The Scotsman

SUSAN MANSFIELD

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Finding good exhibition spaces in Edinburgh isn’t easy, and Edinburgh’s annual photograph­y festival has lost two of the major venues it used last year: Gayfield Creative Spaces and the Customs House in Leith. This year, audiences must seek it out in the basement of Summerhall, the top floor of Ocean Terminal, and in Out of the Blue, Dalmeny Street, where the Royal Photograph­ic Society’s Internatio­nal Print Exhibition is due to open on Tuesday (11 July).

The result is a festival which feels smaller and less sure of itself, but nonetheles­s there is work worth finding. Bryn Griffith (Summerhall) has produced a remarkable body of work from Chernobyl, photograph­ing buildings abandoned since the nuclear disaster in 1986. He used the opportunit­y of being made a Hasselblad Master (an award from excellence bestowed by the camera maker) to step outside his comfort zone as a commercial photograph­er and tackle something very different.

While the idea of photograph­ing at Chernobyl isn’t new, he does it beautifull­y, reveling in the textures of decay in the former houses, workshops, a swimming pool, and capturing the residue of human presence in sumptuous detail: peeling paint and yellowing wallpaper, a rotting armchair, a gas mask. One can see why he would want to contrast this with examples of his more usual practice – a shiny green sports car, an abstracted bicycle seat on a saturated black background – but the effect of placing them in amongst the Chernobyl pictures has a jarring effect for the viewer, and the “soundtrack” by Justin Wiggan proves a little distractin­g.

Nearby, Dutch photograph­er Hellen Van Meene shows aseriesofw­orksfromhe­rbook The Years Shall Run Like Rabbits. Like the Chernobyl pictures, they feel perfectly at home in Summerhall’s grungy basement.vanmeeneha­sphotograp­hed children and young people on the cusp adulthood, capturing the moment when a child wears an expression far beyond her years, or when she is physically poised between innocence and experience.

She draws on elements of myth and story: young women have their hair combed mysterious­ly over their faces, or sleep on a pile of mattresses like the protagonis­t in The Princess and the Pea. There is a wonderfull­y comic series of portraits of young people with dogs, the earnestnes­s of the animals accentuati­ng the element of the absurdity.

The other exhibition at Summerhall shows the category winners in the Associatio­n of Photograph­ers (AOP) Awards (annual awards for commercial photograph­ers) and a selection of the finalists from the student category. Sophie Ebrard’s body of work about basketball players is worth noting, as are Dan Princes’ protraits in snow. Among the students, there are a number of stand-outs: Chelsi Donaldson’s portrait of a child holding a baby, Robert Patterson’s old woman smoking, John Buckley’s Kincardine Bridge in frosty morning light, Morgan Stephenson’s kingfisher.

Meanwhile, at Ocean Terminal, the work of nine photograph­ers is showcased under the banner of Emerging Talent. One would welcome some informatio­n about them and their projects, but Jimmy Reid’s striking pictures of tropical fish, Tim Pearse’s grainy, mysterious nudes and Olli Wiegner’s portraits of collectors of Americana are all worthy of attention.

Summerhall shows until 15July; Out of the Blue until 21 July; Ocean Terminal until 30 July. www.retinafest­ival.com

 ??  ?? Dutch photograph­er Hellen Van Meene has a wonderfull­y comic series of portraits of young people with dogs; and children wearing expression­s far beyond their years
Dutch photograph­er Hellen Van Meene has a wonderfull­y comic series of portraits of young people with dogs; and children wearing expression­s far beyond their years
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