublications see also Sobre a superfície: Espaço público e imagens arquitetônicas em Debate  

 

Coordination 

Pedro Leão Neto  (CCRE - CEAU – FAUP / scopio Editions)

Interviewer: Iñaki Bergera

Video and Editing of original interview: ESMAD/P.Porto

Interview clip and online Edition in scopio Network: Jiôn Kiim (scopio Editions) Sandra Teixeira (scopio Editions)

 

ENTREVISTA: PHILIPP SCHAERER

 

ENTREVISTA: PHILIPP SCHAERER

Entrevista realizadas durante a 4ª EDIÇÃO da CONFERÊNCIA INTERNACIONAL NA SUPERFÍCIE - FAUP | Setembro de 2016

FOTOGRAFIA E ARQUITETURA, ATRAVESSANDO FRONTEIRAS E DESLOCANDO LIMITES 

Outros autores entrevistados: Anna Fox | Karen Knorr  | Marco Iuliano | Paolo Rosselli  | Philipp Schaerer | Pedro Bandeira | Ângela Ferreira | Carlos Lobo | José Pedro Cortes | Lara Jacinto | Mariela Apollonio | Olívia da Silva | Walter Costa

Estas entrevistas oferecem-nos um espaço de exploração e reflexão sobre o nosso tempo e sobre o mundo da arquitetura e da fotografia, vista como documento ou como arte. Constituem uma série única, com a presença de treze autores que concordaram falar sobre si mesmos e sobre o seu trabalho partilhando as suas ideias e experiências.

ler entrevistas em Inglês

 

Philipp Schaerer (1972) vive e trabalha em Zurique e Steffisburg (Suíça). É artista visual, arquiteto e gerente de conhecimento da Herzog & de Meuron (2000-2006). Leccionou no curso de pós-graduação do CAAD liderado pelo Prof. Ludger Hovestadt no Instituto Federal Suíço de Tecnologia de Zurique (ETHZ ). Desde 2010, Philipp Schaerer tem ensinado em várias universidades suíças e o seu trabalho foi publicado e exibido repetidamente, estando representado em várias coleções públicas e privadas. Estas incluem, entre outras, a coleção do ZKM | Centro de Arte e Tecnologia de Mídia em Karlsruhe, Museu de Arte Moderna MOMA em Nova York, Centro Canadense de Arquitetura em Montreal e Fotomuseum em Winterthur.
 

Nesta entrevista, Philipp Schaerer fala, entre outras questões, sobre a importância de um evento como o On the Surface para uma melhor compreensão das relações existentes entre arquitetura, arte e imagem, mais especificamente da imagem fotográfica, bem como do valor que tem um projeto editorial como a scopio Editions. Podemos ouvir a opinião de Schaerer sobre as transformações que estão a decorrer com o universo digital em relação à criação de imagens, sendo uma dessas transformações a mudança de nossa compreensão sobre as representações abstratas ligadas a um ideal e as representações fotográficas vinculadas a um propósito de documentação / evidência. Esta entrevista permite-nos compreender melhor que estratégias podem ser tomadas em relação às novas possibilidades criadas pelo digital, fazendo-nos repensar sobre a questão da verdade nas imagens digitais, que podem representar fotograficamente espaços que ainda não foram construídos. 

Este Clip foi editado a partir da entrevista original realizada durante a 4ª EDIÇÃO DA CONFERÊNCIA INTERNACIONAL NA SUPERFÍCIE: FOTOGRAFIA E ARQUITETURA, ATRAVESSANDO FRONTEIRAS E DESLOCANDO LIMITES. FAUP. Setembro de 2016
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Mais informações sobre a conferência aqui: http://nasuperficie.ccre-online.com e nas publicações Scopio Editons e catálogo Na superfície: Espaço público e imagens arquitetônicas em Debate   

Coordenação

Pedro Leão Neto  (CCRE - CEAU – FAUP / scopio Editions)

Entrevistador: Camilo Rebelo  

Video e Edição da entrevista original: ESMAD/P.Porto

Clip da Entrevista e Edição online para scopio Network: Jiôn Kiim (scopio Editions) e Sandra Teixeira (scopio Editions)

