Sweet and Sound Presents… “New Moves” at Chapter One Gallery
TIM AND BARRY, MICHAEL OTERO, FENTON BAILEY, ROBERT FELIX,MARLON RABENREITHER, HENRY MACKAY-BULL
Sweet and Sound would like to invite you all to the private view of ‘New Moves’. This is our first curated exhibition where we will be exhibiting 5 of the most exciting emerging and established London photographers around:
TIM AND BARRY are a London-based photography duo who document a diverse spectrum of everyday experiences and people. They have also set the standard in contemporary photography with their documentation on the London grime scene and have done shoots for magazines such as i-D, Dazed and Confused, Super Super and were the creative force behind the photos for JC de Castelbajac’s Retrospective in Paris.
MICHAEL OTERO is a 22 year old photographer and was born and bred in London. In just over a year since he started taking photos he has worked with some of the best photographer’s and magazines around including Dazed and Confused, Platform and Vice.
FENTON BAILEY is a London-based photographer who’s main format is Polaroid. He mainly focuses on the the theme of female nudes among other things and has worked on a range of high profile shoots while assisting David Bailey with subjects varying from Gordon Brown to Sienna Miller.
ROBERT FELIX is a photographer from South London who spends his time capturing portraits of individuals that facinate him aesthetically and mentally. His work centers around London’s creative youth and enjoys manufacting moments that display the beauty of the mundane.
MARLON RABENREITHER is an American expatriate living in London since leaving Los Angeles. Rabenreither’s photographic work asks questions of himself and his generation as they reach adolescence in the haze of opportunity and recklessness sorrounding Hollywood Babylon.
HENRY MACKAY-BULL will be displaying two of his sculptures at “New Moves” in a way that will compliment the rest of the work at hand. He describes his work as “a sculptural questioning of display and function through tactile materials. Playing with themes of enigma, failure, and appropriation, the work aims to enact a dialogue, not answers. Taking reference from Arte Povera, Franz West, and Mundane Science Fiction, the sculptures present a distillation of culture.”
PRIVATE VIEW – 3rd December, 6pm-9pm
Free drinks
Prints for sale on request


