• Login / Join
  • About
  • •
  • Contact
  • •
  • Advertising
bustler logo
bustler logo
  • News
  • Competitions
  • Events
  • Bustler is powered by Archinect
  • Sign up for Bustler's Email Newsletters

  • Follow these Bustler feeds:

  • Search

    Search in

  • Submit

    What are you submitting?

    News Pitch
    Competition
    Event
  • Login / Join
  • News|Competitions|Events
  • Search
    | Submit
    | Follow
  • Search in

    What are you submitting?

    News Pitch
    Competition
    Event

    Follow these Bustler feeds:

  • About|Contact|Advertising
  • Login / Join

IN-PUBLIC@10

Friday, May 28, 20105 PM — Saturday, Jul 10, 201012 AMEDT

17a Electric Lane London,UK | 17a Electric Lane London,UK

IN-PUBLIC@10 28th May- 9th July 2010 Private View: 27th May 6.30-9.30 pm Photofusion, 17a Electric Lane London SW9 8LA “ The point of street photography, as I see it, is to trick life into letting slip a secret it had no intention of divulging”. - RT@porousborders

 “ Street photography can be defined as any photography that takes place outside our front door. The essence of street photography is that it is real, it is not set up and it depicts ordinary people going about their everyday lives. Street photography tends to have attitude. Indeed the very word ‘street’ suggests something edgy. It can also be a little dark, or simply odd, but it is essentially an honest pursuit because it offers a poignant take on how we live our lives in public. 

 Taking meaningful street photographs has never been easy. The writer Iain Sinclair likened it to trying to stuff fog into a bottle. Street photography requires an absolute devotion – which basically boils down to a lot of wandering with a camera – and a deep appreciation of the genre’s spirit and history. There is a rich legacy of street photography, which continues to resonate with many people from so called amateurs to those who endeavor to earn a living through photography. But photography is no longer quite so innocent and society, particularly in our western cities, does not view the taking of photographs in public spaces quite so kindly. Times have changed. There is arguably too much photography, too many perceived intrusions and we live in a culture of creeping suspicion. The protection of children, private property, especially that which is corporate, and crucially the debatable call of national security all threaten the sheer normality of taking photographs in public. When in-public was formed by Nick Turpin just 10 years ago, national security was not such a prominent issue. in-public was not primarily set up to defend the natural right of taking photographs in public places; it was simply Nick’s desire to gather together a community of street photographers – to create a ‘home’ – and above all else to celebrate street photography and to communicate this joy with other like-minded photographers. This anniversary exhibition of the in-public photographers, which now extends to twenty members worldwide, clearly illustrates that the joy of street photography can still hold true.” David Gibson, photographer and in-public member in-public are: Christophe Agou, Blake Andrews, Narelle Autio, Richard Bram, Melanie Einzig, Adrian Fisk, David Gibson, Nils Jorgensen, George Kelly, Jeffrey Ladd, Jesse Marlow, Andrew Morley-Hall, Trent Park, Gus Powell, Paul Russell, Otto Snoek, David Solomons, Matt Stuart, Nick Turpin, Amani Willett. in-public@10 forms part of ‘Urban Encounters’ an annual conference and associated events organised by Centre for Urban and Community Research at Goldsmiths, University of London in partnership with Tate Britain, London. This year, the theme of ‘Routes and Transitions’ brings together international researchers, academics, urbanists, photographers and artists concerned with visual urbanism and the transitional nature of contemporary urban space, considering the routes we make to, from and through cities. Tate Britain, Photofusion, Viewfinder Photography Gallery, Centre for Urban and Community Research, Goldsmiths, University of London and Urban Encounters: City to Sea in Bognor Regis, UK will be host to a range of events in May and June. For more information, please visit: www.urbanencounters.org GALLERY EVENT: Tuesday 8 June, 19.15. £5 (£3.50 members). Richard Bram and other in-public members will lead a tour of the exhibition and a discussion which explores the role and place of street photography today. For further information about the exhibition, sales and gallery talks, please email: [email protected] or telephone + 44 (0) 20 7738 5774. www.photofusion.org www.gold.ac.uk/cucr www.in-public.com

Share

  • Follow

    0 Comments

  • Comment as :

IN-PUBLIC@10

Fri, May 28 - Sat, Jul 10, 2010

Alt:town: Alternative pathways to resilient recovery, An LA Forum Alt:adena Roundtable

