| | | | Roger Humbert: Untitled, 1960, Photogram on Baryt paper, 17 x 17cm, Unique | | | | | | 6 June – 13 July, 2019 | | Opening: Wednesday, 5 June 2019, 6 - 8 pm (Roger Humbert will be present) The art historian Katharina Lang gives an introduction to Roger Humbert's work at 6.30 pm.
Zurich Art Weekend 2019: Friday, 7 June, 2 - 8 pm Saturday and Sunday, 8 and 9 June, 10 am - 6 pm | | | | | | | | | |
| | | | | | | | | Roger Humbert: Untitled, 1951, Photogram on Baryt paper, 47 x 61 cm, Unique | | | | Concrete Photography | | Photograms from 1950 to 1970 | | 6 June – 13 July, 2019 | | Concrete Photography strives for a pure photography that focuses on itself and is detached from iconography and symbolism. Born in Basel in 1929, photographer Roger Humbert is a pioneer of Concrete Photography and has produced an extensive oeuvre from the 1950s to the present day. Fabian & Claude Walter Galerie presents Humbert's important position in 20th century photography in a solo exhibition, which shows a selection of photograms from the 1950s, 1960s and 1970s, created with experimental light sources and formal elements, as well as late works created in the past 20 years.
Roger Humbert describes his photography with a short and yet complex sentence: "I photograph the light". Based on the theories of the English photographer Alvin Langdon Coburn around 1916, concrete photography concentrates on the mysterious quality of light. Further stations in the history of development are the well-known Schadographs by Christian Schad, the Rayographs by Man Ray, and the photograms, luminograms, and photomontages by László Moholy-Nagy taken at the Bauhaus. | | | | | | Roger Humbert: Untitled, 1975, Photogramon Baryt paper, 49 x 49 cm, Unique | | | | Although the first international exhibition on the subject, entitled Ungegenständliche Photographie, was shown in 1960 at the Gewerbemuseum Basel, the term Concrete Photography came up a few years later. In 1967, Galerie aktuell in Bern presented the experimental photographs of the young Swiss avant-garde photographers Roger Humbert, René Mä̈chler, Jean-Frédéric Schnyder and Rolf Schroeter to the public for the first time under the title Concrete Photography.
Roger Humbert, who worked as a trained photographer and graphic designer, began creating photograms in the darkroom in the mid-1950s. Humbert and his photographic contemporaries were looking for a new modern, experimental visual language - a photography without a camera. He denied the image, detached himself from the object and understood light as a decisive, image-generating element. The art and literature historian Bernd Stiegler compares in the publication concrete photography as programme Humbert's work in the darkroom with that of a natural scientist. In the laboratory, Humbert carried out scientific experiments with photography and tried to find out what it meant to capture light photographically by using form elements such as stencils, grids and punch cards. | | | | | | Roger Humbert: Untitled, Photogram on Baryt Paper, 1952, 40,2 x 29,8 cm, Unique | | | | Humbert's photograms have been exhibited worldwide, including Tokyo, Osaka, São Paulo, Mi-lan, Anvers, Rome, Paris, Berlin, and New York. They demonstrate how the use of elementary photographic means together with a subjective creative power could open new paths in contemporary art. In today's world, in which digitalization once again calls photography into question and many artists are reverting to old photographic techniques, Roger Humbert has remained true to his important artistic work. (Text: Alessa Widmer) | | | | | |
| | | | | | | | | Jerry Uelsmann, Untitled, 1992, Gelatin silver print, 50,8 x 40,6 cm | | | | Magier der Dunkelkammer | | 6 June – 13 July, 2019 | | | | | | | | | | Jerry Uelsmann, Untitled, 1983, Gelatin silver print, 40,6 x 50,8 cm | | | | Parallel to the main exhibition, the gallery is showing photographs by Jerry Uelsmann in the cabinet. Uelsmann is one of the most influential photographers of his generation, because he did not only challenge with his montages the prevailing canon of his chosen medium, but he also anticipated an image language that came only into fruition in this perfection with the rise of digital imaging and photo editing technologies a few decades later. | | | | | | Jerry Uelsmann, Untitled, 1975, Gelatin silver print, 50,8 x 40,6 cm | | | | Since the 1960s, Uelsmann composed surreal visual worlds and narratives in long hours of tinkering with a selection of different negatives in his darkroom. With his light-sensitive photo paper in hand, he would march down a row of up to seven enlargers in order to manually expose one picture element after the other into the pre-visualized motif. Thus, the resulting dream landscapes, fantasies or nightmares are basically all unique prints, even though Uelsmann always tried to produce ten comparable prints of each image. | | | | unsubscribe here Newsletter was sent to newsletter@newslettercollector.com
© 23 May 2019 photo-index UG (haftungsbeschränkt) Ziegelstr. 29 . D–10117 Berlin Editor: Claudia Stein & Michael Steinke contact@photo-index.art . T +49.30.24 34 27 80 | |
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