
Exhibition
Photo Gloucester 2022
26 Aug 2022 – 29 Aug 2022
The Eastgate (upstairs)
Gloucester, United Kingdom
Hundred Heroines & Friends will be taking over the top floor of the Eastgate Shopping Centre and other venues in the city for a photography extravaganza. Visitors can expect a packed weekend of exhibitions, talks, screenings, and activities, with plenty of opportunities to get involved.
The line-up will include the interactive portraiture series Skin Deep by Ecuadorian artist Paola Paredes, which represents the dualities lived by LGBT+ people in Ecuador; Laxmi by Indian photographer Anita Khemka, which follows the story of the eponymous hijra rights activist; and the multimedia experience Astro 2030 by Mexican artist Mónica Alcázar Duarte, which propels audiences into an imaginative, cosmic future.
Alongside these internationally renowned artists, local photography collective Glossy will be hosting an ever-changing exhibition on the theme of ‘what it means to be a woman’, and graduates of the Hundred Heroines 2022 ‘Bootcamp’ programme will be showcasing their work on Photography & Protest.
A cohort of inspiring guest speakers will illuminate the festival programme. Talks include a keynote address from internationally acclaimed US experimental photographer Ellen Carey, a glance through ‘Quirky Vision’ from sassy US street photographer Meryl Meisler, and alternative recreations of popular fiction from Nigerian photographer Jenevieve Aken.
The festival also offers visitors a chance to explore Hundred Heroines’ growing permanent collection – a rich and unusual array of objects which provide a unique way to learn more about the work of outstanding women artists. The diverse range of artefacts, both humble and profound, recount the history of some of today’s most significant artworks.
Highlights include portraits by Madame Yevonde (1893 - 1975, UK), showing her natural flair for avant-garde techniques, as well as ephemera relating to Gloucester’s best-known photographer, Dorothy Wilding (1893 – 1976).
Details are on the charity’s website, hundredheroines.org