Josef Schulz presents "terraform" at Galerie Heinz-Martin Weigand
Courtesy: Galerie Heinz-Martin Weigand |
terraform
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Info
July 5 - August 16, 2008 Hours: Tue - Fri 1pm - 7pm, Sat 11am - 2:30pm and by appointment
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info@galerie-weigand.de
+49.7243.536262
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Address
http://www.galerie-weigand.de/pages/en/artists/schulz/inventory_landscapes.htm
Muehlenstrasse 31
76275 Ettlingen/Karlsruhe
Germany
JOSEF SCHULZ
terraform
July 5 - August 16, 2008
Opening reception: July 4, 7pm
Heinz-Martin Weigand is pleased to announce an exhibition of a new series by Josef Schulz.
Unlike Schulz' previous series of photographs, where a central architectonic motif predominates, here he concentrates, for the first time, on 'pure' landscape.
The accompanying photographs were taken at a variety of locations in the Alps. They show summits, rocks, scree, lakes and valleys, areas of countryside devoid of people, irritatingly beautiful and of singularly ideal appearance.
The application of his way of working to the sphere of nature produces astonishing results.
Through the extreme reduction of image details and content-related references, but also by emphasising individual colours and contrasts, Josef Schulz provokes a heightening, a dramatisation of the settings in a way normally only found in paintings.
His photographs, shot with a plate camera, are endowed with an impressive intensification through digital editing. In this series of works the viewer experiences a fascinating sounding out of the border between photographic 'truth' and created 'reality'. Josef Schulz' interventions are meant to be visible: in most of the pictures, at least one element clearly points to some form of manipulation.
In some of the photographs the foreground is highly simplified and has been planted in front of the panorama like a two-dimensional plane. The mountain pictures – sections of rough cliff faces– have a painterly appearance; the artist tones down the stark contrast of their natural illumination.
The Wasser #2 picture features a promontory at Lake Lucerne which, at first glance, appears to be an island; the attenuation of the background makes it impossible to locate it. Hereby spaces open up – for Schulz' landscapes as much as for the viewer.
Josef Schulz is interested in this momentary confusion, the moment when the line between authenticity and construction becomes blurred, when it is no longer obvious which detail in the photograph is genuine and which one has been added digitally, in order to create the artist's subjective ideal.
In this manner Schulz gives his answer to the question about the existence of objectivity in a photographed image.
About the artists:
Josef Schulz was born in 1966 and studied in the classes of Bernd Becher and Thomas Ruff in the Duesseldorf academy. In 2001 he was awarded as the European Architectural Photographer of the year. Schulz' Aworks are included in various important collections worldwide. His works where recently shown in the Museum of Contemporary Photography, Chicago, USA.