DAVID YEARSLEY is fascinated by the account of four composers who transformed their experiences of the second world war and the Holocaust into deeply moving works of art
THE FIRST thing to greet you in Johny Pitts’s outstanding exhibition at Stills Gallery in Edinburgh are photo-albums on a home-made table, filled with domestic snapshots “most of which were taken casually,” he says.
These flip-books are a compilation of ordinary off-hand moments and ressemble millions of others as private documents of domestic life. They are almost nostalgic ... who keeps prints nowadays, when you can store images on your phone?
Pitts asks us to see them as equivalent to what is on the gallery walls, as though the step from amateur to artist were an easy one to make, but the difference between snaps and the exhibition prints is startling. Pitts is a master of scale and the enlargements step beyond the domestic into a realm of universal symbolic resonance.
JAN WOOLF invigilates images that meditate on Palestine, and the people who witness them
JAN WOOLF examines work that aims to give viewers a material experience of the environments in the polar north and Britain equally affected by the climate crisis
KEVIN DONNELLY accepts the invitation to think speculatively in contemplation of representations of people of African descent in our cultural heritage
JOHN GREEN is stirred by an ambitious art project that explores solidarity and the shared memory of occupation