 

INTERVIEW: ÂNGELA FERREIRA

 

INTERVIEW: ÂNGELA FERREIRA

INTERVIEW CONDUCTED DURING THE 4TH EDITION INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON THE SURFACE - FAUP | SEPTEMBER 2016

Other interviewed authors: Anna Fox | Karen Knorr  | Marco Iuliano | Paolo Rosselli  | Mariela Apollonio |Pedro Bandeira | Ângela Ferreira | Carlos Lobo | José Pedro Cortes | Lara Jacinto | Mariela Apollonio | Olívia da Silva | Walter Costa

The interviews offer us a space for exploration and reflection about our time and the world of architecture and photography as document or art, and they constitute an exceptional and rich account of thirteen authors and their experiences and ideas. These authors have agreed to talk about themselves and their work.

READ INTERVIEW IN PORTUGUESE

Ângela Mendes Ferreira, pseudonym "ANGELA BERLINDE" was born in Porto in 1975, and studied at the Utrecht School of Arts, Amsterdam. He began exhibiting in 1998 and since then has exhibited numerous solo exhibitions in Europe, Brazil. She lives in Porto. She recently saw her work as the Photographer of the Year for the Emotions category of the BBC and was the winner of Argentina's international contest of Photography "Water and Youth". Ângela Berlinde has her work represented in the galleries Mário Sequeira in Braga; Museum of Image and Sound of Fortaleza; Museum of Contemporary Art of Dragon of the Sea, both in Brazil; Photographic Museum of Amsterdam in The Netherlands. She was director of the International Photography Festival Encontros da Imagem, in Braga. He teaches at IPP, often lectures and workshops.


This interview Clip was edited from the original interview conducted during the 4TH EDITION INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON THE SURFACE: PHOTOGRAPHY AND ARCHITECTURE, CROSSING BORDERS SHIFTING BOUNDARIES FAUP September 2016 

More info about the conference here: http://nasuperficie.ccre-online.com and in Scopio Editons publications see also Sobre a superfície: Espaço público e imagens arquitetônicas em Debate  


Coordination 

Pedro Leão Neto  (CCRE - CEAU – FAUP / scopio Editions)

Interviewer: Camilo Rebelo  

Video and Editing of original interview: ESMAD/P.Porto

Interview clip and online Edition in scopio Network: Jiôn Kiim (scopio Editions) Sandra Teixeira (scopio Editions)

 

LECTURER, MASTER OF DESIGN (M.DES) IN PHOTOGRAPHY AT GLASGOW SCHOOL OF ART

 

INTERVIEW WITH DANIELE SAMBO: LECTURER, MASTER OF DESIGN (M.DES) IN PHOTOGRAPHY AT GLASGOW SCHOOL OF ART

BY INÊS MOREIRA AND PEDRO LEÃO NETO

IM_PLN: Please tell us about your academic and cultural education, where did you study photography, who influenced you the most?

DS: I was born and I grew up in Venice, where I got my BSc in Urban and Landscape planning, which I think helped me to have an idea of the complexity of the dynamics, which characterize the world we live in: a world where many languages are spoken, even within people which think there are speaking the same one. I believe there is an interesting connection between the role of the Urbanist, the planner, and the one of the artist. I like to think that our role as artists is the one of the ‘translators’, being able to process and communicate in various different ‘languages’, re-represent information in a variety of ways, showing new perspectives and possibilities, providing platforms for reflection, dialogue and inclusion. The core of my final thesis in Venice was a photographic project on the history of cinema theatres and after I graduated, for a couple of years, I decided to form professionally as a photographer, working as an assistant and teaching assistant at the IUAV university of Venice. Soon after I got involved in an incredible adventure called Sismycity. Sismycity has been a year long project on the aftermath of the earthquake which hit the city of L’Aquila, not far from Rome, in 2009. This work became a collateral event of the Venice Biennale in 2010 and has been an incredible learning platform, which pushed me to start applying to AIR and to apply for a master in photography at the Glasgow School of Art. My formation as a photographer was very formal, documentary and architectural, working with Fulvio Orsenigo and Alessandra Chemollo, but during my master I explored the potential of interaction with the spaces to create my own language. Andy Stark has been a very important person in this process.

