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FORMAT21: QUAD Gallery
Virtual Exhibition

QUAD GALLERY
Market Place, Derby, DE1 3AS

Brian Griffin: Black Country Dada, Volume II: 1969 - 1990 QUAD Gallery Installation View, Photo: V21 Artspace © The Artists, Courtesy Format International Photography Festival and QUAD Gallery 3D Virtual Exhibition Tour

Brian Griffin: Black Country Dada, Volume II: 1969 - 1990
QUAD Gallery

Installation View, Photo: V21 Artspace
© The Artists, Courtesy Format International Photography Festival and QUAD Gallery
3D Virtual Exhibition Tour

Brian Griffin: Black Country Dada, Volume II: 1969 - 1990

I have written my autobiography … yes, I have written it myself! A hardback book of over 200 pages, with an insightful introduction by W. M. Hunt. It tells truthfully what it was like to survive and make ones way as a photographer in Britain back then. I tell the story through my personal experience of those tough times.

Those were analogue days! Growing up amongst the factories of the Black Country, studying photography in Manchester alongside my friends Daniel Meadows and Martin Parr, and then with trepidation going down to London to make a living as a photographer in the early 1970’s.

In popular recollection, the 1970’s have gone down as the dark ages; Britain’s gloomiest period since the second world war, was set between Harold Wilson’s ‘swinging sixties’ and Margaret Thatcher’s divisive eighties. What was it like to be a young photographer then?

By the end of the 1980’s my photography was known throughout the world. How did I do it? What did I go through? It’s all in this book that tells the story warts and all.

Zou Jingyao: Famous Internet Sites QUAD Gallery Installation View, Photo: V21 Artspace © The Artists, Courtesy Format International Photography Festival and QUAD Gallery 3D Virtual Exhibition Tour

Zou Jingyao: Famous Internet Sites
QUAD Gallery

Installation View, Photo: V21 Artspace
© The Artists, Courtesy Format International Photography Festival and QUAD Gallery
3D Virtual Exhibition Tour

Zou Jingyao: Famous Internet Sites

The term ‘online sensation’ has become a universal saying that has been used in almost every aspect of our lives in recent times. Originally, it referred to and meant “gaining sudden popularity” on the internet. Now it refers to hot and novel trends and places including but not restricted to cities, tourist attractions and food. As people’s interest grows in taking a snapshot (usually on their phones) at sites made famous by the internet, the phenomenon of internet famous exhibitions has in turn become an important means for people and organisations to attract public attention and gain media coverage.

The exhibition Famous Internet Sites by artist Zou Jingyao, curated by Lou Dawei, focuses on places suddenly made famous by the internet, featuring what could also be described as ‘flash mob exhibitions’. This term, coined overseas (that is, outside of China) is a type of immersive exhibition held for recreational aims.

By using Macron-colored installations, mirrors, and balloons combined with VR, projections and other new media tools, it creates a fantasy world consisting of sound, light and electricity. This kind of exhibition is mostly held in Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou and Shenzhen and occasionally makes its way into other big cities.

Most often, it is held in large comprehensive shopping malls located in key business zones, on squares where there is a large visitor flow or streets with busy businesses. Visitors – who come to these exhibitions in a seemingly endless stream – are usually driven by one purpose: take a snap on their phones and share it on social media.

In 2018 Zou Jingyao began to show an interest in the phenomenon of people “visiting famous internet sites”. Since then, he has collected information on internet-famous exhibitions through various channels and recorded more than 30 exhibitions in Beijing, Shanghai and other major cities in the form of pictures, video or sound. In addition to this he also viewed many other exhibitions on social media platforms.

The exhibition Famous Internet Sites by artist Zou Jingyao, curated by Lou Dawei was awarded the Lishui/FORMAT Award 2019, selected by Louise Fedotov-Clements and Laura O’Leary as part of FORMAT’s ongoing partnership with Lishui International Photography Festival, China.


Find out more: Black Country Dada | Famous Internet Sites
From
19th May 2021 to 5th September 2021


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