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Source Magazine Vol. 5 No. 2

Source Magazine Vol. 5 No. 2Source
Autumn 1998: Vol. 5, No. 2
English

Edited by John DuncanPeter Neill, Richard West and Jim Maginn.

 

Softcover
38 pages
295 x 210 mm
1998
ISSN 13692224

 

This issue of Source magazine contains a piece on Patrick McCoy‘s (NI, M) The People’s Taxis which depicts passengers in the Catholic ‘Black Taxis’ firm cars around the Falls Road in West Belfast, a piece on the increase in heroin addiction throughout Dublin called Celtic Tiger on Smack which accompanies photographs by Ronnie Close (M) as well as a review of Losing Ground by Donovan Wylie (NI, M), writing on contemporary German photography and vegetable and flower photography. The cover photograph is by Patrick McCoy.

Artists and writers featured in this issue of Source magazine includes work by Patrick McCoy (NI, M), Ronnie Close (M), Donovan Wylie (NI, M), Gareth McConnell (NI, M), James Small (GB, M), Karl Blosfeldt (DE, M), Charles Jones (GB, M), Wenzel Schürmann (DE, M), Ulf Erdmann Ziegler (DE, M), Katharina Bosse (FI, F), Frederike Helling (DE, F), Armin Smailovic (DE, M), Andre Zelck (DE, M), Eva Leitolf (DE, M), Ulrike Myrzik (DE, F), Manfred Jarisch (DE, M), Ulrike Frömel (DE, F), Nicholas Allen (NI, M), Siún Hanrahan (IE, F) Richard West (NI, M), John Pringle (NI, M), Colin Darke (NI, M), Nessa O’Mahony (IE, F) and Padraig Murphy (IE, M).

Editorial
To coincide with their forthcoming exhibition at The Gallery of Photography in Dublin we feature work by Patrick McCoy and Garreth McConnell. McCoy’s images were made whilst enduring the cramped conditions of working with camera and tripod in the back of West Belfast’s Black Taxis. The project conceived as ‘an antidote to the spectacular images produced by visiting foreign photojournalists’ examines a different aspect of life on the Falls Road. In McConnell’s work the faces that emerge from the dark form a group of portraits that explores the artist’s ongoing fascination with those on the edge of society. This follows on from his project exploring anti-social behaviour that looked at ‘punishment beatings’ and drug abuse, which will be on show at the gallery.

Looking at the drug problem in Dublin Ronnie Close and Johnny Connolly investigate the problems heroine addiction behind the glossy image of Ireland’s booming Celtic tiger economy. The work explores the reactions of the government and the solutions sought by local communities.

Eva Leitolf’s images ‘Searching for evidence in Rostock, Thale, Solingen and Bielefeld’ record the aftermaths of racist arson attacks in Germany. The image of a news crew outside a blackened house has all too familiar resonances with the murder of the Quinn brothers in July.

James Small, Professor of Botany at Queen’s University from the 1920’s and Karl Blossfeldt, working at the same time in Germany, produced photographic studies of plants as teaching materials respectively for their Botany and Industrial Design students. Siún Hanrahan’s article investigates the similarities and differences between their work. Blossfeld’s ‘objective’ photographs went on to influence a generation of contemporary photographers. The lesser known archive of James Small left for so long on the dusty shelves of Queen’s University has been rescued from obscurity through its transformation into an exhibition by The Ulster Museum. Small’s work can now take its place in the discussion and debate surrounding Irish photography.

Richard West reviews the new publication of plant images by the previously unknown photographer and gardener Charles Jones. A large quantity of his gold toned gelatin prints made between 1895 and 1910 were recently discovered by a collector at a market stall. His exact motivation remains a mystery. His relatives however recall that his glass plate negatives ended up sheltering his plants in the early part of the growing season.

On behalf of those who work on the magazine I would like to dedicate this issue to the memory of our dear friend Patrick McCoy.

— John Duncan
(source: https://www.source.ie/archive/issue16/is16editorial.php)

About the Magazine
Source is a quarterly photography magazine, available in print and as a digital edition, published in Belfast, Northern Ireland. They publish emerging photographic work and engage with the latest in contemporary photography through news, thoughtful features and reviews of the latest exhibitions and books from Ireland and the UK. Their website brings together an archive of writing and pictures from the magazine alongside current features.
source.ie
(source: https://www.source.ie/main/about.php)

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