Mark van den Brink - Uitnodigingsbeeld expo 2022

Mark van den Brink

The Minox Files

10/09/2022

29/10/2022

Gallery FIFTY ONE TOO

Opening: Saturday September 10th 2022 from 2 – 6 pm
In the presence of the artist!

Gallery FIFTY ONE is pleased to announce its representation of Dutch photographer Mark van den Brink (°1965). In his first exhibition at the gallery – ‘The Minox Files’ – van den Brink presents a unique visual diary he created using a small spy camera. Started in the late 1990s, this body of work continues to evolve to this day.

In 2021 an eponymous book about this series was published; a beautiful postcard-sized edition bringing together a selection of 400 photographs, all taken between 1994 and 2005.

Read the full press release here.
View a full overview of the exhibited works here.

Installation view: Mark van den Brink - The Minox Files, Gallery FIFTY ONE, Antwerp (10/09/2022 - 29/10/2022)
Installation view: Mark van den Brink - The Minox Files, Gallery FIFTY ONE, Antwerp (10/09/2022 - 29/10/2022)
Installation view: Mark van den Brink - The Minox Files, Gallery FIFTY ONE, Antwerp (10/09/2022 - 29/10/2022)

Mark van den Brink

Mark van den Brink studied photography at the Gerrit Rietveld Academy in Amsterdam from which he graduated in 1996. He continued to develop himself as a free lance photographer but his autonomous projects are the most important part of his work. His projects arise on his journeys inland and to foreign countries. His pictures are characterized by the use of a small spy camera, which he occasionally combines with a spyglass.

biography

Born in Witmarsum, NL in 1965
Lives and works in Amsterdam, NL

Mark van den Brink - 03380.98.nyc, 1998
Mark van den Brink - 02177.97.rdam, 1997
Mark van den Brink - 02177.97.rdam, 1997, Fine Art Inkjet Print, 10 x 13,5 cm

The MINOX FILES is a photography project that began in 1997 and continues to evolve. All photographs have been made with an analog Minox Spy camera, sometimes coupled with binoculars. This subminiature camera (negative size 8x11mm) was perfect for carrying and photographing on a daily basis.

Van den Brink first noticed the German mini-camera in 1994 in Robert Altman’s film ‘Prêt-à-Porter’, in which the Minox is used to secretly take pictures that would cause scandal. In 1996, during his last year as a student of photography at the Gerrit Rietveld Academy in Amsterdam, van den Brink came across a Minox camera in a second-hand shop and welcomed it as an alternative to the large reflex camera he dragged around at the time. The small design suited the way he wanted to shoot; strolling around and uninhibitedly letting things come to him. Since the required film cassettes were only available at extortionate prices, van den Brink created a cheaper alternative by cutting films for large format cameras into small strips that fitted in his Minox. Since the cutting had to be done in the dark, the film is often scratched; darkroom imperfections that the artist gratefully embraced.

Using the Minox, van den Brink, like a voyeur, wanted to inconspicuously photograph the world around him. The camera allowed him freedom of movement and therefore – like a ‘smartphone avant la lettre’ – to shoot quickly and on a daily basis. The resulting pictures – both in colour as in black-and-white – take the viewer along with him on his many walks through parks, forests, along the Meuse river and on his aimless wanderings in the Alps, where he first experimented with mounting binoculars and even a telescope on his miniature camera. We also see street scenes, depictions of banal objects and still lives and numerous accounts of everyday life in densely populated cities like Amsterdam, Paris and New York. These urban photographs are interspersed with very intimate images and nude portraits that give an insight into the artist’s personal life. Distance and intimacy are the two poles between which his images move.

Mark van den Brink - 07525.01.alps, 2001
Mark van den Brink - 07525.01.alps, 2001, Fine Art Inkjet Print, 10 x 13,5 cm
Mark van den Brink - 00008.94.adam, 1994
Mark van den Brink - 00008.94.adam, 1994, Gelatin Silver Print, 10 x 13,5 cm

Uninhibited, fleetingly and working in an experimental manner, a style of poetic, diary-like images emerged. Because of their blur, flat perspective and other technical imperfections due to the limits of the camera, the photos possess a timeless and dreamlike quality. Van den Brink’s unique signature of gloriously ‘imperfect’ images can be considered as an extension of his way of looking at the world. But although this vision is very specific to the artist – averse to any influences – when looked at in its entirety, ’The Minox Files’ immediately evokes a broad range of associations with the work of many well-known names from art history. Very diverse examples come to mind; from legendary street photographers as Garry Winogrand, Robert Frank and Lee Friedlander, to the intimate erotic snapshots of fellow Dutchman Ed van der Elsken. The colour images naturally bring to mind the work of colour pioneer and van den Brink’s photographic hero William Eggleston. The latter’s democratic way of looking at the world by photographing everyday objects and scenes and his seemingly aimless wanderings, is related to van den Brink’s vision. Van den Brink’s alp studies, on the other hand, possess formal links with Gerhard Richter’s serial landscape pictures that are part of the project ‘Atlas’; a collection of photographs, newspaper cuttings and sketches that the German artist has been assembling since the mid 1960s and arranged on loose sheets of paper. Just as in ‘The Minox Files’, in ‘Atlas’ Richter’s life and art interrelate in a multilayered way; nature pictures are lined up with intimate family photographs, etc. Finally, van den Brink’s work can be associated to that of famous Japanese photographer Issei Suda. The latter used the Minox intensively in the early 1990s to capture the different aspects of his life in Tokyo and lovingly described the mini camera as ‘The Mechanical Retina on My Fingertips’.

