The Bisazza Foundation will host in its spacious gallery rooms, a classic and contemporary architecture exhibition, to celebrated the work of one of the most influential photographers on the international scene.
Long the preferred subject matter of Candida Höfer's photography are the interiors of public spaces - museums, libraries, public archives, theaters, offices, banks, historic buildings – all photographed with straightforward composition and long exposure times, devoid of any human figures, and illuminated solely by ambient light. Her photographs are known for their unique sharpness and clarity and do not employ any form of digital enhancement.
Candida Höfer's work –along with the works of Andreas Gursky, Axel Hütte, Thomas Ruff and Thomas Struth—is framed within the tradition of German photographers, direct heirs to the conceptual aesthetic and teachings of Bernd and Hilla Becher at the Kunstakademie in Düsseldorf, who would readapt the original project of the New Objectivity to adopt a unique way to face the world.
Following the work method initiated by her masters, her photographs show an interest almost ethnic in contemporary culture’s multiplicity of forms of representation, establishing a particular relationship with the staging where society and knowledge develop: Building interiors, preferably of public or semi-public use, which like museums, theatres and opera theatres, archives and libraries, are photographed when all activity has ceased and they are empty.
Candida Höfer. Images of Architecture.
Venue.- Fundación Bisazza. Viale Milano, 56. 36075 Montecchio Maggiore – VI. Italy
Dates.- 9 May to 27 July 2014.
Presented from this perspective, free of human occupants, her images of these temples of knowledge and learning offer the viewer the opportunity to establish an exclusive relationship with the space being portrayed, while immersed in solitary contemplation, where every detail (which might otherwise be invisible) can be captured by the eye.
These intimately subjective images are true “architectural portraits”, expressions of Candida Höfer.
“The subjects of my work are public and semi-public spaces. I prefer them when they are without people. Spaces then seem to tell more about people, what they do for them and what people have been doing to them. Spaces are about light. This is why I photograph them in the light that I find in them, may it be natural or artificial light. Spaces have functions. Functions create similarities. I am fascinated by the differences in these similarities.”
Candida Höfer.