IM_PLN: We are interested on teaching profiles, so, can you tell us how did it start? What directed you towards a teaching career?

DS: I got my first teaching experience as an assistant in Venice several years ago, where I discovered that I really enjoyed working with the students, but it wasn’t until last year, spring 2013, that I effectively started teaching. Last month the first group of students I worked with for the full length of the master, graduated. Now in few weeks times I will meet a new group of master students and another year will start.

IM_PLN:Thinking of Glasgow School of Art, could you describe the photography program being taught there? Can you discuss the challenges and your role as a teacher of photography?

DS: The M.DES. in photography at the Glasgow School of Art asks the students to arrive with a proposal, which is discussed during the course of the year (or the two years) through a series of weekly tutorials where the students are guided, suggestions are given, ideas discussed, work in progress reviewed, etc. The students are coming from a variety of backgrounds and countries all over the world. It is our role as educators to support the creative process, suggesting but not revealing everything, stopping early enough so the students are able to discover things making them their own. This is probably the part I find most challenging: the process of appropriation and metabolization of knowledge for the construction of their own voice and their visual language.


IM_PLN: Since you divide your time between the teaching and your professional artistic work, how do you manage these different paths and related points of view?

DS: My personal research feeds into the teaching, also, the relationship with the students is always very direct and open.  Sometimes we discuss books or documentaries or radio programs, share exhibition and other events to go and see. I think is very important for them to explore outside the boundaries of the art school world while they are still studying for their master. It is easy to get absorbed inside the bubble of the art school world and this can limit the amount of critical thinking and diversity of the influences in their work.

IM_PLN: What about your professional and artistic paths, and photographic research? Tell us about your main interests and what projects you have worked on in recent years. What are you working on now at the moment?

DS: I am about to start another residency, just before the beginning of the academic year. I will be in Cardiff, where I will spend 6 weeks as part of Cardiff Contemporaries. I am preparing a show in Glasgow and I am working on a book about Sown, an ongoing work that is now into its 3rd year of life. I am also putting together a series of small books/photozines, which are helping me to reflect on a series of works developed in past year.

IM_PLN: What are your inspirations in terms of books and photographers that influence you the most? Can you  recommend a book to our readers?

DS: When I started was incredibly inspired by the works of Hiroshi Sugimoto, especially by the Theatres series where the light projection of a movie in a cinema theatre literally shapes the space around and makes it what it is. I was also fascinated by the geometrical perfection of the works of Bert and Hila Becker and by the work of their students from the Dusseldorf school of photography, in particular the work of Candida Hofer in the libraries. I was very inspired by Joel Sternfeld, especially in the occasions where his work impacted the world around him, like in the case of the High Line in New York, where the exhibition of the photographs he took ‘walking on the highline’ became the catalyst for the requalification of the old railway system into a suspended park. In terms of works which are less photographic and more about temporary interventions I will mention the most important for me, which is Chirsto’s Running Fence, I was amazed when I watched the documentary by Albert Maysles (Running Fence, Fandor, 1978). Something more recent which inspired me a lot, and it’s funny because he is my age, it’s JR, there is an awesome TED talk online about his work women are heroes, pasting huge pictures in different cities around the world. In terms of books I recently bumped into an awesome book by Adam Broomberg & Oliver Chanarin called Fig. It is probably my favorite book just now.

IM_PLN: Can you refer an emerging photographer that recently interested you? Why?

DS: By working with emerging photographers and by being one myself is very difficult to make a list. Just out the top of my head: Max Pincker, we met a couple of years ago in Brussels, and since then he is doing extremely well. His work plays with reality and fiction in a very fascinating way.

IM_PLN: You took part in many artist residences, can you give any particular advice for young photographers aspiring to circulate and take part in such circuits?

DS: Yes I can, just a very simple advice: do not hide your work. Let your work circulate and be discussed. Talking about it is the best way to move it forward. Asking questions, showing engagement. It will sound obvious but the most important thing about residencies is applying. Many times you will be last minute and decide not to go for it, well I believe that the last push makes the difference between your work being seen or not.

