sign up
login   password  artist portfolio  gallery portfolio  MYabsolutearts 
absolutearts.com
 
help   |  media kit   |  about us   |  services   |  contact  
  HOME     .     REGISTER     .     BUY ART     .     SEARCH     .     ART TRENDS     .     COLLECT ART     .     RESEARCH     .     READ ARTSNEWS   . 
John Cohen's Main Portfolio Page
Return to Previous Page

Artist Information:
John Cohen
Nueva Andalucia,
Spain
Member Since: Nov 2009

send an email contact artist

Photo of John Cohen, Artist



biographybiography
guestbookguestbook
videosvideos
blogsblogs
event photosevent photos
slide showsslide shows
online showsonline shows
join mailinglistjoin mailinglist
accepted payment methodsaccepted payments
Artist Media:
Digital Art (1)
Photography Color (5)
Artist Statement:
PAINTING WITH LIGHT
'Painting with light' is all
about photographing projected
images that surprisingly are
not often projected on to a
screen. John discovered the
projector really is a magical
magic lantern! Computers and
digital images were unknown at
the time when some of his
finest pictures were created
(some ...

Further Information
Artist Exhibitions:
One-Man Exhibitions
(listed in order of events)

Wall of Colour. Kodak House
London.

Jacey Gallery. Marble Arch
London.

Belgrade Theatre. Coventry.

Midland Arts Centre.
Birmingham.

National Film Theatre.
Manchester.

Westcott Art Centre.
Dorking.

Surrey University. Surrey.

National Film Theatre.
London.

Lonsdale Hands Organisation.
Commonwealth House London.

National Film Theatre. ...

Further Information
Artist Galleries:
http://www.artist-john-cohen.ne
t
http://www.artspecifier.com/hom
epage.php?userid=216
http://www.facebook.com/JNCPain
tingwithLight?ref=mf
http://www.flickr.com/photos/jo
hn_n_cohen/
http://rhizome.org/profiles/joh
nnevillecohen/
http://www.worldphoto.org/profi
le/42645/
http://www.myartspace.com/artis
tInfo.do?populatinglist=home&su
bscriberid=luxl28hcxa8cqjo1
...

Further Information
Artist Reviews:

The London Salon Trophy
The first time this much
coveted international trophy
had ever been awarded for a
colour photograph was in 1967.
Presented to John N. Cohen
for his creation 'Spirit of
Spring' he was also the
youngest member ever to have
received it.

Reviews & Exhibitions

A small selection...

Further Information
Collections:
Coming Soon!
Commissions:
Coming Soon!

John Cohen Biography:

Biographical information for John Cohen can be found below. The artist may choose what information to display. Sometimes the artist chooses not to display personal information to the general public.
Age
71
 
Gender Male
 
Status Married
 
Children 2
 
Religion not provided
 
Education Self Taught
 
Hobbies / Interests Fascinated by good design, craftsmanship, and originality. Particularly fond of Asian antiques, classic cars, skiing, salsa dancing.
 
Favorite Artistic Medium Photography Color
 
Favorite Arthistory Movement not provided
 
Favorite Visual Artist not provided
 
Favorite Work of Art not provided
 
Biggest Artistic Inspiration not provided
 
Why Did You Become An Artist not provided
 
Your Personal Biography Introduction by Sir George F. Pollock Bt., M.A., F.R.P.S., F.R.S.A.

Referring to John's publication 'The Magic Lantern'

Fashions exist in art and in ideas quite as much as in women's clothes and in the world of the mind they are much more dangerous, for instead of being put forward frankly as fashions they are presented as the new truth.

How refreshing then, how salutary, how encouraging, to find a man who is prepared laboriously to think things out for himself, who will work alone for years to develop his own vision, his own technique, and who will not allow himself to be deflected from his chosen path by so-called experts speaking an esoteric language directed only at in-groups and which, as Anna Russell puts it 'leave the average person as befogged as before.''

In photography, as in so many other fields, it is the loners who break the trail, who make the path that others can follow. They are few; yet their originality is seen later to have led them straight into the mainstream whilst the work of others, sometimes more immediately successful, is relegated to a mere expression of the fashion of the times.

John Cohen is very definitely a loner. If he had not been, he could never have produced the charming, sentimental, yet so very personal photographs in this book. For in an age of tension and violence, when all of us are continually bombarded by images of horror, to make photographs, solely for pleasure, and expressing the gentler aspects of life, is to court the accusation of being escapist, of deliberately ignoring the allegedly sole business of the photographer, which is said to be realism and reportage, to be a mirror of the times.

In all his work John Cohen emphatically refuses to be tied down by such notions. He insists on being himself, and in so doing he strikes a blow for the freedom of the individual, and for the freedom of photography. With every photograph he says: 'there is more to life than dustbins and death, than weariness and war; even in an overcrowded world there is room, and a need, for sweetness and light.''

Light! That narrow band in the energy spectrum, without which all life on earth would perish!

As Lord Kenneth Clark reminds us 'From Dante to Goethe, all the greatest exponents of civilisation have been obsessed with light.' This obsession is no stranger to photographers.

Indeed, since the photographic image is made by the action of light, truth to light is truth to the medium of photography! All John Cohen's photographs are made, simply and solely, by the use of light. His magic is the magic of the luminous, his poetry is that of the chiaroscuro.

The attractions of his work is all the greater for the purity of the photographic technique, and its appeal all the more universal for being couched in an imagery common to all men and intelligible to all.

From early beginnings in 1963, John Cohen's work soon attracted attention. An article in the magazine 'Photography' in 1964, acceptance in the London Salon of Photography in 1965, the principal trophy there in 1967: all were encouraging signs. But it was his one-man show at the 'Wall of Colour,' Kodak which set the seal of success and of future development on his work; for this was the first such exhibition which Kodak had given to an amateur. It led to exhibitions in the Edinburgh Festival 1968, in the Coliseum and in Grand Central Station, New York, in the National Film Theatre, London, and in many worthwhile venues in the provinces.

But this portfolio is more, much more, than a one-man show, fascinating though this aspect is in itself. It is also a 'how-to-do-it' presentation. And this part is immensely useful to all who feel inclined to use their camera imaginatively. For it turns out that far from needing elaborate and expensive apparatus to produce his delightful and mysterious results, John Cohen uses only bits and pieces which can be bought for modest sums anywhere, or may already be lying about at home. My goodness, anyone can do it! Well, anyone that is, who is gifted with imagination, persistence and patience - for simple though the means may be, it is clear that the author himself has devoted time and thought and effort to each of his pictures. But once again, how good to find someone willing to reveal a trade secret for the sake of the spread of the art.

In this article, John Cohen extends the boundaries of the possible in photography, and shows us all how we can do so too. What more valuable service could he render to what Sir John Rotherstein has called 'the dominant and fascinating and only folk art of the twentieth century?'

THE MAGIC LANTERN
http://www.jncohen.net/photmagi/artic1.htm
 


    BUY   .   JOIN   .   COLLECT   .   RESEARCH   .   READ  .   DISCUSS  
    Copyright 1995-2012. World Wide Arts Resources Corporation. All rights reserved






1