Feuteu

Feuteu An online gallery specialising in Contemporary Photography, Editions & Photo-based Contemporary Art.

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Andy Warhol began creating images of Elizabeth Taylor in the 1960s, at the height of the actress’s career. Taylor was al...
03/10/2025

Andy Warhol began creating images of Elizabeth Taylor in the 1960s, at the height of the actress’s career. Taylor was already one of the most acclaimed performers at the time, but her celebrity status was cemented by the drama surrounding her tumultuous romantic relationships and a bout of pneumonia that pushed her to the brink of death. Taylor was an ideal subject for Warhol: She possessed a similar combination of success, beauty, and tragedy as did Marilyn Monroe. Warhol made silkscreen paintings of Taylor dressed for her roles in National Velvet and Cleopatra, but his best-known image of Taylor, Liz (1964), is based on a closely-cropped promotional photograph for Butterfield 8. Like his famous portraits of Monroe, Warhol adds bold colour to Taylor’s face to represent her makeup, although this embellishment often looks more garish than glamorous.

According to Art Critic Jerry Saltz, “Andy loved women and the power of the feminine, and the women he loved most and best were Marilyn, Jackie and Liz.”

The second image pictured is a photograph of Liz Taylor with Andy Warhol, taken by Warhol’s good friend and well-known photographer Christopher Makos.

A selection of cinematic prints from Miles Aldridge’s portfolio ‘Carousel’
30/09/2025

A selection of cinematic prints from Miles Aldridge’s portfolio ‘Carousel’


Barbara Kruger’s ‘Another Day. Another Night.’ at The Guggenheim Museum Bilbao earlier this month.
23/09/2025

Barbara Kruger’s ‘Another Day. Another Night.’ at The Guggenheim Museum Bilbao earlier this month.

To mark 100 years of The New Yorker, contemporary photographers were invited to reinterpret classic covers from its arch...
19/09/2025

To mark 100 years of The New Yorker, contemporary photographers were invited to reinterpret classic covers from its archives as photographic portraits.

1. Marilyn Minter ()
2. Alex Prager ()
3. Ryan Mcginley ()
4. Awol Erizku ()
5. Camila Falquez
6. Collier Schorr ()

Behind the scenes in Robert Longo’s studio. Photos by  for  Robert Longo’s monumental solo exhibition “The Weight of Hop...
18/09/2025

Behind the scenes in Robert Longo’s studio.
Photos by for

Robert Longo’s monumental solo exhibition “The Weight of Hope” is now open at New York.

‘AFTERMATH: Images from 9/11’ documents the devastation and reconstruction of the World Trade Center through images by J...
11/09/2025

‘AFTERMATH: Images from 9/11’ documents the devastation and reconstruction of the World Trade Center through images by Joel Meyerowitz—the sole photographer to be given unimpeded access to Ground Zero in the wake of 9/11. As such, Meyeriwitz’s deeply moving collection of images is the only existing photographic account of the aftermath of the attack.

During the late summer of 2001, the photographer Joel Meyerowitz was working in Provincetown, Massachusetts, preparing for an exhibition of photographs of lower Manhattan, taken from the window of his loft studio on 19th Street. These panoramas of the cityscape were punctuated with the distinctive profile of the World Trade Center’s Twin Towers. On September 11, Meyerowitz watched in shock and disbelief as this view— and the entire world—changed forever.

Since the invention of the medium in 1839, photography has always given us the immediacy and urgency of a situation, possessing that power to record historical events and preserve those moments in time. Like the great Civil War photographer Mathew Brady, who recounted his first trip to Manassas, Virginina, and the Battle of Bull Run, “I had to go.” That same urgency compelled Meyerowitz to immediately return to New York. By the next morning he was at Ground Zero grab his Leica and rush to Ground Zero.

Through sheer persistence involving almost daily acts of resourcefulness and defiance, Meyerowitz became the sole photographer to have continued access to the site and document its transformation over the next nine months from a place of total devastation to cleared bedrock. After more than fifty years of taking pictures, Joel Meyerowitz has been recognized as one of the most influential street photographers and a pioneer of the New Color photography movement.

#911

The Daily Mail has today reported that Police are investigating Banksy’s latest art stunt, his depiction of a judge usin...
09/09/2025

The Daily Mail has today reported that Police are investigating Banksy’s latest art stunt, his depiction of a judge using his gavel to assault a protestor, which was painted on the wall of the Royal Courts of Justice, London.

The piece appeared 48 hours after 890 demonstrators were arrested during a peaceful protest in London.

The Daily Mail suggests that the investigation into criminal damage of this listed building could see Banksy finally unmasked after 25 years of anonymous activity.

Security were quick to cover up the painting and have remained in place, guarding the wall with personnel and security cameras.

I Am Martin Parr is out now on BBC iPlayer. One of the most controversial photographers of his time, Martin Parr’s image...
03/09/2025

I Am Martin Parr is out now on BBC iPlayer.

One of the most controversial photographers of his time, Martin Parr’s images often have the power to both amuse and leave us ever so slightly uncomfortable, caught between laughter and the uneasy recognition of ourselves in his uncompromising portrait of consumer society.

Though he’s now celebrated, collected and exhibited worldwide, Parr’s early work did not find an easy public and was highly criticized for trivializing the working class. Yet, in retrospect, perhaps he was just observing what we often overlook - forcing it into the spotlight as an essential topic of discussion. I Am Martin Parr is the definitive portrait of an extraordinary photographer who revolutionized contemporary photography by inventing a political, humanist and accessible photographic language.

