Bristol Photo Festival Second Edition - The World on a Wave - to open in autumn

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Bristol Photo Festival Second Edition - The World on a Wave - to open in autumn
From Monument © Trent Parke / Magnum Photos



BRISTOL.- The second edition of —The World A Wave—will open in autumn 2024. Focussing upon the theme of movement, exhibitions will be held across the city’s major visual arts institutions alongside independent and unconventional spaces accompanied by a wide events programme.

The exhibition programme focuses on personal and collective stories of communities confronting societal change whilst navigating daily life. The first confirmed exhibiting artists are: Akosua Viktoria Adu Sanyah, Kirsty Mackay, Amak Mahmoodian, Trent Parke, Sarker Protick and Hashem Shakeri. Each artist addresses a world in constant motion where social, political and environmental conditions are ever-evolving. The full festival programme will be announced in July 2024

‘I believe in photography as a tool to experience the world anew. In a time of multiple crises, we need photography more than ever. I want the festival to be a space full of nuanced and unexpected stories that foster greater understanding of our shared world.’ --Alejandro Acin festival director

The festival has an international focus but is grounded in the city of Bristol. For this edition, alongside the exhibition programme, the festival is collaborating with local residents and port workers from Avonmouth to create a community archive, accompanied by a programme of creative activities. The festival, in collaboration with Prison Education, will present The Prison Mobile Library, an educational photography project across three sites in the South West of England.

The festival opening week will take place between 16 - 20 October 2024 and will include reception events and artist talks across the city. Following this, all exhibitions will remain open for a duration of 1-3 months.

PARTICIPATING ARTISTS

Akosua Viktoria Adu-Sanyah
The House is a Body
Georgian House Museum residency

Akosua Viktoria Adu-Sanya— known for her work examining the relationship between photography and memory, particularly in relation to her own family history— will be in residence at the Georgian House Museum, creating a new body of work relating to the building’s colonial history.

Kirsty Mackay
The Magic Money Tree
Venue TBC

Bristol-based photographer Kirsty Mackay has worked collaboratively with groups and individuals from across England to explore the impact of the cost-of-living crisis and what poverty looks like in the world’s 6th richest economy.

Amak Mahmoodian
One Hundred & Twenty Minutes
17 Midland Road

Premiering as part of the festival — in collaboration with Multistory — Bristol-based artist Amak Mahmoodian's new project uses images, poems, archives and video to explore the dreams experienced by those in exile. The work was produced collaboratively with communities of refugees and asylum seekers across the UK.

Trent Parke
Monument
Martin Parr Foundation

This dystopian project, to be exhibited outside Australia for the first time, extends the metaphor of the moth drawn to a flame to city life and beyond. Photographs taken throughout Parke’s career are edited to create a vision of humanity engrossed by and drawn to an inescapable light.

Sarker Protick
Spaces of Separation
St. John’s Crypt

Bangladeshi artist Sarkar Protick has been commissioned by the festival to produce his first solo exhibition in the UK. Bringing together multiple bodies of his work incorporating photography, video and sound, the exhibition will draw upon the history of and contemplate the ever-evolving story of Bangladesh.

Hashem Shakeri
Staring into the Abyss
Bristol Museum & Art Gallery

Iranian visual artist Shakeri has been documenting daily life in Afghanistan following the withdrawal of British and American military forces and the consequent arrival to power of the Taliban. This work will be shown in the UK for the first time as part of the festival and accompanied by an engagement programme in collaboration with the Afghan community in Bristol.

Bristol Photo Festival is an international biennial of contemporary photography. The first edition in 2021 drew 200,000 visitors, with 18 exhibitions staged across the city’s museums, galleries and independent spaces.

As an organisation, we believe in the power of photography as a tool to experience the world anew. Our mission is to present nuanced and unexpected stories that foster greater understanding of shared pasts, presents and futures. Our work is internationally-focussed yet locally grounded, built from the urgencies of our city and its inhabitants. As a platform, we support artists to experiment, creating work that breaks with convention, exploring the possibilities of photography as a political tool today.

The festival has been made possible thanks our cultural partners, sponsors and the support from the Arts Council of England, Heritage Lottery Fund, British Council, Quartet Foundation, Nisbet Trust, Embassy of the Kingdom of the Netherlands, Acción Cultural Española, Danish Arts Council and Friends of Stoke Park.










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