Joan Fontcuberta - Untitled, Spanien portfolio, 1976





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Joan Fontcuberta. Untitled, Spanien portfolio, 1976.
Joan Fontcuberta is one of Spain's most internationally recognized conceptual photographers. His work has been devoted to questioning photography's supposed objectivity and demonstrating how images can construct visual fictions as convincing as reality itself. In 2013 he received the Hasselblad Award, widely regarded as photography's highest international distinction, for a career dedicated to exploring the boundaries between documentation, manipulation, and photographic truth..
Total dimensions: 26 x 20 cm on semi-gloss paper.
Artist's facsimilie signature in the lower right corner.
Fine condition.
This image belongs to Fontcuberta's early investigations into the ambiguous nature of photography. At first glance it appears to be an ordinary documentary scene, constructed with the simplicity and naturalism associated with European humanist photography. Yet the image contains an impossible alteration: the cyclist has no legs.
The intervention is deliberately subtle. The viewer initially accepts the scene as real and only later discovers the anatomical impossibility on which the entire composition rests. At that moment, the photograph ceases to function as a document and becomes a perceptual experiment about the mechanisms of visual credibility.
Long before celebrated projects such as Herbarium, Fauna, Sputnik, and Orogenesis, Fontcuberta was already exploring the question that would define much of his career: how easily images manufacture false evidence and how readily human beings accept it as true.
The work occupies a distinctive place within late twentieth-century European conceptual photography and may be considered alongside artists such as Cindy Sherman, Duane Michals, Man Ray, Jeff Wall, Sophie Calle, John Baldessari, Christian Boltanski, Thomas Demand, Bernd & Hilla Becher, and Andreas Gursky, among others, all of whom explored the relationships between image, fiction, representation, and truth.
Joan Fontcuberta. Untitled, Spanien portfolio, 1976.
Joan Fontcuberta is one of Spain's most internationally recognized conceptual photographers. His work has been devoted to questioning photography's supposed objectivity and demonstrating how images can construct visual fictions as convincing as reality itself. In 2013 he received the Hasselblad Award, widely regarded as photography's highest international distinction, for a career dedicated to exploring the boundaries between documentation, manipulation, and photographic truth..
Total dimensions: 26 x 20 cm on semi-gloss paper.
Artist's facsimilie signature in the lower right corner.
Fine condition.
This image belongs to Fontcuberta's early investigations into the ambiguous nature of photography. At first glance it appears to be an ordinary documentary scene, constructed with the simplicity and naturalism associated with European humanist photography. Yet the image contains an impossible alteration: the cyclist has no legs.
The intervention is deliberately subtle. The viewer initially accepts the scene as real and only later discovers the anatomical impossibility on which the entire composition rests. At that moment, the photograph ceases to function as a document and becomes a perceptual experiment about the mechanisms of visual credibility.
Long before celebrated projects such as Herbarium, Fauna, Sputnik, and Orogenesis, Fontcuberta was already exploring the question that would define much of his career: how easily images manufacture false evidence and how readily human beings accept it as true.
The work occupies a distinctive place within late twentieth-century European conceptual photography and may be considered alongside artists such as Cindy Sherman, Duane Michals, Man Ray, Jeff Wall, Sophie Calle, John Baldessari, Christian Boltanski, Thomas Demand, Bernd & Hilla Becher, and Andreas Gursky, among others, all of whom explored the relationships between image, fiction, representation, and truth.