IM_PLN: With rapid and continuous technological change those who want to pursue a creative career must always be updated. In addition, the vast competition requires more skills to young people entering the labor market. What are the tips and suggestions you have for the younger generation?

DS: This question could be asked to an art or design student but also to a medicine student or a law student, which once had automatically a job just because they finished their studies. The technological changes always affected all the professions and being updated has always been key. Careers In the creative world, as far as I know, have always been more difficult in terms of the amount of energy and effort needed to get a job in the field or being recognized at the end of the studies. I can say that in my experience it’s a slow process and you are never arrived, as soon as you think you are at a stage in your life when you have enough experience and network, etc. you get out of fashion, stop getting exhibitions and opportunities, and have to start again from scratch. We have to be able to re-invent ourselves every time and work and live for the cause and thanks to this we get all the inspirations and inputs that establish a relation between us and the outside world.


IM_PLN: How do you think the internet and everything that is connected is affecting the production and sharing of projects and images?

DS: In my humble opinion this is overproduction of images shared on the internet had the effect of increasing the number of artist books for example, or different ways of looking, less fast and more reflective. It’s very hard to give an answer, which isn’t a forecast. I will say that maybe we are looking at something similar to what happened when painting felt challenged by the technological advancements of photography (Daguerre and friends), and had to re-invent itself. In a similar way I think the internet and the new-tech are after all offering an opportunity to us for re-inventing the photographic medium.

IM_PLN: And last, the reflection on the mirror, what’s your opinion about the Portuguese photography panorama? Do you find echoes in Glasgow?

DS: I don’t know enough about Portugal to answer this question properly, but I can tell you that there is something that connect Glasgow and Porto. Perhaps both being at the periphery of Europe or perhaps because both are postindustrial cities. In Glasgow there is an interesting relationship between the artscene and the making of the city (A social sculpture is a good book to get an idea). Many artists and collectives are making work insitu, using the numerous empty and abandoned spaces, warehouses, factories, etc. I was in Braga to see the photography festival and the most interesting work there I think were the ones which found an unconventional installation set up (eg. Hung in a street, in a container in the middle of a square, etc). It made me think of The Social, encountering photography, a small festival in Sunderland, where the exhibitions took place mostly in public spaces, in an attempt to construct a different relationship between the audience, the place they live in and the artworld.

 

INTERVIEW WITH KELLY MCERLEAN

 

INTERVIEW WITH KELLY MCERLEAN

Director of National Media College, Dublin

by Pedro Leão Neto

PN: Tell us about your background, where and when did you study photography, who were your teachers, who influenced you the most?

KM: My photography tutor was called John Hodgett from Bourneville College, Birmingham, UK. At 22yrs, I was working as a Software Engineer at a UK Ministry of Defence site. I decided to change career and study photography, then film production. I was always interested in films and thought that becoming a proficient photographer would be a goodway to start in that profession. Then I fell in love woth photography and work in both fields.

 

PN: What was your first teaching experience? What directed you towards a teaching career?

KM: I started teaching part-time photography at a school in Dublin in the 90's. The classes went well so I was promoted to full-time. I have always enjoyed teaching. It's very rewarding. 

 

PN: As this interview series focuses on photographers / artist /educators and their photography schools and teaching experience at your institution? Can you discuss the challenges and your role as a teacher of photography?

KM: It is challenging to unravel a students' pre-conceived opinions as to what photography is. There is a strong element of trust needed between the tutor and student. They must believe that you know what you are doing and that you know how much they can learn in each lesson. We ask students to 'engage' with the spirit of the course. We also ask them to focus on critical analysis and lateral thinking. The photographic skills will come with practice, but critical analysis and lateral thinking abilities take perseverance.

 

PN: You divide your time between the teaching, research and your professional and artistic work. How do you manage it? How is it possible to share these aspects of professional and artistic practice in teaching and with student careers?

KM: It is helpful to move between commercial and creative projects. Discussing commercial projects with students helps them to understand the reality of professional practice. Creative projects remind them why they wanted to study photography in the first place.

