Julia Staples Photography

Entries tagged as ‘Julia’

No Man’s Land

October 4, 2009 · Leave a Comment

Opening on Friday October 9th, 2009 at the Lost Horse Gallery 6-9pm.

The show has finally arrived, well almost. I am still running around like a mad woman trying to get ready. Please come celebrate and see what we have been working on. I will be showing buildings from Keflavik and Lana Vogestad will be showing a video installation titled Smoke Signals.

I am busy trying to get all of the colors correct on these images so they match ok. I never realized how much work that could be. Just getting them so the skies match and the asphalt isn’t totally different colors. It is much harder working on a computer to do this than in the darkroom. You can’t just post all of the photographs on the wall and adjust accordingly. Well, I suppose the darkroom might take longer with the processor waiting time.

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You can see more imagery here from Julia or Lana and more information about the gallery by visiting their websites:

Lost Horse Gallery : www.losthorse.is
Julia Staples : www.juliastaples.com
Lana Vogestad : www.vogestad.com

Categories: American Navy Base · Art · Iceland
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Editing while in Tallinn

September 12, 2009 · 2 Comments

Lana Vogestad and I are having a show at the Lost Horse Gallery in the beginning of October. I have been photographing the American Base for an installation I would like to show. I want to show the eerie quality of the place. How it feels abandoned and how it looks so alienating. The structures look very utilitarian and totally stiff. It is my goal to present these images in a way where the viewer also experiences that. At this moment I am struggling with form. I want all of the forms to be the same. It would fullfill all of my dreams if I could capture every building in the same light and at the same angle. So far, that has been difficult. I also don’t like getting cars in the shots and that is sometimes hard to avoid since it is not totally abandoned.

Here are 2 shots that clearly show the aesthetic I am going for.

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Categories: American Navy Base · Art
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Trying to make a Disney Land set out of Tallinn

September 11, 2009 · Leave a Comment

So, I have been trying to find a way to capture Tallinn in a way that it looks like the set from a Disney movie. I have not been successful yet. Maybe this isn’t really the sort of town. I realize that a more provincial French town would be more appropriate. Probably my reaction to this town looking like a Disney set is that I have not traveled around Europe very much and haven’t seen many small medieval villages. This being one of the first is leaving a big impression.

I was walking in between the old city, the new city, a newly re-furbished conodized yuppies neighborhood and the harbor today. You can see some of my wanderings.

Click here to check out today’s wanderings…

Categories: Art · Estonia
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You Gotta Play it to Win

August 25, 2009 · Leave a Comment

I have been forever working on a project–getting rich quick. It started when I was a kid and wanted to sell products door to door. I think the first thing I did was sell stationary from a catalog. I would get $1 for every box of stationary I sold. It was a sales scheme marketed to kids for them to go to their friends and family and solicit a catalog full of stuff to adults. The adults would feel guilty and purchase something from the kid. I was obsessed. I hope those adults don´t mind me for that.

I also was really into Publishers Clearing House. I was very hopeful of what they had in store for me. They “change people’s lives” and I loved to dream about how they would change mine.

So in tune with that, I started a photography project a few years back. I photographed myself taking part in tasks deemed necessary to be a “one minute millionaire” and also put myself in the situation of waiting for Publisher’s Clearing House. Afterall, they did say they were on the way to my house.

Here is a photograph from that series.

winning is everything

Categories: Art · Iceland · Personal
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and then there was Greenland

June 14, 2009 · Leave a Comment

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Last week, I was in Greenland. In Nuuk. It was a strange mix of city and country on the water. Big city buildings, large apartment blocks, all mixed with rocky terrain, no grass, and old beautiful country homes. These photographs are from 2 of the blocks that are part of the large neighborhood of Soviet style run-down apartment buildings built to house all of the Greenlanders moving from the country to the city for jobs. One of the buildings alone has 5,000 people living in it. That is 10% of Greenland´s population!

