MUSÉE 29 – EVOLUTION

Evolution explores the concepts of progress, transformation, growth, and advancement in an age when images are taking a dramatic shift in the role they play in our lives.

Triggered: Satoshi Fujiwara

Triggered: Satoshi Fujiwara

By Satoshi Fujiwara

It was taken at 12:37 p.m on September 10, 2014, a couple of years after relocating to Berlin where I started working as a photographer. Since the beginning, I’ve had a strong interest in the various fuzzy boundaries in relentlessly reproducible contemporary imagery. To focus on portraiture, the right of likeness is something that has long-troubled photography since the invention of the camera. Today, with the rise of social media, we have become even more acutely aware of photographs and those who appear in them when they are posted on digital media. With furthering technological developments in digital photography, it will be even more difficult to make legal judgments in cases involving the right of likeness. I won't mention anything about this specific subject. How she/he actually looked like, so-called ’fact’ or ‘background’, and so on except for the date photographed which is visible in the data. Because only the image that is detached from the ‘original’ context allows the viewer to be read with subjective interpretation.

From Our Archives : Lorna Simpson

From Our Archives : Lorna Simpson

Parallel Lines: Nathalie Vallois

Parallel Lines: Nathalie Vallois