Past Events
Saturday 20 July
Join Adam Broomberg for a discussion about Anchor in the Landscape, a book that brings together studied, absorbing portraits of olive trees in Palestine, which act as fixed points in a historic and transforming landscape that is constantly disputed, altered, and destroyed. Issa Amro will be joining the conversation online from Hebron.
Friday 5 July
Adam Broomberg and Rafael Gonzalez will be signing copies of Anchor in the Landscape, a book that depicts the olive tree as a symbol of occupation and resistance in Palestine, bearing witness to a landscape that is increasingly destroyed.
Wednesday 10 July
Adam Broomberg and Rafael Gonzalez will be in conversation with Issa Amro to mark the launch of Anchor in the Landscape, a book that brings together studied, absorbing portraits of olive trees in Palestine which act as fixed points in a historic and transforming landscape that is constantly disputed, altered, and destroyed.
Thursday 11 July
To mark the launch of Little Joe: A book about queers and cinema, mostly, editor Sam Ashby will be in conversation with writer and director Andrew Haigh (All of Us Strangers, 45 Years, Weekend). Join us to celebrate this new collected edition of the cult periodical that challenges the mainstream narrative of film history with a rebellious, queer perspective. The event will include a screening of short films by Shu Lea Cheang and Mike Kuchar, and readings from contributors.
Tuesday 30 July
Editor Charlotte Flint will be in conversation with curator Alona Pardo for the launch of Tee A. Corinne: A forest fire between us, an ambitious publication that uncovers Tee A. Corinne’s radical and expansive photographic practice.
Wednesday 24 January – Friday 16 March
Justine Kurland’s This Train presents images from road trips taken with her young son across the United States between 2005 and 2011. Revisiting these images, Kurland upends the conventional family album to tell a story of queer motherhood and deconstructs the familiar mythology of the American railroad as a pioneering symbol of modernity. To coincide with the release of This Train in March, photographs from the book will be exhibited at Higher Pictures.