JOURNAL
DETROIT ART REVIEW // Roy Feldman's Truth & Grace in Hamtramck
March 29, 2020 by Ron Scott
Truth & Grace in Hamtramck was in the planning for a year and scheduled to open on March 20, 2020, at the M Contemporary Art in Ferndale, but the state order to “Stay at Home” by Governor Gretchen Whitmer of Michigan made those plans impossible. As a result, I asked the gallery owner, Melannie Chard, to allow me to view the images online and proceed with a review. I had viewed Feldman’s photographs over the years and seen several images in person, which gave me enough perspective to proceed in this peculiar and highly unusual endeavor: write a review from art viewed online.
DETROIT METRO TIMES // Detroit photographer Kenny Karpov captures the despair and hope of Europe's refugee crisis
For his latest solo exhibition, Detroit photographer Kenny Karpov took to the Mediterranean Sea for a closer look at Europe's refugee crisis.
Many of the photos show Black bodies packed onto ship decks, calling to mind a modern-day slave ship. What gets lost in the mainstream media narrative of the refugees, Karpov believes, is that any of the African and Middle Eastern refugees are in fact fleeing the horrors of modern-day slavery, human trafficking, famine, and war.
THE OAKLAND PRESS // Detroit photographer exhibits emotional photos, stories of refugees
Looking through his lens, photographer Kenny Karpov tries to capture who people truly are — their expressions, their bodies and the light in their eyes. His emotional portraits, paired with written work, tell their stories.
In Karpov’s latest project, the book “Despite It All We Never Learn,” he tells the stories of refugees, the real people going through travails on a journey toward better and safer lives.
DAILY DETROIT // Kenny Karpov Conversation with Jer Staes
Internationally acclaimed photographer and Detroit resident Kenny Karpov joins us to talk about his upcoming photo exhibit, “Despite It All, We Never Learn.”
The photos take you on a journey with Karpov on a refugee boat in the Mediterranean. It’s quite the story, and the opening event is at M Contemporary Gallery in Ferndale.
PLAYGROUND DETROIT // Kenny Karpov Releases Photography Book “Despite It All We Never Learn”
Despite It All We Never Learn, is a book of refugee testimonials taken from the Mediterranean Sea from those living in situations beyond our imaginations released by photographer and documentarian, Kenny Karpov.
Karpov’s mission is to share the stories of the many refugees that he encountered during his time in Europe. The book that he crowdfunded earlier this year, describes the agonizing first person narratives and impossible decisions that refugees have to make as they head toward what they believe is a better life.
DETROIT PERFORMS // Matthew Eaton
Artist Matt Eaton explores themes of nostalgia and space.
Episode 908/Segment 2
FPLO // Kenny Karpov’s New Book ‘Despite It All We Never Learn’ + Exhibition at M Contemporary
Kenny Karpov will be the featured exhibiting artist at M Contemporary Art Gallery, right across the street from the Ferndale Library, starting November 22 -thru – December 15. This is his first solo exhibition, but Karpov is not an artist. Even if it is an exhibition in a gallery, with 21 works of photography, Karpov is not an artist, just as he’s not your typical photographer. At least he doesn’t talk like one; doesn’t live like one, and doesn’t, frankly, think like one.
WDET // Pigeonholed: Detroit’s Rashaun Rucker Explores Marginalized People, Animals in New Art Exhibit
In first exhibition of his drawings in five years, Rucker explores the connections between rock pigeons and African-American males — “marginalized person, marginalized animal,” says Rucker.
DETROIT PERFORMS // Kenny Karpov; author, photojournalist
Detroit native Kenny Karpov at 17 moved to New York where he became a photojournalist with the New York Times and the BBC. His story telling abilities drew the attention of international help organizations and as a result he has just published a book of his 4 1/2 year mission to document the rescue of Libyan and Syrian refugees in small boats in the Mediterranean sea.Detroit native Kenny Karpov at 17 moved to New York where he became a photojournalist with the New York Times and the BBC. His story telling abilities drew the attention of international help organizations and as a result he has just published a book of his 4 1/2 year mission to document the rescue of Libyan and Syrian refugees in small boats in the Mediterranean sea.