Our Summer Exhibition, Coastlines & Tan Lines, is online now. From the easy calm of Slim Aarons’ turquoise Bahamian shor...
25/08/2025

Our Summer Exhibition, Coastlines & Tan Lines, is online now.

From the easy calm of Slim Aarons’ turquoise Bahamian shorelines and Gerhard Richter’s hazy sky- and seascapes to the riotous heat of Damien Hirst’s kaleidoscopic blooms and Hassan Hajjaj’s rockstar regalia, Coastlines and Tan Lines brings together artworks that crystallise the essence of summer.

This collection of artworks includes pieces that evoke nostalgia of summers past by the likes of Terry O’Neill, Barbara Alper, Richard Avedon and Andy Warhol, as well as contemporary depictions from Miles Aldridge, Martin Parr, Trent Parke and Alec Soth.

Visit our website via the link in bio to explore the full collection

1. Slim Aarons, ‘Exuma Holiday’, 1964
2. Martin Parr, ‘Yalta, Crimean Peninsula, Ukraine’, 2022
3. Trent Parke, ‘Humankind, South Australia, 2024’, 2024
4. Thomas Struth, ‘Pink Azalea, Dusseldorf, 1993’, 2000
5. Hassan Hajjaj, ‘Afrikan Boy Sittin’ from My Rockstars 2013’, 2020
6. Terry O’Neill, ‘The Morning After, Faye Dunaway at the pool (1977)’, 2019
7. Alec Soth, ‘White Bear Lake, Minnesota, 2019’, 2024
8. F. Scott Fitzgerald
9. Damien Hirst, ‘Resolution (H14-6)’, from The Secrets Series, 2024
10. Barbara Alper, ‘Rockaway Beach’, 1986
11. Miles Aldridge, ‘TAN LINES #4, 2012’, 2013
12. Richard Avedon, ‘Paul McCartney’, 1967
13. Steve McCurry, ‘Flower Seller. Dal Lake, Srinagar, Kashmir. 1996’, 2021
14. Joel Meyerowitz, ‘Man & Blimp, Florida 1968’, 2021
15. Andy Warhol, ‘Flowers 11.67’, 1970-2020

Alec Soth is a leading contemporary photographer, who documents American social and geographic landscapes in an offbeat ...
20/08/2025

Alec Soth is a leading contemporary photographer, who documents American social and geographic landscapes in an offbeat and intimate style. Drawing inspiration from Depression-era photographers such as Walker Evans and Dorothea Lange, Soth is best known for his project-based work on what he calls “the big middle”—the American Midwest.

He first gained recognition with his series ‘Sleeping by the Mississippi’, lush, painterly colour prints of landscapes and portraits shot over five years on car trips along the Mississippi River. Other subjects include Niagara Falls’ honeymoon and tourism communities in Niagara, and the country’s exhaustion under two terms of George W. Bush with ‘The Last Days of W.’

In the tradition of road photography established by Walker Evans, Robert Frank, William Eggleston, and Stephen Shore, Soth documents suburban and rural communities throughout the Midwest and Southern United States. Soth is also the founder of Little Brown Mushroom, a small arts institute and publishing house, through which he collaborates with writers and other photographers to publish books and magazines.

See more from Alec Soth on FEUTEU now (link in bio)

Trent Parke is one of the most innovative photographers of his generation and the first Australian to become a Full Memb...
05/08/2025

Trent Parke is one of the most innovative photographers of his generation and the first Australian to become a Full Member of the renowned Magnum Photo Agency. He is known for his poetic, often darkly humorous photography that offers an emotional and psychological portrait of his home country – from the southern outback to its busy beaches. 
 
Though rooted in documentary, his works sit between fiction and reality, exploring themes of identity and place. His emotional and psychological portraits of family life are poetic and often darkly humorous.
 
Parke has received numerous awards and accolades. He won five Gold Lenses from the International Olympic Committee, and World Press Photo Awards in 1999, 2000 and 2005. Parke’s work is held in major institutional collections, including the National Gallery of Australia, Museum of Contemporary Art and the National Gallery of Victoria.

Available now from Feuteu

Tacita Dean is a British Conceptual artist known for her esoteric films and photography. In film she explores both speci...
24/07/2025

Tacita Dean is a British Conceptual artist known for her esoteric films and photography. In film she explores both specific historical events and formal qualities of the medium, as seen in her ‘Disappearance at Sea’ (1996) and ‘The Green Ray’ (2001).

Dean’s use of celluloid film, photography, installation, and drawing, seems an act of mourning for the analog world of documents and photographs as it passes into the realm of a massive digital archive.

“A world that won’t forget is a world drowned in its not forgetting,” she reflected. “Do we want a world full of unedited memory? To be human is to be finite.”

In 2001, the artist published her book Floh which consisted of arranged photographs Dean found while scouring flea markets throughout Europe and America. She has gone on to participate in three Venice Biennales as well as documenta 13 in Kassel.

‘An Organised Whole’ was created to celebrate Tate Modern’s 21st anniversary. In this work Tacita Dean compounds the traditional ideas of landscape and still life in a single collaged image. The background is from Tacita’s extensive vintage postcard collected by the artist in her visits to European flea markets, while the black and white object is from her Father’s collection of flints. The foregrounding of the flint changes its scale, suggesting something more monumental than a simple flint, and having too the characteristics of a Henry Moore public sculpture.

Available now on Feuteu

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