| | | | Installation view Henrik Spohler © photo by Laurent Antonelli & Michel Zavagno, Blitz Agency / CDI 2018 | | Photographic season 2018 - 2019 PORTRAIT - HORS CADRE | | | | The new collection explores the different forms the portrait can take in contemporary photography. The subject allows for certain interpretations and liberties in its definition and the selection of images. The conscious expansion of the meaning of “portrait” serves to enable additional reflections – perhaps in favour of a cultural landscape and its perception? This wider understanding of the genre does not, however, erase its distinct characteristics. The collection exposed here draws a subtle portrait of today’s society and shows various points of view: personal – cultural – fictitious – transitory. | | | | | | | | | |
| | | | | | | | | Isabelle Graeff: Lizard Point from the series "Exit" | | | | 28 September 2018 – 27 September 2019 | | Isabelle Graeff moved to England after a death in the family. Coming to terms with significant events in a person’s life requires time for recentering and questioning of identity. The personal circumstances intuitively put the German photographer in tune with the particular atmosphere in a country on the threshold of the Brexit decision.
Her work is not beholden to a specific genre. Isabelle Graeff’s snapshots seem to draw a portrait of the country. Just as the change of seasons introduces a mood shift, so her visual inventory catalogues an atmosphere that portends an upheaval. Perhaps it is merely subjective impressions that retrospectively make the connection between the photographs and Brexit and give the collection its name. But aren’t images always the result of subjective impressions? And isn’t the viewer’s gaze invariably tinted by interpretation? | | | | | | installation view Isabelle Graeff © CDI 2018 | | | | Viewing it from the other side of political developments, a wholly new portrait emerges, showing a desolate cultural landscape, wide nature shots, austere urbanity and a variety of human faces. Stagnation and change, expectation and wonder, proximity and distance, familiarity and foreignness alternate. The glance towards strangers is fleeting. The alternation of subjects from image to image conveys a feeling of movement through space and progress through time. The photographer lines up impressions like links in a chain. Just like a jigsaw puzzle, these snippets combine to form a full picture between subjective premonition and factual documentation – the freedom of deciphering it is up to the viewer.
More Information: www.editionexit.com | | | |
| | | | | | | | | Heimat © Peter Bialobrzeski | | | | (Home(land) & The Second Home) | | 18 September 2018 – 17 September 2019 | | |
The concept of the "Heimat" – the Home(land) – can be found in all languages, though not every language has a single, familiar term for it. “Heimat” unites different layers of meaning.
At the geographic level, the home represents a specific place, a region defined by its familiarity. Exploring no longer presents a challenge, but instead evokes a feeling of comfort. At the social level, it is analogous to community and belonging: the bosom of the family or the circle of friends, along with traditions and customs. At the sentimental level, the subjective memory draws a clear picture of the home based on recollections and personal experience. This multi-layered nature of "Heimat" results in a complex construct that is easier to grasp emotionally than to explain intellectually.
Any attempt to explain "Heimat" on the visual plane invariably leads to the German Romantic Era and the paradigms found therein. It is interwoven with the romantic landscape, grandiose views of nature, captivating the gaze through their beauty and grandeur.
"Beauty is ideologically suspect. Just like the notion of 'Heimat'." (Ariel Hauptmeier in Peter Bialobrzeski: "Heimat", Hatje Cantz Verlag, 2005) | | | | | | Instalation view, Peter Bialobrzeski: Heimat & Die zweite Heimat © CDI 2018 | | | | The word "Heimat" thus becomes the subject of polemics between the individual appropriation of the term in the private realm, and the misuse on the public and political stage. The duality of the term is remarkable: a longing for idyll and ideal stands alongside intolerance and a fear of loss.
Peter Bialobrzeski confronts this volatile topic head on. Can the question of beauty – a purely subjective form of appreciation – even be asked in contemporary photography? Is it possible to have a factual discourse based on emotional concepts, or do emotions stand in irreconcilable contradiction to the documentary character of an image? Can "Beauty" be represented independently of nostalgic sensibility?
"Heimat means having roots, not necessarily being rooted", says Bialobrzeski. His collection "Heimat" seeks to substantiate this. In his work "Die Zweite Heimat" (The Second Home), he takes the question to a new level and expands the meaning of Heimat by opening it outwards: one person’s home can be someone else’s second home.
More Information: www.bialobrzeski.de | | | |
| | | | | | | | | Susan Barnett: Stop Violence from "NOT IN YOUR FACE" | | | | 28 September 2018 – 27 September 2019 | | |
Susan Barnett‘s "Not In Your Face" is a collection of photographic images approaching the portrait genre from an unconventional angle.
The entire series by the U.S. photographer is based on the principle of the figure seen from the back. In the Visual Arts sciences, this is a design element of symbolic significance: the figure’s back reproduced in two dimensions enables the real life viewer to take the subject’s place in the picture and see what the depicted person sees. It is traditionally a very effective way to increase the effect of stepping into the picture. The motif helps penetrate the pictorial space and draws the observer’s gaze deep into the work itself… | | | | | | Installation view of "NOT IN YOUR FACE" | | | | Susan Barnett breaks with this tradition. The human figure occupies the entire space, preventing the observer from decoding the picture. The in-depth view is blocked by an anonymous back, which seems to be addressing the viewer, clad in illustrative and flashy clothing. Where before one would try to decipher someone’s facial expression in getting to know them, nowadays this communication has moved down to the chest, or even the back. This shift, previously read as disinterest or withdrawal, has become a direct and efficient message. At the same time, helped by the anonymous street setting, it becomes an indirect appeal. This once bizarre attitude has made its way into daily discourse and become an integral part of our standard personal coding. But this communication also takes on a political dimension. The systematic study undertaken by Susan Barnett evolves towards a typology in contemporary sociology. The author Gottfried Keller would have been surprised to see his proverb "Kleider machen Leute" reinterpreted in this manner: The quest for identity has become a philosophy blending into ideology and ultimately worn on one’s body. (Text: A. Meyer, Clervaux – cité de l’image)
More information: notinyourface.com | | | | unsubscribe here Newsletter was sent to newsletter@newslettercollector.com
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