Today, Van den Brink’s archive consists of more than 15,000 photographs, filed like postcards in drawers and indexed by number, date and place. This way of archiving dictates both format and presentation of the photographs, yielding a clear grid. Like a puzzle with endless combinations, the archive has a life of its own.

Mark van den Brink - 11239.03.nyc, 2003
Mark van den Brink - 11239.03.nyc, 2003, Fine Art Inkjet Print, 10 x 13,5 cm
Mark van den Brink - 00142.94.adam, 1994
Mark van den Brink - 00142.94.adam, 1994, Gelatin Silver Print, 10 x 13,5 cm
Mark van den Brink - 02482.98.nyc, 1998
Mark van den Brink - 02482.98.nyc, 1998, Gelatin Silver Print, 10 x 13,5 cm
Mark van den Brink - 11723.03.nyc, 2003
Mark van den Brink - 11723.03.nyc, 2003, Fine Art Inkjet Print, 10 x 13,5 cm
Mark van den Brink - 02568.98.nyc, 1998
Mark van den Brink - 02568.98.nyc, 1998, Gelatin Silver Print, 10 x 13,5 cm
Mark van den Brink - 03144.98.nyc, 1998
Mark van den Brink - 03144.98.nyc, 1998, Gelatin Silver Print, 10 x 13,5 cm
Mark van den Brink - 11322.03.adam, 2003
Mark van den Brink - 11322.03.adam, 2003, Gelatin Silver Print, 10 x 13,5 cm
Mark van den Brink - 06271.00.paris, 2000
Mark van den Brink - 06271.00.paris, 2000, Fine Art Inkjet Print, 10 x 13,5 cm
Mark van den Brink - 10.963.03.nyc, 2003
Mark van den Brink - 10.963.03.nyc, 2003, Fine Art Inkjet Print, 10 x 13,5 cm
Mark van den Brink - 03369.98.nyc, 1998
Mark van den Brink - 03369.98.nyc, 1998, Gelatin Silver Print, 10 x 13,5 cm
Mark van den Brink - 08768.01.alps, 2001
Mark van den Brink - 08768.01.alps, 2001, Gelatin Silver Print, 10 x 13,5 cm
Mark van den Brink - 07941.01.alps, 2001
Mark van den Brink - 07941.01.alps, 2001, Gelatin Silver Print, 10 x 13,5 cm
Mark van den Brink - 07403.00.paris, 2000
Mark van den Brink - 07403.00.paris, 2000, Gelatin Silver Print, 10 x 13,5 cm
Mark van den Brink - 01369.97.bel, 1997
Mark van den Brink - 01369.97.bel, 1997, Gelatin Silver Print, 10 x 13,5 cm
Mark van den Brink - 06090.00.paris, 2000
Mark van den Brink - 06090.00.paris, 2000, Gelatin Silver Print, 10 x 13,5 cm
Mark van den Brink - 05027.00.paris, 2000
Mark van den Brink - 05027.00.paris, 2000, Fine Art Inkjet Print, 10 x 13,5 cm
Mark van den Brink - 03156.98.tur, 2001
Mark van den Brink - 03156.98.tur, 2001, Fine Art Inkjet Print, 10 x 13,5 cm
Mark van den Brink - 00487.95.ita, 1995
Mark van den Brink - 00487.95.ita, 1995, Gelatin Silver Print, 10 x 13,5 cm
Mark van den Brink - 01409.97.bel, 1997
Mark van den Brink - 01409.97.bel, 1997, Gelatin Silver Print, 10 x 13,5 cm
Mark van den Brink - 02143.97.bel, 1997
Mark van den Brink - 02143.97.bel, 1997, Gelatin Silver Print, 10 x 13,5 cm
Mark van den Brink - 05536.00.paris, 2000
Mark van den Brink - 05536.00.paris, 2000, Gelatin Silver Print, 10 x 13,5 cm
Mark van den Brink - 11174.03.nyc, 2003
Mark van den Brink - 11174.03.nyc, 2003, Gelatin Silver Print, 10 x 13,5 cm
Mark van den Brink - 08920.01.adam, 2001
Mark van den Brink - 08920.01.adam, 2001, Gelatin Silver Print, 10 x 13,5 cm
Mark van den Brink - 12907.04.adam, 2004
Mark van den Brink - 12907.04.adam, 2004, Fine Art Inkjet Print, 10 x 13,5 cm