Categories: Art · Greenland
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My cat ate my Easter Egg

April 23, 2009 · 3 Comments

In Iceland there is a very different tradition for Easter than in America. Instead of Easter baskets filled with candy delivered by the magical Easter Bunny, your parents hide a large chocolate egg filled with candy. Every single kid gets an Easter Egg and they are all very similar. The only thing that matters is the size of your egg. And the sizes range from 1-10 I think. From what I understand it is important above the age of maybe 6 to have gotten at least a size 7. Otherwise, it is unclear if your parents love you! There is no deviation from this Chocolate Egg. Nobody makes their own and it doesn´t seem to matter which brand you buy. I did find a few candy shops that made a luxury brand, but I never heard anyone mention that they would rather have that brand. So, here is the egg given to me. You can see from the picture after what my cat thought of the egg.

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Categories: Personal
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Silver Eye Show Going Well

April 19, 2009 · Leave a Comment

The show at Silver Eye just closed. I am so pleased to have gotten the opportunity to show there. You can see a picture of the installation, check it out. Thank you!

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Categories: Art
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Upcoming Show in Pittsburgh

March 12, 2009 · Leave a Comment

I will be featured in an upcoming show in a wonderful gallery in Pittsburgh called Silver Eye Center for Photography. The gallery is very active, has rotating shows for up and coming artists, and shows for the more established photographers. I was asked to participate in this show after applying for their annual grant. They offer a very generous grant of $4000 for one photographer each year. It is a great opportunity. The show will be opening on the 18th of March. You can see more information about the show here:

Click here to link to the information on the exhibition at Silver Eye

I will be showing works from my ongoing project in Iceland about the economic boom and the growth of the suburbs and the following economic collapse and the unfinished construction.

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Categories: Iceland
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Review of Show at the Nordic House

March 7, 2009 · 1 Comment

See text below the picture of the article. Thank you Richard for a very thoughtful review.

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Ipseity – Abeyance
A look through the lenses and into the crisis

March 2009

Words by Richard P. Foley
As part of the Northern Lights Festival, the Nordic House has been hosting the group exhibition “Ipseity- Abeyance”. The exhibition is one of the first artistic ventures to express the crisis. The exhibition’s curator and photographer, Julia Staples, chose to focus on photography, stating that the “illustrative qualities of photography go together well with representing the crisis.” One recurring theme throughout the show is the choice of portraying the real estate industry so as to reflect upon what has occurred from the economic crisis, as real estate is always a strong indicator of the financial situation in any country.

As I walked through the space and browsed the pamphlet provided, I noticed an article espousing photographer Guðmundur Ingólfsson’s feelings about photography. He told of how the art-form had received a lowered status throughout his career and the struggle for employment that photographers encounter.  It became apparent that the choice of photography was possibly the most appropriate for expressing the crisis. For me, the show truly engaged itself in demonstrating aspects of the situation with realism, subtlety and pathos. Hence, I wanted to try to articulate a few of the artist’s works that conveyed these feelings.

Guðmundur Ingólfsson

Upon entering the exhibition, the first artist’s work on view was that of the aforementioned Guðmundur Ingólfsson, a renowned photographer of Iceland. Ingólfsson presented was a contrast of two photographic series. Firstly, was a modern day reflection on the harbour area in Reykjavík, where a lot of ambitious building plans have been undertaken and sadly halted. The photographs depict large industrial cranes in the skyline, said to symbolise the economic landscape of the depression. The work remained bright and optimistic in its summer setting, compared to the second series “Stories From the Last War”. This older set of black and white imagery shows the demolition of old, unused buildings that existed in Reykjavík, such as the Pravda Club bar. Today, all buildings seem to hold question marks over their heads. As the title implies, these are “Stories From the Last War”, but we are already anticipating the next battle.

