This is what I call a sparkling start of 2024: WINNER TIFA SILVER PRIZE! The Portrait of My Love Nita Curled Up, a photogravure printed on washi paper with 24k Gold Flakes, has been awarded with Silver at the prestigious Tokyo International Foto Awards in the Category Fine Art/Nude! Thank you jury of the TIFA 2023.
Please have a lookat the Winners Gallery: https://www.tokyofotoawards.jp/winners/tokyo/2023/ This Silver award is a true ode to my Love Nita, who passed away a bit more than a year ago now. Sail on my Silver Girl! The image Portrait of My Love Nita Curled Up is part of the series Book of Light, which was developed during a Swatch Art Peace Hotel Residency.
This portrait of Nita was taken at the former Convitto Palmieri in Lecce for the museum project ‘The Living Archives’ ❤️ Recently this same image had already been awarded twice at the 20th IPA: Winner IPA 2nd Prize Analogue/Fine Art and Winner IPA 3rd Prize Fine Art/Nude.
TIFA WINNER HONORABLE MENTION
… and there is more sparkling news: TIFA Winner of an Honorable Mention! The image Double Exposure of Nita My Love, a hand printed gelatin silver print on baryta paper, has been awarded with an Honorable Mention at the prestigious Tokyo International Foto Awards in the Category Fine Art/Abstract. Thank you jury of the TIFA 2023. Nita My Love’ is part of the series ‘Traces into the Unknown’ in which I investigate the traces of love left behind after losing the love of you life. As memories are slowly changing and or fading, I started digging in the archives of images trying to understand and visualize how feelings of love can still be so incredible strong, overwhelming and vivid, even without the physical presence of Nita. Trying to find new balance and coping with the loss, I know that working in the darkroom will help to clear my mind and bring back sparks of beauty in my life.
This portrait of Nita was also taken at the former Convitto Palmieri in Lecce for the museum project ‘The Living Archives’ ❤️
In de tentoonstelling Elements of Elusivenessbrengt Mo Verlaan twee langlopende projecten samen: de serie met (zelf)portretten Book of Light en de serie portretten van bomen Elusive Nature. Beide series vertellen het verhaal hoe om te gaan met gebeurtenissen die het leven onomkeerbaar kunnen veranderen. Mo heeft afscheid moeten nemen van haar vrouw, kunstpartner en muze. Fotografie was haar manier om het constante proces van verandering te onderzoeken en nu wijst het haar de weg hoe rouw en verlies te verwerken en te visualiseren. Haar beelden zijn zeer intuïtief, ze komen boven drijven en raken de diepere lagen van ons zijn. Vaak zijn het geabstraheerde uitingen van heftige emoties van snijdende pijn, bevroren angsten en ontroostbare rouw om het verlies. Ze zoeken contact met een andere wereld, een niet aantoonbaar universum, we zijn per saldo gemaakt van sterrenstof en water. Dit schreef haar vrouw Anita in een gedicht aan haar. De schoonheid en de wijsheid van haar vrouw die op de overgang van deze 2 werelden stond, hebben haar geleerd te leren luisteren naar ons lichaam en de natuur te respecteren. Zo volgen de beelden de zoektocht naar het natuurlijke verloop van de dingen, het meanderende ritme van het leven, de broodnodige ruimte in tijd en geest, om vanuit de leegte weer te beginnen met creëren.
Mo werkt bijna volledig analoog en om de ongrijpbaarheid van de materie tastbaar te maken, drukt zij de foto’s af op hele oude broze fotopapieren. Hierdoor krijgen de werken een universele kracht en een uniek patina van de tijd. Na het afstuderen aan de Rietveld Academie heeft zij beeldende performances gemaakt en decors voor theatervoorstellingen. Haar liefde voor reizen en koken resulteerde in De Drie Gezusters, een reizende cateraar voor internationale filmploegen. De vergankelijkheid van licht, de vluchtige schoonheid van landschappen, architectuur en mensen brachten haar ertoe intensief te gaan fotograferen. Dat resulteerde in een internationale erkenning en ze heeft recent prijzen gewonnen op de 20the International Photography Award 2023, ze was Overall Winner of the19th Julia Margaret Cameron Award en winnaar van Mt Rokko International Photography Festival 2019 in Kobe, Japan. Daaruit voortvloeiend volgden internationale exposities in Bazel, Barcelona, Berlijn en Kobe. Op dit moment werkt ze aan een grote fotografische installatie in een voormalig klooster in Lecce, Italië. Het klooster wordt omgebouwd tot een permanent museum voor hedendaagse kunst: The Living Archives.
The exhibition Elements of Elusiveness brings together two large bodies of work: the series with (self-)portraits Book of Light and the series with portraits of trees Elusive Nature.
Both series are new chapters of a continuing story, a follow up on the series Undercurrent and Meander. Undercurrent started at the end of October 2018 as a reaction to the fact that my wife had been diagnosed with cancer. In a single moment our lives were changed, our minds in a muddle, invaded by a thick layer of fog. Our horizon kept shifting and nearly seemed to have collapsed. The unreal uncertainty of losing your loved one felt like walking on very thin ice.
