Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Photokina and the International Photo Scene in Cologne

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Photokina and the International Photo Scene in Cologne

    PhotoRevue, Czech Republic
    Dec 30 2006

    Photokina and the International Photo Scene in Cologne
    Vydáno dne 30. 12. 2006 (29 přečtení)



    Photokina, Cologne

    As early as the 1950s and 1960s, well before the emergence of the
    first festival of photography in Arles, there existed a regularly
    held event presenting many exhibitions of images from historical and
    contemporary photography - the culture program of Photokina, the
    world's largest film and photography fair in Cologne. The fact that
    since its inception Photokina did not merely present innovations in
    film and photo technology but also actual photographic work was in
    large part due to the recently deceased German collector and
    historian of photography, L. Fritz Gruber, who for many years
    organized for the fair, both directly at the main site and in
    Cologne's numerous museums and galleries, thematic as well as
    artist-oriented exhibition of the foremost photographers. After he
    retired, the cultural program of Photokina experienced once more a
    heyday during the time when Karl Steinorth was closely involved - the
    curator of a number of major exhibitions and author of many books on
    the history of photography. Photokina Cologne thus regularly saw
    retrospectives of Alfred Stieglitz, Alvin Langdon Coburn, Edward
    Steichen, Richard Avedon, Helmut Newton, William Klein, and other
    famous photographers, richly sponsored by Kodak and Agfa.


    Exhibition of the Institute of Creative Photography, Silesian
    University in Opava (Academy meets Photokia)

    The current crisis of many traditional photographic companies that
    have failed to keep up with the massive advance of digital
    photography, however, has resulted in a sharp drop in the sponsorship
    of the cultural side of Photokina. In spite of this, in September
    2006 the Photokina Visual Gallery took place already for the third
    time on the premises of Hall 1 of the much-improved Cologne
    exhibition area, presenting a number of attractive exhibitions.
    Exhibitions were also held at other venues during the fair;
    noticeable among them for instance the immense prints of the
    historical photographs of Karl Hugo Schmölz, portraying the dominants
    of Cologne destroyed by air raids during the Second World War, the
    documentary photographs of the Dutch photographer and environmental
    activist Robert Knoth showing the deadly impact of ill-deposited
    radioactive waste in Russia on the local people and landscape, or the
    Bildeberg agency exhibition, portraying life in contemporary Germany
    with gentle irony. The main magnet of the Visual Gallery at
    Photokina, however, was the new retrospective of Martin Parr, fresh
    laureate of the Erich Salomon Prize, awarded on the eve of
    Photokina's opening by the German Photographic Society (DGPh). Parr
    compiled his Assorted Cocktail from sections of both older and brand
    new cycles, in which he with characteristic dry English humor and
    subtlety showed the typical features of mass tourism, consumerism,
    globalization, and herd mentality. While the garish details of
    kitschy souvenirs, chubby tourists and greasy food from Mexico or
    Germany were close in both motif and style to Parr's older
    photographs from England or Spain, his newer images of everyday life
    in Scotland heralded a return of sorts to his spectral 1980s´
    England, full of absurd confrontations and visual symbolism. Another
    exhibition that drew large audiences was Patric Fouad's Frauenzimmer
    - Brothels in Germany. These technically precise large-format
    photographs showed the interior of rooms inhabited by prostitutes in
    various German cities. Fouad was not seeking titillating views of
    places normally accessible only to paying customers, but instead
    employed the symptomatic details of garish beds, artificial flowers,
    stuffed animals, embroidered pillows, and lascivious framed pictures
    on walls and bedside tables to create a sociological documentary of
    the settings in which the oldest trade in human history is conducted
    in his native country. Of an altogether different kind was the
    exhibition of young Italian photographer Lorenzo Castore entitled
    Paradiso, already presented in Arles as well as several other
    photography festivals. His blurred color images of streets,
    backyards, bars and bedrooms are far removed from the traditional
    humanism of photojournalism and rather then social issues they
    reflect the inner world of the artist, his subjective take on people
    and the intimate moments in their lives. The other pole of
    contemporary documentary presented traditionally composed
    black-and-white images by Jürgen Escher (Germany) on humanitarian aid
    in various ailing places on the planet, filled with poverty, hunger,
    disease and violence, but also hope and longing for a better life.
    Escher's photographs cannot be denied a certain humanist appeal, but
    they lack the visual qualities of Salgado, or Nachtwey.

