art – uncoy https://uncoy.com (many) winters in vienna. theatre, dance, poetry. and some politics. Sun, 10 Mar 2024 13:55:29 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.2 https://uncoy.com/images/2017/07/cropped-uncoy-logo-nomargin-1-32x32.png art – uncoy https://uncoy.com 32 32 Are all art vandals criminals? Balfour’s destruction https://uncoy.com/2024/03/art-vandals-balfour.html https://uncoy.com/2024/03/art-vandals-balfour.html#respond Sun, 10 Mar 2024 13:41:24 +0000 https://uncoy.com/?p=5907 Are all art vandals criminals? Balfour’s destruction

Like many, I abhor the destruction of art work to make a political point or the removal of historical monuments. This time though…

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A young lady in England attacked Balfour’s portrait, hanging in Trinity College, Cambridge. She did a heck of a job.

Like many of you I abhor the destruction of art work to make a political point. The removal of historical monuments and statues, I also oppose.

But in this case, the targeting is exact. It is Balfour.1

In the comments, TarquiniusSuperbus notes:

Good for this protester, and very courageous! And what is so wrong about being anti-Israel anyway ? Israeli Zionist Jews are anti-Christian, anti-Druze, anti-Muslim, anti-Arab, anti-Palestinian, and anti anyone else who is not a Jew. Let’s face it, Zionist Jews are the most hateful people on earth.

That’s awfully blunt but not far off the mark. Charles Manson was close competition but he’s no longer with us.


  1. There’s no lord prefacing Balfour’s name above. It’s deliberate. I suggest we stop recognising British titles, 1. most of us live in republics 2. our ancestors gave their blood to eliminate the pox of hereditary nobility 3. British titles are mostly given to war criminals i.e. Blair or economic criminals i.e. Philip Green]. who is indirectly responsible for the destruction of Palestine and the misery visited on the Palestinians for almost a century. 

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Leica film reveals the fundamentals of street photography in 8 minutes https://uncoy.com/2018/04/fundamentals-street-photography.html https://uncoy.com/2018/04/fundamentals-street-photography.html#respond Sun, 15 Apr 2018 02:32:06 +0000 https://uncoy.com/?p=2527 Leica film reveals the fundamentals of street photography in 8 minutes

Uncomplicating a great camera does the photographer the great favour of letting them not think about it. For anyone who has ever shot street, Exploring Porto with the Leica M-D a straight shot of insight and inspiration.

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When I first came across an article about Leica’s digital camera with no display screen, I first thought it was an April fool’s post. No, the post was published on April 30th not March 31st. In 2016, Leica indeed released a camera without any kind of a screen, the Leica M-D. Even my Canon 5D had a screen as did generations of PowerShot 30 and 45’s.

There’s a kind of brilliance in it. I remember the thrill of shooting my Pentax K1000 or Zenit cameras and not knowing what was waiting for me on the other side. I was never a full time professional image maker in the days of film but I did make many beautiful pictures (though some shoots did fall on their face). Photographers had to be really, really good then to work professionally as there could be hundreds of people dependent on your images.

For a big event, a wise brand would hire two or three photographers. I.e. the backup, behind-the-scenes guy would shoot some duplicates of what the main camera was shooting, just in case. We sometimes used those behind-the-scenes photos for the main print shots in an ad campaign.

What’s important here is that Leica made a film of three street photographers working with the Leica M-D. The three subjects were brought together in Porto and spent what looks like a week shooting together. The result is Exploring Porto with the Leica M-D.

[fvplayer src=”https://vimeo.com/164548974″ splash=”https://i.vimeocdn.com/video/569820367_1280x720.jpg?r=pad” caption=”Exploring Porto with the Leica M-D”]

The most interesting of the three street photographers is the oldest, Rui Palha, from Portugal. When he shoots portraits in the city, he returns with beautiful black and white prints and gives them to his subjects.

It makes them feel important, and they are important.