Nico Muhly

An American composer, who by chance became involved in the exhibition, was invited after his video collaboration with the DVD magazine, Rafskinna. The live performance was composed specifically for the incomplete city Music Hall. Muhly asked Helgi Hrafn Jónsson to perform on the trombone for its acoustical quality in testing a space—even though the roof was still missing, as he points out. The music seemed to produce an unnerving reiteration of the first verse, creating a stuttering tension that constantly began again and again, with short stints of other compositions but never building to a crescendo.  In this way it managed to convey something of the emotions of the building. Nico Muhly’s comment that this “might be the first and only performance” performed in the Music Hall made the moment even more sentimental.

Ingvar Högni Ragnarsson

A side room holds Ingivar Högni Ragnarsson’s photographic installation series “Waiting”. The emptiness of the work appears to be a stern realisation that all has been deserted in pursuit of better days.  The presence of people is suggested throughout each picture but never seen: car tracks in the snow, tyre marks on a vacant road. The curious aspect of the work is the concept of static time, a moment caught in anticipation. “Waiting” evokes the sense that something is about to happen or just has, reflecting the tense atmosphere of the crisis. The images are motionless, in wonder of what is to come: who will fill the empty car parks and occupy houses? What will happen if left un-built and docile? From an aesthetic viewpoint the photographer has captured a sense of the melancholic beauty of the Icelandic landscape, reflected in the dull greys and silence. His symmetrical angles in the work convey a dramatic impression on the viewer’s natural sense of composition, placing the work as one of the more technically ambitious.

Julia Staples

Photographer Julia Staples works directly with the issues imposed on people throughout the crisis. Two intriguing works produced for the exhibition are a smaller series, entitled “Breiðholt, Iceland” and “Looking Through An Unfinished House in Norðlingaholt”.  “Breiðholt, Iceland” depicts the housing blocks of Breidholt – which legend has it is a notoriously deprived part of Reykjavík with a high concentration of immigrants.

What struck me regarding this series were its vibrant colours, instinctively drawing me to view them. Inspecting the images further, I noticed they were small entrance doors to a housing block, placed in numerical order. The systematic order seemed to express ideas of populace statistics and the categorization of people into a number; in this context, it almost appeared like a list of unemployed families receiving benefits in each apartment. I began to wonder what the impact of the crisis would have here. Would the people of Breiðholt be the first to experience the repercussions of the economic change? If most immigrants emigrate home, will these apartments become barren or be over filled because the housing crash? Just how bad could it get? All these questions posed by the work were inevitably unanswerable. “Looking Through An unfinished House in Norðlingaholt” seems to portray more hope. The images were printed so that the frame mimicked the windows of the house. Most of the window views were set onto a picturesque landscape, contrasting the pathos between the tragic financial restrictions preventing a family for living there, and the hope that one day they will enjoy these views when the economic crisis will be over.

On the most part the exhibition was a conflict between anxiety and optimistic aspirations both connecting to the current atmosphere of the crisis, which makes the work a successful re-enactment of what has been felt throughout this historical period.

Categories: Iceland
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Malin Stahl performs at the Nordic House

February 20, 2009 · Leave a Comment

I Always Wanted to Wear White

-Let’s meet for a drink and a smoke, the White Canary analyzes the situation

Nordic House, Friday 27th of February 7-11pm. Performance at 7:30.

Come hear Malin talk about the art at the Nordic House and listen to her give some advice on how to run the government. Malin Stahl is a friend who I met the first time I came to Iceland in 2003. She did her undergraduate art studies at the art school of Reykjavik. She later went to London to do her MFA. Now she does art and performance all over Europe. She will be gracing us with her presence on Friday the 27th at 7:30. Come to the Nordic House to see her in action.

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Here is what Malin says about her work:
My practice embraces a cross-disciplinary approach which includes
performance, writing, drawing, photography and most predominantly video
installation. In subject-matter I engage in womanhood and gender
examinations as well as the visual expression and structures of theatrical
performance. Adding disparate elements together when creating feminine and
cross-gender personas constitutes attempts at finding system in a chaotic
disorder of references, relationships and media.

Categories: Iceland
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