Barnard Gallery in conjunction with MOP6: Cape Town Photography, Film & New Media Biennale is pleased to present Glimpse, a solo exhibition of photographs by artist Alastair Whitton. Drawing on cultural sources including literature, history, art and the Bible, Alastair Whitton is known for conceptually engaging work that is essentially concerned with the ways in which we recognise, recall and navigate the world around us. He graduated from the Natal Technikon School of Art in 1994 and subsequently undertook post graduate studies at the Glasgow School of Art in Scotland. He is the recipient of a number of awards including a Volkskas Atelier Merit Award (1994), the Emma Smith Overseas Scholarship Award (1994) and a PUMA Grant (2009).
In 2009 he was selected to represent South Africa at the 8th African Photography Biennale. This touring exhibition, entitled Borders, featuring photography and video from more than 50 artists from the African continent premiered at the National Museum of Mali in Bamako. Antawan Byrd, Curatorial Assistant at the Centre for Contemporary Art, Lagos in his review of this pan-African exhibition highlighted Whitton’s work as showing “real critical and conceptual engagement” and arts writer Mary Corrigall described the work as a series of “astute statements … about the relationship between language and imagery that challenge our expectations of photography.”
Whitton’s recent project Glimpse is primarily a series a photographic ‘portraits’ of objects from a personal collection gathered and carried over an extended period. These images function as commemorative markers and explore the notion of the photograph as memorial. The evidence of a life; this collection of photographs chronicles aspects of love and loss, memory and geography and is essentially a meditation on transience and the passage of time.
The artist’s work has been featured in various survey exhibitions at venues including, amongst others the South African National Gallery; Johannesburg Art Gallery; Durban Art Museum; Contemporary Art Centre, Vilnius; Calouste Gulbenkian Museum, Lisbon and FotoMuseum, Antwerp. His artist’s book project Patmos and the War at Sea was recently selected from the Jack Ginsberg Collection for inclusion in Behind the Personal Art Library: Collectors Creating the Canon opening on October 11, 2014 at The Center for Book Arts in New York.
Whitton’s work is represented in various corporate and public collections including the Durban Art Museum; University of South Africa; Jack Ginsberg Collection; Ellerman House; South African Centre for Photography; National Museum of Mali and the Luciano Benetton Collection in Venice, Italy.