 

PN: What about your professional and artistic paths, and photographic research? Tell us about your main interests and what are you working on now? Any ideas for the future?

KM: I am working on 2 photobooks and a short film.The books are called 'New York is Purple' and 'Americana. ''New York is Purple' are images I shot in NY during the heatwave and impending financial meltdown of July 2011. Purple is the colour of change, it signifies importance, I had the same feeling about New York. People are tough but there is also a strong feeling of community. I can send you a rough draft if you would like to see it.

'Americana' is a series of images of San Francisco in 1999. The short film is called 'Singularitas.'

 

PN: What are your inspirations in terms of books and photographers that you have loved the most? Do you have a book or photographer that recently interested you?

KM: Tony Ray Jones. I saw his exhibition in Bradford recently. Also, I am reading the work of Georges Perec and I am interested in photographing what he described as the 'infra-ordinary.' 

 

PN: You took part in many exhibitions. Any particular advice for young photographers aspiring to display and exhibit their work without drowning in the ocean of images in which we daily swim?

KM: Always photograph with the 'intention to make a statement.'

 

PN: With rapid and continuous technological change those who want to pursue a creative career must always be updated. In addition, the vast competition requires more skills to young people entering the labor market. What are the tips and suggestions you have for the younger generation?

KM: Keep an eye on new technologies and their application in industry. Employers want new ideas, not old ones. 

 

PN: What’s your opinion about the Irish photography panorama? What about the International panorama?

KM:There is a major photofestival each year here in Dublin. As I was originally trained in the UK I gravitate towards UK photographic practice and style.

 

PN: Are the new technologies useful vehicles for the dissemination and the promotion of the photographers work?

KM: Yes definately. Students should read all the technology sites like TechCrunch to be aware of what new technologies are coming.

 

PN: What is the importance of online specialist magazines such as, for example, Lens Culture, Portfolio, Source, Aperture and the influence of these being a source of an amazing volume of work from around the globe.

KM: Very important. Critical analysis creates better work. Foam magazine is one of the best.

 

EMERGING PORTUGUESE PHOTOGRAPHER MIGUEL REFRESCO

 

EMERGING PORTUGUESE PHOTOGRAPHER MIGUEL REFRESCO

BY JIÔN KIIM

Miguel Refresco is one of the most emerging Portuguese photographers. Born in 1986 in Porto, Portugal, Miguel lives and works in Porto as a freelance photographer and photography teacher. He has a degree in Audiovisual Communication Technologies - specialization in Photography of ESMAE and Master in Contemporary Artistic Practices - FBAUP. He has developed documental works related to the issues of identity and territory that he has exhibited regularly since 2008. At the same time, he collaborates with “o Ballet Contemporâneo do Norte”, “Lovers and Lollypops” and “Capicua.” His work has been published in several publications: Vice Spain, Vice Portugal, Public, Observer, P3, Scopio Network, Terrafirma. He is a co-founder of the publishing house Álea. Lately, he's been participating in group exhibitions and opened his solo exhibition with his project "Promenade" from Balkan region in Espinho Auditorium and with a book presentation of "Menir" which is his 10 years of photography project in IPCI - Instituto de Produção Cultural e Imagem.

 

JK: Please tell us about your background.  Where and when did you study photography? What directed you towards a photographer?

MR: When I was a teenager, I wasn’t quite sure of what I wanted to study in college. I couldn’t decide if I wanted to enter a Law School or do other things like Audiovisual Communication. Eventually, I’ve decided to take a chance on a School of Media Arts and Design (IPP) and started to study Video, Sound and Photography. But it wasn’t before I went to Barcelona as an exchange student at Centre de la Imatge i la Tecnologia Multimèdia in Terrassa that I got interested in photography as I am today. Spending a lot of time alone, I had just enough time to develop new skills and techniques and I started focusing a lot on my final graduation project. But way before that, my parents got me a camera for my 9th birthday and I started taking a lot of pictures of my friends at school and during vacations. The camera still works!

 

JK: Who/what inspired or influenced you the most when you were studying?