Photographing was, and is, my way of coping, finding images that could visualize my deepest fears. For me the self-portraits and the portraits of my wife Nita from Book of Light and the portraits of trees from Elusive Nature are about the process of learning to listen to our bodies and to respect nature. Following the natural course and rhythm of life, allowing space within us to be empty and leaving it empty, not filling in every little gap in time. We need these blank spaces to begin creating again, to express our roiling emotions.
Working completely analog, with its slow, tangible and pure character proved to be the right method for Book of Light and Elusive Nature. The tranquil process of printing in the darkroom became soothing and brought peace. Being in the dark room gave me strength, cleared my head and opened up new creative paths. Not having the option of reviewing my work until I developed it brought me in the now. It felt very vulnerable capturing my wife Nita and my own naked body, being confronted with these unguarded moments of ourselves in the darkroom. Using papers decades old, sourced online, brought uncertainty and uniqueness to the process as their response was unpredictable. And yet it resulted in prints where, for me, the individual qualities and textures of the paper greatly enhance the expression of the image.
These images and this way of working helped me connect to my deepest terrors. More importantly this process invited the unexpected, the surreal surprise into the images suggesting the elusiveness and revelatory nature of life.
The images were shot using a medium format Mamiya camera and a 35mm Nikon FM3a using old and new stock Kodak Tri-X film and T-Max. They were hand-printed, Silver Gelatin Process, on old photographic paper.
The Special Edition of Book of Light is a completely handmade artist book with 15 original washi prints.
The book comes in a handmade box with a 20x29cm print on Mitsumata washi paper from the Awagami Factory, famous for their remarkable fine art papers. The thin washi papers used for the photographs look fragile, but in fact they are so strong and flexible, they can be glued in by hand in the booklet.
This way the photographs can cross seamless from one page to the other.
Nearly on my way @photobasel, who would have thought that 6 months ago? The FotoNostrum Gallery from Barcelona is presenting my work, I’m so thankful.
🙏Julio Hirsch-Hardy
Self-Portrait Nr 6 will be there of course, being the Overall Winner of the 19th JMCA. Hand printed with a chine collé technique on 36gr green Kitakata @awagami paper in an edition of 3. The 23k gold chabin has been affixed on the washi paper flake by flake by me, which makes each print unique.
The making of these self-portraits for Book of Light, posing myself repeatedly in a space of light on a cold floor of the former Convitto Palmieri in Lecce, connected me profoundly to feelings I seem have locked somewhere inside my body, to fears that ebb and flow through me.
That space of light is a moment in time. It is not so much time as told by the clock, though naturally it is the sun creating and minutely altering the shape, revealing my body and casting shadows. That space of light is time as duration, it is time as experienced within us. It can stretch forever and cut short in an instant.
🙏Book of Light was developed during a residency @swatchartpeacehotel
GOOD NEWS, I’m so proud and happy to share this incredible news with you.
The joint Art Book ‘As The Magic Hour Shifts’, I had been working so hard on with Anita, has been awarded with a Grant for Publication from the Prins Bernard @cultuurfonds.
Overall Winner Single Image of the 19th Julia Margaret Cameron Award For Women Photographers
Exhibition at FotoNostrum The Mediterranean House of Photography located in the heart of Barcelona.
Come and join me at the vernissage of my Solo Exhibition at Gallery FotoNostrum and the beautiful work of all the Winners!
Exhibition runs from 21th of April till 4th of May 2023.
Special thanks to FotoNostrum and the Judge Barbara Davidson, Guggenheim Fellow, 3 x Pulitzer Prize, and Emmy award-winning photographer, for granting my work so generously.
WHAT AN INCREDIBLE HONOR TO BE SELECTED AS THE OVERALL WINNER SINGLE IMAGE PRO OF 19TH JULIA MARGARET CAMERON AWARD!
Have a look at this beautiful Virtual Museum with art from all over the world.
Thank you Swatch for this inspiring journey! The wonderful guidance of my mentors brought this series so much further, thank you @alecvonbargen_studio and @lynnerobertsgoodwin for pushing to think bigger.
Thank you Adam Finkelston for choosing my work in your lovely magazine! Publication in Issue 38 of the The Hand Magazine
The Hand Magazine is based in Prairie Village, Kansas and has been in publication since 2013.
The Hand is published four times a year in February, May, August, and November.
It is owned, published, co-edited, and distributed by Adam Finkelston. James Meara is lead designer and co-editor.
The Hand is dedicated to being the world’s premier forum for “alternative” and historic photographic processes and all types of printmaking.
They want to encourage inspiration, education, and community for artists using unique, mixed media, experimental, and idiosyncratic “reproduction-based” techniques.
They do also print digital art work and art work where the subject matter has been manipulated, directed, or staged by the artist.
The Hand Magazine Issue 38 contributing artist, Mo Verlaan (Amsterdam, The Netherlands)
“Self Portrait Nr 6 With Glass Rod”
Photopolymer gravure, Chine Collé with green Washi paper with gold flakes
digital positive transparency made from scanned analog print on vintage paper, 5 7/8″ x 4 1/8″