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Singapore

THE BIG PICTURE

September 14 – November 18, 2012

Henri Cartier-Bresson, Srinagar, Kashmir,1948, gelatin silver print, 16 x 20 inches. © The Estate of Henri Cartier-Bresson / Magnum Photos
Henri Cartier-Bresson, Behind the Gare, Saint Lazare, 1932, gelatin silver print, 16 x 20 inches. © The Estate of Henri Cartier-Bresson / Magnum Photos
Annie Leibovitz, David Bryne, Los Angeles, 1986, archival pigment print, 40 x 60 inches. © Annie Leibovitz
Edward Burtynsky, Rock of Ages #6, Abandoned Granite Quarry, Rock of Ages Quarry, Barre, Vermont, 1991, Chromogenic color print, 40 x 50 inches. © Edward Burtynsky
Len Prince, Ford Model V, New York City, 1991, platinum/palladium print, 29 x 24 inches. © Len Prince
Don Hong Oai, Waiting, Guilin, 1984, sepia-toned gelatin silver print, 11 x 14 inches. © Don Hong Oai
Robert Polidori, Vestibule, (73) AMI.01.009, Salles Empire, Aile du Midi - R.d.C, Château de Versailles, France, 1985, archival pigment inkjet print, 40 x 50 inches. © Robert Polidori
Lillian Bassman, Mary Jane Russell, New York, Harper’s Bazaar, 1950, gelatin silver print, 40 x 30 inches. © Lillian Bassman
Sebastião Salgado, Church Gate Station, Western Railroad Line, Bombay, India, 1995, gelatin silver print, 48 x 70 inches. © Sebastião Salgado/Amazonas Images
Ken Heyman, France, Pablo Picasso (31), 1954, silver gelatin print, 13 x 9 inches. © Ken Heyman
Chester Higgins, Jr., Muslim Woman, New York, 1990, platinum/palladium print, 18 x 14 inches. © Chester Higgins, Jr.
Ruth Bernhard, Classic Torso, 1952, selenium-toned gelatin silver print, 14 x 11  inches. © Ruth Bernhard
Steve McCurry, Blue City, India, 2010, C-type print on Fuji Archival Crystal Paper, 40 x 60 inches. © Steve McCurry
Barry Lategan, Twiggy, 1966, platinum/palladium print, 33x25 inches. © Barry Lategan
Elliott Erwitt, Provence, France 1955, gelatin silver print, 16 x 20 inches. © Elliott Erwitt

About This Exhibition

Sundaram Tagore Gallery is pleased to announce the opening of a new space at Singapore’s Gillman Barracks arts complex. The gallery, which specializes in contemporary painting, sculpture and photography from around the world, will open with a gala celebration on Friday, September 14. It is Sundaram Tagore’s fifth gallery. His other spaces are located in New York City (in Chelsea and on Madison Avenue), Hong Kong and Beverly Hills.

As the only New York gallery invited to open at Gillman Barracks, and with the largest space, measuring 4,200 square feet (390 square meters), Sundaram Tagore Gallery is expanding its global presence. Renowned for its support of cultural activities (including poetry and book readings, film screenings, and music and dance performances), the gallery staff looks forward to contributing to Singapore’s burgeoning art scene.

The gallery will open with a photography exhibition titled The Big Picture, which includes the work of world-renowned photographers Henri Cartier-Bresson, Annie Leibovitz, Robert Mapplethorpe and Sebastião Salgado, all of whom have fundamentally changed the way we see the world. Of late, photography has acquired a great deal of importance in the contemporary art world with more and more leading arts institutions in the West devoting resources and space to it. Sundaram Tagore will continue this trend at Gillman Barracks. Much of the work in The Big Picture has never before been shown in Singapore.

 

ABOUT SUNDARAM TAGORE

 

Sundaram Tagore was the first gallerist to focus exclusively on globalization by assembling a roster of artists from around the world. He is devoted to examining the exchange of ideas between Western and non-Western cultures. He has pioneered cross-cultural exchange in the contemporary arts by mounting exhibitions and hosting not-for-profit events that encourage spiritual, social and aesthetic dialogues.

A descendant of the influential Indian poet and Nobel Prize winner Rabindranath Tagore, he promotes East-West dialogue through contributions to numerous exhibitions as well as his eponymous galleries and their multicultural and multidisciplinary events. Having done his doctoral work at The University of Oxford, Tagore writes for numerous art publications. He was previously a director at Pace Wildenstein Gallery in New York and has advised and worked with many international organizations including The Peggy Guggenheim Foundation, Venice, Italy; the Metropolitan Museum of Art and The Museum of Modern Art, New York; and the United Nations. In addition to running five galleries, Tagore is also a filmmaker. His award-winning documentary 'The Poetics of Color: Natvar Bhavsar, An Artist’s Journey' premiered at New York’s MIAAC Film Festival in 2010.

ABOUT GILLMAN BARRACKS

 

Gillman Barracks is Asia’s up-and-coming destination for contemporary art. It will be distinguished as a vibrant center in Asia for the creation, exhibition and discussion of contemporary art. Named after British general Sir Webb Gillman, Gillman Barracks is set amid lush greenery and was once a stronghold to the First Battalion of the Middlesex Regiment. The conserved colonial barracks will house galleries and creative businesses, as well as the Centre for Contemporary Art (CCA) Singapore. The international galleries will feature diverse and ever-changing contemporary art exhibitions, while CCA Singapore will bolster the region’s visual arts landscape through its international artist residency, research and exhibition programs. By fostering cultural exchange and creation, showcasing the best and most innovative art of our times, as well as generating discourse and research, CCA Singapore will establish Singapore as an important center for contemporary art in Asia. More information on Gillman Barracks can be found at www.gillmanbarracks.com.

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