As someone who works in (the city of) London, I must find time to get over to the West End to see this exhibition. I'm not overly familiar with all her work but, as her name seems synonymous with controversy, I wonder whether she's a bit of a drama queen? Talented, for sure, but surely she must know what reaction her work will receive? Is that why she does it; to provoke a strong reaction?
Incidentally, the Photographer's Gallery is closing in the Autumn for a refurbishment and re-opening later next year. I can't remember the dates but I got an e-mail about it last week.
The earlier comments about deliberately "scuffing up" images made me smile. Before I got back (heavily) into film usage, I bought a post processing tool called Silver Efex Pro (SEP). For those unfamiliar, this is a film simulation tool that turns a digital image into something that broadly resembles a film print. It's good fun to use and, so long as you're not too picky, the results are okay.
However, a number of friends of mine have asked, why would someone want to "ruin" a perfectly good digital colour image by turning it into a mono, film simulation? The only answer I can come up with is because I like mono film more than digital. Now that I have the film cameras I want, I seldom use SEP anymore.
However, isn't it fascinating how we believe our photos should look compare to how other people would have them? Seldom do I see a colour image that I think wouldn't look better as a black and white.