MR: Looking back after all these years, I’ll have to say that it was probably the moment where I first presented my work at college to my classmates, without even knowing the shape of a photographic series nor authorial intent.So basically the thing that influenced me the most might have been my classmates and all the projects we’ve shared with each other. And, of course, my Erasmus period in Terrassa (a 40km-distant town from Barcelona) was also important. As I told you, because I spent a lot of time by myself, I had no other distractions besides my final project. Curiously, the University was quite more focused on technique rather than on the artistic approach of photography - nevertheless, I met two great Professors who taught me a lot, introducing a great deal of ideas that still influence my work today. Before this period, I was trying out a lot of techniques and styles more focused on the photojournalism aesthetics.

 

JK: Tell us more about your project as photographic research of that period.

MR: By that time, I was hoping to do my final Project in a specific neighborhood in Barcelona, called Carmel. A border region of Barcelona, with an astonishing view of the city where you could see traces of the Spanish Civil War (bunkers, guns, etc). It is hard to get to that specific place and there were lots of illegal occupation too: non-licensed construction and terrible conditions as well. My first attempt was trying to talk to its people, going inside their homes and tell them about the guidelines of my project. Obviously, with a combination of apathy and aggressiveness, my proposals were constantly rejected. Eventually, I started giving up on Carmel and my work became more spontaneous, less premeditated (I was just photographing without any defined or specific goal) – I’m sure that this episode still influences the way I work on my photography series: suddenly, the work shows up and you never know when it starts nor when it finishes. This gradual discovery of my working process – well, if we can even call it a process – turned it into a more spontaneous method: my camera as a constant presence of my day and photographing whatever comes along. During my stay at Terrassa, I spent most of my day time walking. Maybe strolling around is the correct way to put it since I didn’t have any destination whatsoever on my mind. All photographs that were part of “Untitled Ruptures” had this mark, of someone who was always passing by. However, it’s not a clear mark.

 

JK: Tell us about your last editorial project with your new Label.

MR: Álea is an editorial project created by Daniel Costa and myself in 2016 and it was born from our desire of publishing the work of several artists we admire and follow. “Menir” seemed like a viable option for the label's first publication since we both knew it quite well and it the project was already in an advanced stage. No image in "Menir" was specifically thought to be published in a book. They are pictures that, gradually, started dialogue with each other due to little experiments for some exhibitions. Some of them determine the structure of the work - a good example of it is the opening image of the book, "Oakland" or "Greenwich" . You feel something is growing out of it and it will be hard for it to fade away. The moment where you start thinking of those pictures as a book coincides with a "subtraction stage": this means, thinking about the amount of images and trying out to delete all the obvious connections between the pages and any other kind of narrative. I get the sense that if I try to draw a narrative, I'll shut the opportunity for others to pop in and, in this book, this would be something that I was really trying to avoid. The book includes photos taken between 2006 and 2016 in several different places - from Porto, to Galiza, Cataluña and Minho region of Portugal. Despite the diversity, I link it a lot to Barcelona.

 

JK: I couldn't find any text or statement in your book. Is there any specific reason or intension as an author?

MR: As a matter of fact, that’s quite an interesting question since we discussed it and thought of it for months. We gave up any text whatsoever because in all of our experiments we felt that with it the book was becoming something else; its aura of the unknown stone strolling around space would vanish. All information that we decided to include was the name of the author, title and date (in the dustjacket) - and even those can be removed at any time. This was something that we came round to after several tries, there was no initial intention, but rather a consequence of all failed experiments. All information we didn’t include in the book are at the label’s website: www.aleaeditora.pt.

 

JK: Tell us more about your main interests. Which project are you working on? Any ideas for the future?

