Karen Knorr Artist Talk: Transcultural Migrations for London Independant Photography

Karen Knorr Artist Talk: Transcultural Migrations for London Independant Photography

Thursday 27 February
London Metropolitan University (Map)
6:30 for 7pm prompt

LIPs Talk events are being held in partnership with the Sir John Cass School of Art, Architecture and Design at London Metropolitan University. They are informal and social, and open to LIP members and non-members alike, so bring your friends and be inspired by new perspectives – whether you’re a photographer or not.
Transcultural Migrations

Karen Knorr writes:- I will be contextualising my recent work these last 20 years in France ,India , China , Japan and the Middle East referencing narratives from myth and origin stories that have circulated and mixed with Western Fables, stories and narratives. I am interested in hybridity and the boundaries where East meets West . Animals figure in my work as ciphers of alterity that interrogate our human anthropocentric currently being challenged by groups such as Extinction Rebellion .

Karen Knorr (featured in the current BJP and exhibiting in a new exhibition on Masculinity at the Barbican) Her most well known work called Gentlemen (1981-1983) was photographed in Saint James’s clubs in London and investigated the patriarchal conservative values of Britain during the Falklands war. Karen ’s work developed a critical and playful dialogue with documentary photography using different visual and textual strategies to explore her chosen subject matter that ranges from the family and lifestyle to the animal and its representation in the museum context. Since 2012 Knorr has been visiting Japan to reflect on tradition within contemporary Japan referencing Ukiyo-e prints and folktales connected to Shinto and Buddhist heritage sites. Her first series entitled Monagatari, places animals and humans in temple sites found in Nara, Kyoto, Tokyo and Ohara. Her second related series  Karyukai is inspired by the Kano’s  36 portraits of poets also  referencing “bijinga” prints  of the 17th century. Women photographed by Karen Knorr were asked to compose waka and haiku reflecting on  their life  and dreams. Future projects are now developing in Italy, India, Japan and USA.

February – A talk for London Independent Photography