Retrieving search results

Contact

Webber London

18 Newman St
London
W1T 1PE


+44 (0) 20 7439 0678
london@webberrepresents.com

Webber New York

35 E 1st Street

Basement West
New York
NY, 10003

+1 646 370 5713
newyork@webberrepresents.com

Webber Los Angeles
939 S Santa Fe Ave
Los Angeles
CA 90021

Tues - Sat | 11am - 6pm
By Appointment

la@webberrepresents.com
info@webber.gallery

Careers

Producer
Location : London
Start Date : Immediate
Salary : DOE
Applications : emily@webberrepresents.com / laura@webberrepresents.com

WEBBER is a thriving multidisciplinary agency and gallery that harmonises creativity and collaboration with contemporary artists and clients. We are seeking a dynamic, considerate and organised Producer to join our team in London. This role is central to our mission of fostering strong relationships and delivering exceptional creative projects on a global basis.

You will collaborate closely with our Senior Producer, supporting Agents, Directors and Artists in the execution of outstanding production and project management. We value collaboration, and creativity in our work environment, always with a positive and naturing mind set.

Responsibilities :

-Create, oversee, and manage a variety of budgets, from intimate editorials to full-service advertising campaigns, for both stills and motion.
-Independently manage all aspects of an artist's production, including client liaison, estimating, optioning, shoot scheduling, travel logistics, on-set production, and liaising with external production and service companies, film development and processing, postproduction, and delivery.
-Create and manage intricate post-production processes for both stills and motion on both analogue and digital platforms.
-Reconcile and wrap job financials accurately and in a timely manner.
-Advise, guide, and provide clients with creative budget solutions according to target spend and concepts
-Maintain existing relationships and forge new relationships within the industry with collaborators, vendors, and peers alike.
-Inspire and empower our small, but growing team.
-Be cognisant and proactive about how we can make productions an accessible space.

Qualifications :

-Excellent communication, negotiation, and interpersonal skills.
-Ability to manage multiple projects simultaneously and meet deadlines.
-Proficiency in post-production processes for both analogue and digital media.
-A commitment to diversity, inclusion, and accessibility in the workplace.
-A proactive, organised, and detail-oriented approach.
-At least 3 years experience with artist lead production and/or within an artist representation agency.
-Strong understanding of budgeting, scheduling, and logistics for both stills and motion projects.

Webber

Unseen
Daniel Shea, Theo Simpson
22.09–24.09.17

Unseen Amsterdam
22-24th of September, 2017
Stand 47

Thomas Albdorf
Marton Perlaki
Daniel Shea
Theo Simpson

Do we really need to visit somewhere in person to experience it? Can you ever look at a place you know well with the eyes of a stranger? Through the prism of photography, can disparate places be drawn together? And how do we preserve our personal, place-specific narratives within a broader one of rapid socio-economic development and relentless technological change? These are just some of the questions you are invited to consider when engaging with the work of the four artists Webber has bought together for Unseen Amsterdam 2017.

All at times graphic and expressive in their output, each of the artists – Thomas Albdorf, Marton Perlaki, Daniel Shea and Theo Simpson – probe the narrative potential of flat image surfaces, and the multiplicity of fragments that can be layered into single photographic planes. 

In Thomas Albdorf’s General View, the artist takes us to the archetypal landscape of Yosemite National Park – a place he has never been. Digitally strolling the park via Google Street View, Albdorf set out to discover if it is possible to render an experience ‘almost as good as being there’ within the confines of the photographic frame. Layering Street View imagery with digitally altered material and constructed, sculptural set-builds, Albdorf questions the way we consume images, and the integrity of photography’s indexical link to the world in the age of the Internet.

Marton Perlaki began taking pictures of windows in 2016, in his hometown of Budapest, as something instantaneous to counter the concept-driven, character-based images he is so used to constructing. Living now between New York and London, he found himself reflecting upon his experiences of returning home, and seeing Budapest with the eyes of a stranger for the first time. Becoming interested in the graphic, formal qualities the shop windows of the city possess – their structures, the lines, the swathes of colour, the uncannily reflective surfaces and the layers of perspective he could capture – his Shop Windows series became an unconscious symbol of that process of self-reflection. 

Embarking upon his own meandering investigations into the place he grew up, Theo Simpson’s work probes the mythical themes of landscape and industrial heritage so often associated with the North of England. Through archive material, objects, ruins, symbols and stories he gathers along the way, Simpson proposes a re-imagining of history and our role within it. One particular new work, Vanden Plas, examines the resilient and enduring elements of declining British industry. Depicting a slice of the landscape, the piece is mounted on cold rolled steel (a material intrinsic to the region), with a Rover car advert from the 1970s placed on top of it (a brand inherent to the region), inviting us to visually understand the layers of history that can be embedded within any given place. 

Also mining the traces of industrial and socioeconomic shifts through the layering of material is Daniel Shea, this time with the architectural plans and lifestyle branding of real estate developers arranged over sequences of photographs from a number of places across the world. Beginning with a simple premise to survey the residential real estate boom of his native Long Island City, Shea’s 43-35 10th Street wound up juxtaposing images of the condo culture arising there, with photographs of the infamous government buildings in the Brazilian city of Brasilia (built ex-nihilo around 50 years ago), and images of a dying California industrial town. There’s something spectral about the fusion of architectural forms, from disparate places and moments in history, evolving and echoing between frames. At the centre of all of this is Shea’s studio – a microenvironment, from which he explores our contemporary, evolving relationship to work and labour. 

A particular image in Albdorf’s oeuvre – depicting a riverbed and a sheet of glass with spray-painted dots held over it – echoes an image of Perlaki’s, in which a smattering of paint drops is strewn across a window. The skeletal forms of Shea’s condos are reminiscent of Simpson’s steel sculptures. Sourced from the artists’ own surroundings and far beyond, the rich constellation of visual material you’ll find here deals with a broad, divergent set of themes, though subtle waves of conversation based on form, composition and approach emerge between the photographs, and fine threads of connection are woven.