TEN YEARS OF THE PHOTOCOPY CLUB EXHIBITION, 2021, LONDON: SOMEONES RUBBISH


Excited tonight my Rubbish will be included @thephotocopyclub 10-year anniversary exhibition along with 237 other brilliant photographers. It was lots of fun creating the prints and submitting to this and has made me think of new ways to get ‘Someone’s Rubbish’ out there. It’s a good start! I love the whole idea behind the photocopy club, making opportunities like this available to photographers, taking some of the financial concerns away, cheap prints, and up on walls.

Curated by @luckygoldteeth thank Matt!

Tonight 6pm / 9pm. The theatre courtyard, Green Rooms, 36 abatement Row, London, EC2A 3HH. RSVP via link in my stories. https://thephotocopyclub.com/

@thephotocopyclub TPC has exhibited at the LAABF and the NYABF as well as OFFPRINT London and the Berlin Miss Read Bookfair. They have worked with The Photographers Gallery, Magnum Photos, Tate Modern, Photoworks, Woohoo Space, Joberg Photo School, Adidas, UCA, John Doe, Margret, Dr. Martens, Doomed Gallery, Hart Club, Giant Triplets, and a variety of photography festivals through the world.

#someonesrubbish #eggs #lockdowneggs #myrubbish #costofliving #photocopyclub #chloejuno #someonesrubbishchloejuno #streetmuseum #lifenow

https://thephotocopyclub.com/

The Photocopy club started as a simple idea. To exhibit photographers work at as low a cost as possible for the photographer.

With Photography submission programmes having high entrance fees, we wanted come up with a way that levelled the playing field and made exhibiting photography accessible to everyone.

Starting in 2011 in Brighton, founder Matt Martin came up with the idea of people submitting their work as Black and White Photocopies. No theme, no size restrictions. The work just had to be printed on a photocopier in Black and White.

We started with 6 bi -monthly exhibitions between Brighton and London, with the first in Brighton in November 2011. The project exploded, with photography being sent from across the globe. The 1st exhibition received over 300 photocopy photographs from 60 photographers.

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