Tue, Jun 16

Altadena, CA, US

Live Interview with Chief Design Officer at Design Council

Tue, Jul 7

Online Event

NOT NOT: An Office, An Exhibition

Thu, Jun 18

Brooklyn, NY, US

Furniture by Architects / Sculpture by Margaret Saliske

Sun, Jun 14 - Sun, Aug 23, 2026

Rhinebeck, NY, US

Structures for Inclusion Conference 2026

Fri, Oct 9 - Sat, Oct 10, 2026

Portland, OR, US

A LACMA Therapy Session

Sun, Jun 7

Los Angeles, CA, US

Earthen Comforts: Airing Earth

Sat, May 30 - Sun, Oct 25, 2026

Los Angeles, CA, US

San Francisco Design Week 2026

Mon, Jun 1 - Fri, Jun 12, 2026

San Francisco, CA, US

Sign up for Bustler's Email Newsletters

NeoCon 2026

Sun, Jun 7 - Wed, Jun 10, 2026

Chicago, IL, US

London Festival of Architecture 2026

Mon, Jun 1 - Tue, Jun 30, 2026

London, GB

AIA26 Conference on Architecture

Wed, Jun 10 - Sat, Jun 13, 2026

San Diego, CA, US

The Century of Gehry

Fri, Jun 12 - Wed, Dec 30, 2026

Porto, PT

CAMPOSAZ 54:54 | Progetto Manifattura - Wooden Self-Build Workshop

Fri, Jul 3 - Sun, Jul 12, 2026

Rovereto, IT

Drifting Signals, Lasting Traces

Tue, May 26 - Sun, Aug 23, 2026

Lisbon, PT

Making Space Together. Creative Practice in Unstable Conditions

Thu, May 21

Lisbon, PT

Next page » Loading

IN-PUBLIC@10

Friday, May 28, 20105 PM — Saturday, Jul 10, 201012 AMEDT

17a Electric Lane London,UK | 17a Electric Lane London,UK

Share

Related

city ● cucr ● encounters ● exhibition ● goldsmiths ● london ● photography ● street ● tate ● urban

IN-PUBLIC@10 28th May- 9th July 2010 Private View: 27th May 6.30-9.30 pm Photofusion, 17a Electric Lane London SW9 8LA “ The point of street photography, as I see it, is to trick life into letting slip a secret it had no intention of divulging”. - RT@porousborders

 “ Street photography can be defined as any photography that takes place outside our front door. The essence of street photography is that it is real, it is not set up and it depicts ordinary people going about their everyday lives. Street photography tends to have attitude. Indeed the very word ‘street’ suggests something edgy. It can also be a little dark, or simply odd, but it is essentially an honest pursuit because it offers a poignant take on how we live our lives in public. 

 Taking meaningful street photographs has never been easy. The writer Iain Sinclair likened it to trying to stuff fog into a bottle. Street photography requires an absolute devotion – which basically boils down to a lot of wandering with a camera – and a deep appreciation of the genre’s spirit and history. There is a rich legacy of street photography, which continues to resonate with many people from so called amateurs to those who endeavor to earn a living through photography. But photography is no longer quite so innocent and society, particularly in our western cities, does not view the taking of photographs in public spaces quite so kindly. Times have changed. There is arguably too much photography, too many perceived intrusions and we live in a culture of creeping suspicion. The protection of children, private property, especially that which is corporate, and crucially the debatable call of national security all threaten the sheer normality of taking photographs in public. When in-public was formed by Nick Turpin just 10 years ago, national security was not such a prominent issue. in-public was not primarily set up to defend the natural right of taking photographs in public places; it was simply Nick’s desire to gather together a community of street photographers – to create a ‘home’ – and above all else to celebrate street photography and to communicate this joy with other like-minded photographers. This anniversary exhibition of the in-public photographers, which now extends to twenty members worldwide, clearly illustrates that the joy of street photography can still hold true.” David Gibson, photographer and in-public member in-public are: Christophe Agou, Blake Andrews, Narelle Autio, Richard Bram, Melanie Einzig, Adrian Fisk, David Gibson, Nils Jorgensen, George Kelly, Jeffrey Ladd, Jesse Marlow, Andrew Morley-Hall, Trent Park, Gus Powell, Paul Russell, Otto Snoek, David Solomons, Matt Stuart, Nick Turpin, Amani Willett. in-public@10 forms part of ‘Urban Encounters’ an annual conference and associated events organised by Centre for Urban and Community Research at Goldsmiths, University of London in partnership with Tate Britain, London. This year, the theme of ‘Routes and Transitions’ brings together international researchers, academics, urbanists, photographers and artists concerned with visual urbanism and the transitional nature of contemporary urban space, considering the routes we make to, from and through cities. Tate Britain, Photofusion, Viewfinder Photography Gallery, Centre for Urban and Community Research, Goldsmiths, University of London and Urban Encounters: City to Sea in Bognor Regis, UK will be host to a range of events in May and June. For more information, please visit: www.urbanencounters.org GALLERY EVENT: Tuesday 8 June, 19.15. £5 (£3.50 members). Richard Bram and other in-public members will lead a tour of the exhibition and a discussion which explores the role and place of street photography today. For further information about the exhibition, sales and gallery talks, please email: [email protected] or telephone + 44 (0) 20 7738 5774. www.photofusion.org www.gold.ac.uk/cucr www.in-public.com

Share

  • Follow

    0 Comments

  • Comment as :

Promoted Events

Flyway City: Architecture for a Flourishing Ecosystem

Jun 11 - Jan 3, 2027

Chicago, IL, US

He Built This City: Joe Macken’s Model

Feb 12 - Dec 31, 2026

New York, NY, US

Frank Gehry

May 14 - Jun 27, 2026

Beverly Hills, CA, US

Core Samples

Mar 12 - Jun 30, 2026

Los Angeles, CA, US

The Many Lives of the Nakagin Capsule Tower

Jul 11 - Jul 12, 2026

New York, NY, US

The Century of Gehry

Jun 12 - Dec 30, 2026

Porto, PT

Earthen Comforts: Airing Earth

May 30 - Oct 25, 2026

Los Angeles, CA, US

Encounters: Denise Scott Brown Photographs

Jan 08 - Jul 3, 2026

New Haven, CT, US

Gerrit Rietveld: Wealth of Sobriety

May 07 - Sep 2, 2026

New York, NY, US

Architects of Liberation: Modernism in Western Africa

Jul 05 - Jan 2, 2027

New York, NY, US

Latinitudes: A Collection of Latin American Modern Architecture

Apr 02 - Jul 18, 2026

Chicago, IL, US

Next page » Loading