Bob Carnie
Subscriber
Hi Folks
I just finished printing this show and would like to announce it for Ihor.
All prints are on Ilford Warmtone selenium toned. 35mm to 22inches on the long side.
If the economy gets better I hope to be at his opening
Here is some info
The exhibit will open on Nov 5, 2010 (and will run until Jan 11 2011) at the International Cultural Centre in Krakow, which is located at the main square of the city Rynek Glowny 25
Here is the link: http://www.mck.krakow.pl/view.php?idt=3&idm=273
The present? Photographs of Lviv by Ihor Krut
November 2010
The works in this exhibition form photographic documentation of contemporary Lviv's urban landscape. Their author - a Ukrainian photographer resident in Canada - adopts as his method a type of flânerie, roaming the city in search of interesting motifs. The Lviv of Krut's photographs is a place of contrasts - vestiges of the previous system mingle with symbols of nascent capitalism. And it is this aspect of suspension between the old and the new that the artist, by his own admission, finds the most fascinating. The places, people and quotidian situations captured on the photographs combine amusingly, sometimes reflectively, to form a subjective portrait of the city and its residents.
I just finished printing this show and would like to announce it for Ihor.
All prints are on Ilford Warmtone selenium toned. 35mm to 22inches on the long side.
If the economy gets better I hope to be at his opening
Here is some info
The exhibit will open on Nov 5, 2010 (and will run until Jan 11 2011) at the International Cultural Centre in Krakow, which is located at the main square of the city Rynek Glowny 25
Here is the link: http://www.mck.krakow.pl/view.php?idt=3&idm=273
The present? Photographs of Lviv by Ihor Krut
November 2010
The works in this exhibition form photographic documentation of contemporary Lviv's urban landscape. Their author - a Ukrainian photographer resident in Canada - adopts as his method a type of flânerie, roaming the city in search of interesting motifs. The Lviv of Krut's photographs is a place of contrasts - vestiges of the previous system mingle with symbols of nascent capitalism. And it is this aspect of suspension between the old and the new that the artist, by his own admission, finds the most fascinating. The places, people and quotidian situations captured on the photographs combine amusingly, sometimes reflectively, to form a subjective portrait of the city and its residents.