Wednesday, May 26, 2010

Exhibition of Landscape Photographs at Galerie Wagner + Partner

May 24, 2010 by All Art News  
Filed under Photography

BERLIN.- Nature became landscape long ago. Since the Romantic period landscape has furthermore been an aesthetic position. But what is landscape for the modern human being? The thematic exhibition “Open Landscape” at the Galerie Wagner + Partner provides a juxtaposition of multigenerational photographic and pictorial approaches to this question. The reference point for all participating artists is the real landscape.

The works of Thomas Wrede and Joseph Schulz increase their charm through friction between photorealistic representation extended through staging and intervention. Wrede, in his series entitled “Real Landscapes” combines the natural beauty of landscape with constructed miniature models. The landscapes photographed in this way appear seductively plausible and exaggerate the romantic projection.

Josef Schulz Terraform Felswand 3 2008 C Print Diasec 180 x 230 cm 580x388 Exhibition of Landscape Photographs at Galerie Wagner + Partner

Josef Schulz, Terraform; Felswand #3, 2008, C-Print / Diasec, 180 x 230 cm

Schulz similarly aims for an aesthetic exaggeration and idealisation through digital intervention in his nature photographs of the series “Terraform”. Through the elimination of human traces he reconstructs the lost primordial state of nature and creates people’s “internal” images of the landscape.

Similarly originating from actual landscape, Peter Dreher’s “Schwarzwaldlandschaft” (Black Forest Landscape) appears idealistic. It almost appears to be based on the tradition of “Heimatmalerei” (patriotic landscape painting). Viewed in close proximity however, the picture’s elements are ordered according to days and time. Each single picture documents what the artist saw and captured at precisely this point in time. Only when viewed as a whole an abstract picture of landscape as space-time-construct appears.

The central theme of Neo Rauch-student Friederike Jokisch is the landscape beyond the established idyll. Her large format pastel paintings make the process of transformation from nature to landscape tangible. In striking pictures “landscape” is demystified and instead ruptures and alienations between culture and nature become central themes.

The exhibition consciously poses more questions, attempts to find fewer answers. At the same time it continues the theme of the previous exhibition “The Nightingale’s Secret Garden”.

Related posts:

  1. Thomas Wrede to Show Works from Manhattan Series at Henn Gallery
  2. Regen Projects Presents New Landscape Photographs by Catherine Opie
  3. Photographer Rex Dupain Exhibits at Galerie Lucie Weill & Seligmann
  4. Galerie Sherin Najjar Opens in Potsdamer Platz with Group Exhibition
  5. Solo Exhibition Featuring the Work of Chakaia Booker at Galerie Pfriem

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