Give Me Your Image
January 6, 2006- February 18, 2006
535 W 22nd St
A cross between Robert Frank and Nan Goldin with a little bit of Martin Parr... Bertien
van Manen's photographs - rich, textured, from-the-hip - might be described as a kind of
visual anthropology. Jean Dykstra, Art Review, October 2005
The Yancey Richardson Gallery is pleased to present Give Me Your Image, an exhibition
of photographs by Dutch photographer Bertien van Manen. Photographed throughout
Europe between 2002 and 2005, these tightly composed intimate views of family
photographs within domestic environments explore the role that family photographs play
in our lives, how they shape our identity and form both personal history and shared
history. Represented by this body of work, van Manen is one of four artists featured in
the Museum of Modern Art's current exhibition, New Photography '05. In addition, our
exhibition coincides with the release by Steidl Editions of the monograph Give me your
Image, which presents the complete project.
Originally commissioned by the Swiss Ministry for Foreign Affairs to photograph
immigrants in the suburbs of Paris, van Manen ultimately expanded the project to the
homes of individuals in countries as diverse as Lithunia, Greece, Germany, Italy, Austria,
France, Bulgaria, Moldovia and Holland. Van Manen was intrigued by the photographs
her subjects choose to keep and to display; the ones immigrants chose to take with them
from their homelands; and the ones others chose to contain their memories and delineate
their personal histories. As she noted in her interview for Art Review Magazine
(Dykstra, October 2005) Very human things like death and birth and happiness and
family are in all the pictures. Seen together the photographs trace a rough history of
Europe from World War I soldiers to a concentration camp of the Holocaust to political
demonstrations in Spain and the last of the coal miners in England. The images are
thoughtful and poignant, especially in light of the rapid development of digital
technology, which threatens to make the family snapshot obsolete.
Born in The Hague, The Netherlands, in 1942, Van Manen currently lives and works in
Amsterdam. Her extensive projects in the former Soviet Union and China were published
respectively in books A Hundred Summers, A Hundred Winters (1994) and East Wind
West Wind (2001). In 2003 she was nominated for the Citibank Photography Prize. Van
Manen's work has been exhibited in museums internationally including the Fotomuseum
Wintherthur, the Reina Sophia and the Metropolitan Museum of Photography, Tokyo and
her photographs are held in the collections of major institutions such the Metropolitan
Museum of Art, the Museum of Modern Art, New York, San Francisco Museum of
Modern Art, and the Stedlijk Museum among others.
Books and DVDs related to artists in this show| Location | | | Gallery | Yancey Richardson Gallery | | Address | 535 W 22nd St, 3rd Fl New York (Chelsea) NY, 10011 United States | | Phone | 646-230-9610 | | Fax | 646-230-6131 | | Hours | Tue-Sat 10-6 | |
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