Palha tells us.

New Yorker Daniel Arnold is even more verbal than visual. His running commentary on his stolen images (as he avoids talking with people or even letting them know he has a camera) is fluent and philosophical. He affirms his very existence via photography:

The excitement isn’t a wild photo….when it works it feels like you have super powers to distill this crazy unexpected thing from the whole mess of the world…Our existence however full it gets is lonely, short and meaningless. Being able to present your experience as something concrete, it’s like this is my story as I saw it. Witness me, validate my existence. Let me be more than this fleck of dust in the air.

As a photographer, Arnold mainly shoots real film. His technique unsurprisingly was not successful on his first time out with a digital camera.

The first story, lost millenial, Nicholas La who is struggling with moving from lifestyle and concert photography for travel photography has less depth but is equally genuine. In La’s words: “If you are taking photographs to impress people, you’ve lost sight of photography.”

Many younger photographers will identify with La’s struggle for direction. La’s hunger to abandon technology is something that most modern photographers understand.

I was shooting all different kinds of cameras. It was pretty much, point shoot, shoot, shoot, burst, whatever. It got really, really boring. My interest in photography started to die until I switched over to Leica, because everything with Leica felt genuine.

What’s nice about Leica and a few other camera on the market is that there are fewer features. Fujifilm has tried very hard to put all the controls on the exterior of the camera so that once you’ve set up your shooting preferences you should almost never have to look at a menu again. Olympus has played with the retro, all exterior controls as well. With my Sony NEX-5T, it’s very similar. There is a knob on the camera for shutter speed and a wheel on the back for aperture (which I can also use for ISO). Since I only shoot RAW, I don’t ever even look at white balance. Many photographers curse the Sony menus but I need mine so seldom they bother me hardly at all.

So a Leica is not necessary to get to this zen state. Many of Leica’s offerings including the Leica M-D or the SL are certainly a fast track to photographic zen if you can afford them. I’m very grateful that Leica exists to remind other camera makers that at the end of the day, it’s just light boxes and lenses. The lenses are so much more important.

Arnold sums up Leica’s technical minimalism well:

Uncomplicating a great camera does the photographer the great favour of letting them not think about it.

As far as the Leica M-D goes, La states the obvious:

It’s a visceral thrill. Just like film, you don’t know what youv’e got until later on.

Strangely the camera infuriated many hobby photographers. The last few minutes of the film are really boring. How nice to meet in Porto and discuss photography with photographers who are so different. It would be better if the film ended at 8 minutes precisely.

Despite the weak ending, Exploring Porto with the Leica M-D is a remarkably concise journey into the vision of three photographers. For anyone who has ever shot street or anyone who has ever wondered what drives a photographer to do what s/he does, it’s a straight shot of insight and inspiration.


Technical Info on the Film

Technically the film looks to be shot on a photographic camera (as opposed to a video camera). The cameraman played to the strength of the medium with wonderful handheld shots and odd angles but very little movement or pans. If you keep your camera still, rolling shutter and digital jitter are not an issue and there’s no need for IBIS. I’m wrong. It was an Alexa Mini with Leica Cine lenses. The Alexa Mini allows video capture in RAW (2880 x 2160) at up to 200fps with 14 stops of dynamic range. Leica doesn’t have a moving picture camera like this in their catalogue and bravo to them for choosing the right technology to capture the story. The video was a very good match to the high quality photographic images taken by the Leica M-D.

Even though the Alexa Mini is smaller than a traditional Alexa film camera, it still weighs 2.3 kg without a lens. Not something you’d want to take on your next vacation, even if you had an extra $36K (without the lens).

