In a wide-ranging conversation, four artists whose work appears in ‘But Still, It Turns’ temper popular fixations with product by turning their attention to process. They discuss how they go about creating images and films among the tangle of reality: embracing surprise and accident, drawing on mythologies and rejecting conventions, working in both solitude and collaboration.
On Process: Richard Choi, Kristine Potter, Emanuele Brutti and Piergiorgio Casotti (moderated by Michael Mack)
Wednesday 12 May 2021
18:00 BST, London
13:00 EDT, New York
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Join us for a week of informal conversations on ‘But Still, It Turns’, curator Paul Graham’s revitalising manifesto for photography of the world-as-it-is. Over four days, the artists and writers will discuss the book's themes and provocations around the issues of Time, Place, Process, and Sequence. In partnership with the International Center of Photography, New York.
Held in partnership with the International Center of Photography, in conjunction with ICP’s current exhibition, But Still, It Turns: Recent Photography from the World on view through August 15, 2021 in New York, New York.
About But Still, It Turns
But Still, It Turns is Paul Graham’s revitalising manifesto for photography from the world - a re-dedication to the tangle of reality. In this dynamic and diverse book, Graham curates 8 photographers' work: Vanessa Winship, Stanley Wolukau-Wanambwa, RaMell Ross, Kristine Potter, Curran Hatleberg, Piergiorgio Casotti & Emanuele Brutti, Gregory Halpern and Richard Choi, together with essays by Graham, Rebecca Bengal and Ian Penman, all of which tease out a new, enlightening post-documentary form for photography.
Header image: Kristine Potter