Screening at Voies Off at Cour de l’Archevêché in Arles.
Author: Bas Losekoot
Galerie Caroline O’ Breen – Artist Talk
Exhibition: Private life / Public space. May 20 – June 25, 2016
June 23, 5.30 pm: artists talk with introduction of philosopher Naomi Jacobs
Seelevel Gallery displays works by four different artist who are concerned with the movements and behavior of people in cities and crowded spaces.
The anonymity gained from living in crowded cities, enables us to watch each other without being noticed. While watching each other, we get a glimpse of the private lifes of people moving in the public space. Since its invention, the camera has often been used to preserve such voyeuristic acts. However, the street photographer always remains partly an outsider, he observes and records life on the streets but can never be an integral part of what he is observing. The participating artists of this exhibition attempt to capture movements and behavior of people in cities and in crowded spaces, they explore how the behavior of people is related to the city they are part of.
The introduction will be done by Naomi Jacobs. She is a junior philosophy lecturer at the Technical University of Eindhoven and works as a freelance publicist, discussion leader and producer. Jacobs wrote the essay Mixofobie and the city, a plea for public spaces where the strange is celebrated rather than feared. The search for the stranger in the city is a major theme in the work of the participating photographers: Tanja Engelberts, Maarten van Schaik, Sander Foederer en Bas Losekoot.
CNN Editions – Interview
Life in an ‘urban millennium’
- Photographer Bas Losekoot is fascinated by city life and its people
- He took photos in major cities across the world to study how its residents interact
- In 2007, a U.N. report said 3.3 billion people live in cities — 3% of the world’s surface
(CNN) Take one look at these images and you experience a range of city-life emotions. You feel the noonday sun beating down on your back, surging waves of people on every side of you. You sip your overpriced beverage and stare into the distance for a reprieve from the crowds and from a morning spent on your feet.
You see long shadows and you hear the quiet: the exhale of a city that’s been running hard and long all day — the settling down, the withdrawal of vendors and businessmen and every sort of tradesmen in between.
Dutch photographer Bas Losekoot is interested in these interactions, and by isolating them he examines “the mask that people are wearing on the streets, and things like the gaze — who’s looking at who?
“After that,” he said, “the street became a studio and the people became the actors.” He started in New York three years ago when he had this idea. “I was fascinated by this theme of the ‘urban millennium,’ ” he said. “What’s going to happen when cities get more busy and people have to live in a smaller space?”
The urban millennium references the announcement, made by the U.N. Department of Economic and Social Affairs in 2007, that “more people (are) living in cities than in rural areas: 3.3 billion people (are) on three percent of the earth’s surface.”
Losekoot brings small flashes with him and sets them up on whatever is available, be it light posts, poles or railings. Then he waits for the perfect moments. Nothing is staged; it’s all a candid flow of human interaction. The most subtle gaze or movement speaks volumes in a still image. Losekoot does his best to be invisible so that people will act naturally and not pose for the camera. The dramatic lighting makes for a very theatrical end product. Running late for the bus suddenly becomes an epic dash through dappled sunlight and illuminated sheet-metal buildings. “The camera made me curious in the world, and the camera is a great way to explore places and people,” Losekoot said. “And it can open doors in a lot of situations.”
Losekoot asks thoughtful questions of society by holding up a mirror and inviting honest examination.
CUCR Crossing Lines – Presentation
At Crossing Lines, an on-going forum for collaboration between photographers & researchers whose central interest is the urban situation, its constituents & its dynamics, i presented and discussed my project. Crossing lines is working in cooperation with the CUCR: Centre of Urban and Community Research at Goldsmiths, University of London.
Crossing Lines seeks to provide
- a valuable resource for developing a photographic practice
- an opportunity to pursue a joint project away from academic demands
- expanding contacts within photography
- an additional audience for research-in-progress
- an alternative channel for disseminating a project
- the prospect of working with someone who might challenge one’s assumptions
It encourages
- innovative approaches to collaboration at distance
- serendipitous encounters
- accidental outcomes
It believes that
- everyone benefits from the sharing of supportive reactions to their work
- photography in itself, and in the service of a wider project, is a developmental and explorative
- process which can benefit from partnership with others
- experimental work that has no formal platform for presentation benefits from a sympathetic forum
It is open to
- all members of London Independent Photography
- all students, researchers and staff of CUCR
- all those who have been associated with CUCR and who seek a point of contact for continued practical involvement
C-Platform Artist Talk
Artist Talk at C-Platform, Xiamen/China
C-PLATFORM is a non-profit culture and art research and curatorial organization supported by XIAMEN LUCITOPIA CULTURE CO., LTD, located in Xiamen, China. The organization is focusing on current trends and future concepts in the realm of mixed media. In addition to periodical research subjects and issues it has conducted a series of explorations and related practices. This has been achieved by launching and curating comprehensive research projects and activities which are inter-disciplinary, inter-media and inter-sensory. It attempts to establish an interactive exchange platform that continuously releases creative energy and cultural transformation across the boundaries of content production and communication, public awareness and experience.
C-PLATFORM has established global partnerships with organizations including the Chinese European Art Center, China Design Center UK, China Residencies, Dutch Culture Centre for International Cooperation, Three Shadows Photography Art Centre, Jimei X Arles International Photo Festival, Xiamen Design Week, Xiamen University Art College Digital Media Art Department etc