Monday, March 22, 2010

Put The Lotion In The Basket presents ... Ari Markopoulos - ‘Nostalgic for the Future’

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Ari Marcopoulos was born in 1957 in Amsterdam and now lives and works in Sonoma, California.

Marcopoulos’s work is characterized by a remarkable feeling of intimacy. Whether it concerns celebrities from the world of music or art, or his own family, he approaches his subjects in an intuitive manner and he always knows how to get close to the heart. His photos are direct, extremely personal and subtly structured. Recurrent themes are art, music, graffiti and the vulnerability of the human body.



Background.

Upon arriving in New York, self-taught Marcopoulos had the opportunity to learn the profession from two great, but very different masters. He started out as a darkroom printer for Andy Warhol, from whom he learned that anything is worth photographing. Marcopoulos also worked as an assistant to photographer Irving Penn, from whom he gained more technical skill and learned that control and a simple approach produce the best images.

At the beginning of the 1980s, Marcopoulos began to photograph street culture in New York, which at the time was characterized by an emerging graffiti and hip-hop scene. As is evidenced throughout his entire oeuvre, Marcopoulos has the ability to assimilate into the group he’s following, by which he seems to stay ahead of the Zeitgeist. His earlier work contains portraits of personalities that later emerged as the leading players of their time, such as Jean-Michel Basquiat, Robert Mapplethorpe and rappers like Rakim, LL Cool J or Run DMC.

In the 1990s, Marcopoulos became interested in the lives of skateboarders. He befriended a group of young skaters who were recruited for the film Kids by Larry Clark in 1995. Marcopoulos followed them on a bicycle and documented them both as a group and in their personal lives. An assignment for a snowboard company introduced Marcopoulos to a new youth culture of snowboarders. In documenting these groups, he combined images of extreme physical exertion and concentration with intimate images of their daily lives.

After his marriage, Marcopoulos moved to the West Coast, where he became the father of two sons, Cairo and Ethan, who frequently appear in his photos. The themes from his earlier years return in photographs of his children growing up, such as skateboarding, graffiti and music. Ari Marcopoulos became acquainted with photography at an early age, when he received an SLR camera as a gift from his father. After living in New York for a long time, for the last few years he has resided in northern California. Marcopoulos has exhibited his work in Gavin Brown’s Enterprise, NY (2000), Deitch Project NY, The Photographer’s Gallery, London (2002), MOMA (2005), MU Eindhoven (2006), Gallery White Room, Tokyo (2008), Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive, CA (2009), amongst others.

Several books of Marcopoulos’ work have been published, including Transitions and Exits, New York powerHouse Books (2001), Release your inner Ari, self-published (2006), Free Fall, Paris Nuke (2007), The Chance is Higher, New York Dashwood Books (2008), Within Arm’s Reach, JRP Ringier (2009). Marcopoulos’ work is being simultaneously exhibited at Foam and at the Whitney Biennale in New York.



Taken from Foam Gallery Website

http://www.foam.nl/index.php?pageId=41&tentoonId=156



Film and Videos.

A good introduction to his work





In Interview





Photographs.






























Ultimately it seems that Ari Markopoulos is a political artist, not a photographer or filmaker pointing a device at the world and recording it, it’s through the everyday things that he chooses to engage with that we see this pollicisation, the environment, the everyday mundane things, hip-hop, guns, suicide, the family, friends, these are the things that are important to people outside of the political narrow confines of left and right thinking, some of these are things we will all stand and fall by potentially and Ari offers us all a view of those worlds. We should all be nostalgic for the future for that’s where life waits to be lived to it’s full.


More images can be found here at google Images.

Ari’s site at AFG.

Work with The Beastie Boys
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