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ImPulsTanz 2012: Francis Bacon with Ismail Ivo https://uncoy.com/2012/08/francis-bacon-ismail-ivo.html https://uncoy.com/2012/08/francis-bacon-ismail-ivo.html#respond Fri, 10 Aug 2012 23:05:13 +0000 http://uncoy.com/?p=808 "Francis Bacon" just misses genius but is first rate movement theatre done on a grand scale. I

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One of the most awaited productions of the ImPulsTanz season includes co-artistic director Ismail Ivo in the lead role. Mesmerising posters and entrancing video previews have worked there magic. The public hungered for the late premiere. Here at last, Francis Bacon is a complex tormented work. The subject is the imaginative world of Irish visual artist Francis Bacon (1909-1992).

We begin in a prison cell with metal walls. There are flashing lights which recall something from the film the Matrix. It’s good to see a choreographic production challenging (if in miniature) the opera productions and the main stage theatre productions in production design. Great to get away from the empty black room at last. Fantastic work from production designer Penelope Wehrli.

Ismail Ivo is naked in a blanket, bare naked. The bottom of his feet are painted red, reminding us all that he and we are made of blood. The other dancers’ feet are also so painted. Mortality visualised on the soles of the feet.

Ivo struggles out of his blanket and against the closed walls. No exit is to be had.

Here a man enters (Giuseppe Paolicelli). Ivo’s Bacon first fights with him and then moves to love. Their love making is violent. Here sex is no gentle caress but a lashing out against mortality, an attempt to subjugate and own the other.

The stage is a kind of triangle: the long side has three doors in it which flip up and down and also serve as beds for the lovemaking.

Later women appear. One with huge breasts rips one out of her bodice and force feeds Ivo’s former lover her breast (Elisabetta Violante).

Another woman with no legs, just a spider web where the legs should be is carried crawls out (Valentina Schisa) . Under a huge mane of hair, the most beautiful bosom you’ve ever seen is revealed. Our strange mermaid/harpie is picked up and suspended in every possible position over the course of the next half hour, both witness and participant in the tortured debauchery and tormented self-interrogation.

The two men cheat on one another with women, the women like accessories, a barrier between men, a barrier from the truth. The women often enter with large butcher’s knives which they wave around before using against themselves. Violent women with knives and naked men brings forth images of castration. Strangely that didn’t happen.

One of the strongest image is of Ivo hanging upside down like a bat, naked. He shivers and shakes, his arms become free he lifts himself up and down in a strange upside down dance. Ivo’s power and grace entrance in these moments.

The underlying theme is about about the powerlessness of of even greath strength and beauty. No matter how strong or beautiful you are, if you fight the tenets of society, you will face imminent evisceration or imprisonment. The consequences are enough to break anyone. And the attempt to break Bacon’s spirit does not end for the one hour and forty minutes purgatory.

There is no end to the brutality. At least no mothers brought small children to this show (Vandekeybus’s Medea), nor should they. There are live insects behind one of the doors.

Traditional choreography as such is nearly non-existent. There are only theatre episodes and fight scenes (apart from the hanging bat). Curiously there are four credited choreographers: Ivo, Mara Bobo, Tero Saarinen with director Johann Kresnik. The art direction (costumes and the splendid decorations is the work of Penelope Wehrli).

An unnecessary weak point in “Francis Bacon” is the music. In itself, the music is a highly atmospheric of industrial noise and violin solos and dark arias. While going with recorded music widened the musical possibilities in individual episodes, this piece would be extraordinary in the accompanied by live music.

We bathe in horrors. This is Dostoevskian existence, a kind of dance Notes from Underground.

As the stage darkens finally around Ismail Ivo, we hear a final voice: “iI you love life, then you love death. they are like two sides of the same coin. Like you, I’m always surprised when I wake up in the morning.”

Ivo’s performance is memorable and he is well-supported by the surrounding cast. I’m amazed that Ivo has the emotional strength to perform this role for nine days straight. “Francis Bacon” just misses genius but is first rate movement theatre done on a grand scale. If you can find a ticket, grab it while you can.

The original version of Francis Bacon was staged in 1994. Such magnificent productions were people then creating.

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