    A number of fresh ideas and technically perfect photographs, where
    today it no longer matters whether they were created using
    traditional or digital technology, were on display at the group
    exhibitions of young artists. The exhibition of the laureates of the
    Kodak Prize for young artists was outstanding; almost all the works
    were technically precise, possessed of a solid concept and functional
    utilization of color (not one of the prize-winning collections were
    in black and white), as well as an emphasis on visually attractive
    rendition of both self-reflective and social subtext. Some works were
    `staged documentary' that obliterated the boundaries between reality
    and fiction. Protagonists of this tendency meticulously arranged
    spectral scenes set in strange rooms in St. Petersburg and Moscow,
    places with no clear function, where time seemed to be frozen (Frank
    Herfort), in a nuclear power-station and its vicinity in the
    Lithuanian town of Visaginas (Martin Schlüter), or in a house where
    puppets represented family members doing their morning exercises,
    having breakfast or having sex - and also committing suicide (Grit
    Hachmeister). Among the prize-winning works were also the naturalist
    detailed photographs of women during their morning beautification
    sessions (Malin Schulz and Sina Preikschat), an apt documentary from
    present-day Armenia (Lili Nahapetian), inventive portraits of Chinese
    artists from Peking (Tobias Habermann) and other works that proved
    that many young German and European photographers are moving away
    from the long dominant influence of Andreas Gursky, Candida Höfer,
    Thomas Struth, Thomas Ruff, and other famous disciples of Bernd
    Becher at the Staatliche Akademie in Düsseldorf, and are looking for
    new themes and new styles.

    This was visible also in the international context at the exhibition
    of 23 university-level schools of photography, Academy Meets
    Photokina, where a single school from a formerly Communist country
    was selected - the Institute of Creative Photography of the Silesian
    University in Opava, represented by works of Czech, Slovak and Polish
    students. The winning works of the Fujifilm Euro Press Professional
    Photo Award 2006 were of a rather uneven level of achievement, as
    alongside works of quality some rather banal sports shots or details
    of frogs and newts were also honored. Photographs by Eliot Erwitt,
    Reinhart Wolf, Ernst Haas, Andreas Feininger, and other
    world-renowned artists were included in the Icon exhibition - 30
    photographers of the Association of Freelance Photo Designers, which
    was however handicapped by the fact that their giant prints were hung
    all the way up under the exhibition hall ceiling, and few people
    actually looked at them. Photographs of Charles E. Fraser were a
    nostalgic reminiscence of the early days of Photokina, capturing as
    they did installations of exhibition at Photokina in the years
    1950-1956, which from our vantage point are sometimes unintentionally
    amusing.

    Of the 68 exhibitions of International Photoscene held in various
    galleries and other venues, among the most interesting this year were
    above all the retrospective of the American pioneer of conceptual
    photography and new topography, Ed Ruscha, held at the Ludwig Museum,
    the extensive, but rather uneven exhibition God in Germany at the
    Kunsthaus Rhenania, and the exhibition of photographs of the
    fascinating dehumanized jungle of Hong Kong tenement houses by
    Michael Wolf (Germany) at the Laif Agency's exhibition room. German
    inter-war photography was represented by the impromptu street shots
    of Friedrich Seidenstücker and little-known reportage photographs by
    Hannes M. Flach from the car races at Nürburgring. In comparison to
    the dozens of outstanding exhibitions at the International Photoscene
    in the 1980s and 1990s, there was little to see this year, and
    moreover the selection of exhibitions in the official program struck
    one as rather random. It was evident that the International
    Photoscene in Cologne is not in its heyday.

    Vladimír Birgus
    Fotograf 8/2006

    http://www.photorevue.com/view.php?cislocl anku06123001
Working...
X