16.10.08 - 22.11.08 Sarah Moon - 1, 2, 3, 4, 5

03.09.08 - 11.10.08 Lucien Hervé

01.08.08 - 18.09.08 Jones Beach - Joseph Szabo

12.06.08 - 01.09.08 Miroslav Tichy

01.06.08 - 15.07.08 Ruth Orkin

17.04.08 - 07.06.08 The New York School

22.02.08 - 05.04.08 Mirella Ricciardi

06.12.07 - 26.01.08 The Bold and the Beautiful

04.10.07 - 01.12.07 Eyes Of An Island - Japanese Photogra...

12.09.07 - 29.09.07 LONDON - Matthew Pillsbury

02.07.07 - 04.08.07 Dr. Harold Edgerton

28.06.07 - 01.08.07 Alfred Eisenstaedt

01.06.07 - 27.06.07 Colin Jones - The Black House

26.04.07 - 17.06.07 Edward Quinn - A Day's Work

03.02.07 - 14.04.07 Fashion

01.02.07 - 10.03.07 Hunter S. Thompson - Gonzo

29.11.06 - 03.01.07 Peter Beard - Time's Up

26.10.06 - 03.11.06 Flip Shulke - Hero

12.10.06 - 14.11.06 David Parker – Sirens II

12.09.06 - 07.10.06 Emil Otto Hoppé - Hoppé's London

23.05.06 - 01.07.06 Botanicals

11.05.06 - 17.06.06 Miroslav Tichy & Jacques Henry Lartigue

01.09.05 - 01.10.05 Ken Griffiths - Three Gorges

23.04.05 - 31.05.05 Sarah Moon - Circus

08.03.05 - 06.04.05 Joseph Szabo - Teenage

24.11.04 - 31.01.05 Peter Beard - Living Sculpture

04.11.04 - 15.01.05 Matthew Pilsbury - Screen Lives

15.09.04 - 30.10.04 David Parker - Sirens

20.11.03 - 17.01.04 Photographs from the Bauhaus


For past exhibitions at Michael Hoppen Contemporary click here

Botanicals

23.05.06 - 01.07.06

Flora - Series X No.9

Flora - Series X No.9
© Bruce Rae

Hand coated salt print

5 x 4"

Botanicals, an exhibition of floral photographs to coincide with this years’ Chelsea Flower Show. The exhibition spans over a century of botanical photography from the early pioneering work of Fox Talbot, rare photogravures by Karl Blossfeldt, to the contemporary Robert Mapplethorpe, Nobuyoshi Araki and the first UK exhibition of striking new colour work by Ron van Dongen.

The flower has always inspired artists and photographers alike. The photographers in this exhibition all had different motivations for using the flower as their subject matter. Fox Talbot used flowers for their intricate 2-D shapes in his “talbotypes”, Karl Blossfeldt, just after the turn of the century, used organic forms to teach sculpture at the Berliner Kunsthochschule in Berlin. Blossfeldt's home-made camera magnified the forms up to 30 times, producing some of the most intricate botanical photography to date. More recently, Ron van Dongen’s photographs stem from his use of flowers in place of human sitters whilst experimenting with light and the tonal range of human skin. He found, instead, a deep understanding for the delicate nature of the flower captured in his contemplative photographs. The contemporary selection will also include the work of Robert Mapplethorpe and the sexually charged photography of Noboyashi Araki who held his first retrospective exhibition at the Barbican late last year.

Alternative content