Image copyright © Natasha Lythgoe - All rights reserved
Natasha Lythgoe "Opening"
Natasha Lythgoe is a young British photographer who has worked as a professional for the past 15 years and will have her first solo exhibition in Paris at Centre Iris beginning June 13 through September 15, 2012. Over the past 8 years she has had nearly 1000 students in her photography courses from those who are new to photography to more advanced students. She has a degree in fine art and is currently completing her MA in Photography.
So, if you are in Paris this week, you have an opportunity to meet this artist at the vernissage as she welcomes you at Centre Iris on rue Saint-Martin. Natasha and I have not met face-to-face but I am looking forward to the opportunity on my next visit to Paris. How I wish that I was in Paris to join Natasha and many of you for this opening event.
Tant pis pour moi.
Is it possible for a photograph to have an existence that generates a response, emotion or reflection of its own accord, rather than simply being a representation of elsewhere?
Imbued with Buddhist philosophies and practices, Natasha Lythgoe’s path has led her through spheres of dance and meditation. Through these practices, she explores re-embodiment, re-connection and the present moment.
Sensitive and sensual, viscerally grounded and at the same time transcendent, Natasha Lythgoe invites us to look beyond the trail of photography, so that we not only contemplate that which we are shown, but also experience physiological and psychological responses, and therefore our own personal, intimate relationship to the world at this point in time. The photographs thereby provoke a return to self and to self-awareness. They speak to our eyes of course, but we can also appreciate the images with our ears, feel them in our stomach and through our skin. This visceral yet transcendent quality impels us to reject the notion of photography as merely a process of depiction, and search for meaning behind and between the photographs themselves.
Traditional ways of exhibiting images with ideas of completion and sequential order simply don’t fit in this context. To understand the work fully one needs to view each image as part of a whole: the constellation of images within which it is being presented. Each series of images is neither definitive nor frozen in a permanent sequence, and this freedom of movement, this fluidity, creates a sense of free association, of interchangeable patterns.
As a result, this body of images which at first glance appears disparate, in fact forms together images which present the possibility of a subject, above and beyond that which is represented, and even beyond that which is being photographed. Bearing in mind this move away from photography’s indexical relationship to the world, a particular object within each image is not the main focus of attention.
This distance from what appears to be the ‘subject of’ a particular image, forms part of a theory of non-representation.
Natasha Lythgoe’s photography also employs an intellectual approach which is related to Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari’s concept of ‘deterritorialization’. This concept when applied to art, at the very least, becomes an exploration of not reducing work to the categories which make it make sense.
In Natasha Lythgoe’s proposal, nothing is defined - unless it is our perception of life, of nature, of the infinitesimal vibrations that run through our world.
Centre Iris... pour la photographie
238, rue Saint-Martin
75003, Paris
I would so love to see Natasha's exhibition! I love the photo that you have posted! I never cease to be amazed that it took me so long to even begin taking photos, let alone become such photography nut!! I can't even begin to say how much it has changed my life over the past five years! Thank you, mon amie, for sharing this and for all that you share every day! Hope you have a great week!
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Sylvia
An effective photo. Would love the opportunity to take a class with her. When do you return to Paris?
ReplyDeleteHello Genie:
ReplyDeleteHow indeed we too were in Paris for the opening of Natasha's exhibition and that you too could be there for it would all be such enormous fun. We are particularly interested in photography as an art form and so would be fascinated to see Natasha's work first hand. But, and we very much hope this, there may well be an opportunity one day.
In the meantime, we wish her every success.
The image of the bird cage is delightful. Hopefully I can see the exhibition this summer. Does Natasha give classes in the UK or in France?
ReplyDeleteBonne semaine
There's something about bird cages... this is a beautiful demonstration of Natasha's work. Thanks for introducing her to us, dear Genie! {And thank you SO much for solving the mystery of the Hotel de Paris ~ bless you!}
ReplyDeletewhat a wonderful photo to draw us in. i'd love to see this, too.
ReplyDeleteA talented artist!Thanks for all information about this exhibition!
ReplyDeleteLéia
felice inizio settimana a te...ciao
ReplyDeleteI think all photos are subject to the creativity of person who views them.
ReplyDeleteThanks so much Genie for introducing me via your website, and thanks for all the appreciative comments.
ReplyDeleteIn response to the questions about my teaching work. I run weekly and weekend courses in Brighton, and this year I began co-leading residential workshops in Le Marche in Italy. Our next workshop with available places is in the Autumn.
If you would like to keep updated about my teaching work and exhibition news, amongst other photographic info, I send out a newsletter about six times a year. Just email me via my website to ask to go on my database...
all the best,
Natasha
Et tant pis pour moi aussi! Beautiful work !!!
ReplyDeleteV
Thanks for sharing this information Genie,I've passed it on to a friend who is off to Paris tomorrow.
ReplyDeleteNatasha's images appear to have a real "edge"to them.....very interesting!
Ruby
I wish I was there for the vernissage! She sounds fantastic. :)
ReplyDeleteYes I love the birdcage shot too. What a lovely exhibition to visit. I wish I was there too.
ReplyDeleteBeautiful work.
ReplyDeleteThank you Genie for such kind words. I am new to blogging and it is a real thrill to hear from people all over the world! I will be checking out your blog frequently.
ReplyDeleteWonderful photography! And that is coming from a former professional photographer
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interesting, woth the trip !
ReplyDeleteanni