MR: Currently, we’re working of the distribution of the book. Personally, I’ve been focused on a project called Intermittent Fasting. It all comes down to fast for a 16-hour period and it took me to the a new project organized in volumes in which I explore a place that I’ve been just for a short time. I came up with this after a work trip to Funchal where I stayed less than 24 hours. Actually, it looks the antithesis of Menir which is built from a 10-year-old work. Up until this moment, there are three volumes: I Funchal, II Vilamoura, III Cíclades, each one with very specific formal characteristics. Three objects with very distinctive guidelines with an intention in common: at some point, they should look as a travel guide - Volume I was thought to be published as a leaflet. I like the idea of working in the immediate, without having to be stuck at a story or a long-run project; thinking of the same relevancy and legitimacy of a two-day project as a 5/10-year-old one.

 

JK: For which reason, you've been in those places if you didn't have any idea of the project?

MR: As I told you before, I try to include photography in my daily life, therefore I didn’t go to any of those places specifically to photograph. I went there either for professional or personal reasons. Obviously I have choices to make in those places; I know that specific zone in Vilamoura ou Funchal will be more appealing for the kind of images I do, but it’s a spontaneous decision. For this specific project - Intermittent Fasting - the less I know the better.

 

JK: What are your inspirations in terms of books and photographers that influence you the most? Can you recommend some book to our readers?

MR: It’s always a hard task to tell you what influences me the most because it goes way beyond books or authors. I get a lot of inspiration from the daily life, in my case music and food - that walk side by side with each other since I cook while listening to music. But also walking and riding my car inspire me a lot. Regarding photography, I guess one of the last things I’ve read was a book that gathers interviews to several artists working on photobooks, it’s called “Photography Between Covers – interview with photobook makers”. During the 70s, Tom Dugan interviewed Larry Clark, Ralph Gibson, Robert Adams, Duane Michals, among others. Actually, I now remember that Volume III of Intermittent Fasting - Cyclades has the obvious influence of “Um Adeus aos Deuses” of Rúben A.

 

JK: Could you refer some emerging photographers who recently interested you? And why.

MR: This week, I came across the work of two authors that I hadn’t seen in a while: Alejandra Nuñez who documented the whole catalan punk-rock scene and Joana Castelo’s work on Vietnam.

 

JK: You took part in various exhibitions. Any particular advice for young photographers aspiring to display and exhibit their work without drowning in the ocean of images in which we daily swim?

MR: I have no advice to give, as a matter of fact. The idea of an ocean of images is beautiful, as long as you know how to swim in it. It is something that we need to learn how to deal with. Instagram might be that ocean: a young student today has a much more critic opinion on photography than what he could have had 20 years ago - at least because you have to choose one picture among many to publish. He spent that time deciding which elements of the image will make him choose it over others and I can either be talking about a random selfie or a self aware act of a photographer. I try to be optimistic.

 

JK: With rapid and continuous technological change those who want to pursue a creative career must always be updated. In addition, the vast competition requires more skills to young people entering the labor market. What are the tips and suggestions you have for the younger generation? Any particular advice for the young photographers?

MR: Technology is not mandatorily connected to the evolution of photography. I can’t see such an obvious correlation: some tools help, others don’t, it’s much more about the way you decide to work. Technology is a tool that can help you materialize your ideas.

 

JK: How do you think the internet and everything that is connected is affecting the production and sharing of projects and images?

MR: It’s quite a complex issue, but I guess it has more advantages than disadvantages. For promotion and sharing is great and it’s cheaper. All that involves democratization and free access to tools for creation and promotion sound great and, for this, internet has been remarkable. I like the idea of sharing and if it is easier to share I like it. In the other hand, in Instagram for example, you could easily have connection with your favorite artists.

 

JK: Do you have any opinion about us, scopio network?

MR: I think it’s a great platform because it works such a vast area as architecture and urbanism, divided into smaller and particular branches. It’s funny that you ask that, because a few weeks ago I was reading an author project at Scopio and, two and a half hour later, I was still reading articles on the website that had nothing to do with the original topic. It’s a diverse platform, not diffusing.

 

* "Traversed by a meridian where time passes stumbling and guideless,“Menir” stirs Iberian geography. It is a cycle of images that doesn’t renew itself (2009 to 2016), where Miguel’s photographic gesture is swift, and the quality of testimony is less of the realm of duration, actually belonging to that of the spirits who evade the insense, errant. We leave “Menir” as we do a long day of sleepless nights. From here on, the images will be different."

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