Weather Tonight: 8°c Light showers Morning: 13°c Light showers

Five of the Best...Exhibitions
  1. The Conversation Piece
  2. Points of view: Capturing the 19th Century in Photographs
  3. The Sacred Made Real
  4. Robert Mapplethorpe: A Season In Hell
  5. The Future is with Bloomberg New Contemporaries

Critics' Choice

Film

Andrew O'Hagan

quoteAn awesome and ridiculous film that leaves you thrilled beyond the point of your natural endurancequote

Andrew O'Hagan 2012 Theatre

Fiona Mountford

quoteThe show has suddenly become quite wonderful, and the galvanising factor is the terrific stage debut of Melanie Cquote

Fiona Mountford Blood Brothers Music

John Aizlewood

quoteThe British pop music industry may be eating itself but if Muse are the pick of what it can offer the world in 2010 then British music is in rude health indeedquote

John Aizlewood Muse

Reader reviews

Theatre

Rachel Dalziel

quoteI was smitten by both Gilberts enormous luxuriant moustache and the intelligence and nuance of this highly entertaining playquote

Gilbert Is Dead Restaurants

Raja, London

quoteI totally recommend Babbo to anyone who is looking for really good and traditional Italian foodquote

Babbo Music

Katy, London

quoteAlways been a fan but never seen them live. I was ecstatic to be part of this epic event. WOW!quote

Muse

Arts and Exhibition reviews London,

Taylor Wessing Photographic Portrait Prize 2008

Your rating
one startwo starthree starfour starfive star
Click on a star to rate
National Portrait Gallery
St Martin's Place, WC2H 0HE

Evening Standard rating Sue Steward's rating
Evening Standard rating Reader rating
 Add your review

Description: More than 50 selected and prize-winning portraits from amateur and established photographers in the open submission competition.


Phone: 0207312 2463
Website: www.npg.org.uk

Trains: Tube: Leicester Square; Rail: Charing Cross Overground network, Tube / Bus: 3, 6, 9, 11, 12, 13, 15, 23, 24, 29, 53, 77A, 88 Transport for London

Extra info: Food, Party Hire, Air Conditioning, Telephones, Pub

 
Please wait the page is loading extra content
  • Show details
  • Hide details
  • Show map
Close X

Directions

 

Rich talent for Portait Prize

By Sue Steward, Evening Standard  06.11.08
 
Portrait Prize

Top billing: Quints by Lottie Davies

Portrait Prize

Thinking about things: Murdoch Reflects by Tom Stoddart

Look here too

The 15th Photographic Portrait Prize coincides with the National Portrait Gallery’s Annie Leibovitz show. In the same gallery as some of the most expensive shoots in history are images by little-known photographers but both exhibitions span celebrity and moments with family and friends.

The image on the catalogue cover is Hendrik Kersten’s Bag, a beautiful portrait of a young woman’s head and shoulders floating against a black background, wearing a plastic bag headdress in the style of a Dutch Old Master’s model. Its position implies it won first prize but it was actually second to Lottie Davies’s Quints, which also makes art historical connections — to the late 19th-century Pictorialists. Davies’s naked mother of quintuplets lies on a bed cradling naked, pink babies. Was it the nakedness or the digital manipulation that led to Bag being so prominent?

No confusion over Catherine Balet’s third place-winning Ines Connected with Amina — two schoolgirls communicating via laptop and email in their room, a quiet study of the times, lit by their screens. In fourth place, Tom Stoddart captures a lugubrious monochrome moment in Murdoch Reflects — an incongruously vulnerable representation of one so powerful. Taking the new Godfrey Argent Prize, Vanessa Winship’s Sweet Nothings is a mesmerising portrait of two Turkish schoolgirls posing in matching school dresses.

This year’s crop of 60 is exceptionally rich in range, vitality, originality and internationalism. Particularly welcome is a focus on context, bringing more narrative but never allowing the mundane to dominate. Breaking any unwritten rules of youthfulness, this collection welcomes themes of ageing, illness and death in the portrait of spruced-up Auschwitz survivor Joel Redman. Of the celebrities, Platon Antoniou’s cold depiction of Putin for Time magazine is calculatedly revealing. Most fabulous is Chris Floyd’s close-up of the photo-phobic artist Steve McQueen, literally grinning and bearing it.

Closing the show, Silvia Amodio’s poster-sized contact-prints of 16 South African township inhabitants, Positive Faces, offers positive expressions in not-so positive lives — an uplifting end to an exhilarating collection.
Until 15 February 2009
(www.npg.org.uk, 020 7312 2463).

Related articles

More


Details are correct at the time of publication - please check with venue before booking.

 

Reader reviews (0)

 Add your review

No comments have so far been submitted.


Add your comment

 

Your email address will not be published

Terms and conditions make text area bigger You have  characters left.


 
 


 
 
London's Weather
Tonight
Light showers
8°c
Morning
Light showers
13°c
5 day forecast
 
 

Daily Mail Mail on Sunday Travel Mail This is Money Metro

Loot | Jobsite | Homes & property | London jobs | FindaProperty.com | Primelocation.com | Educate London | Holiday Villas