Anders Petersen - Café Lehmitz - 1985





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Description from the seller
Made between 1968-70 by Swedish photographer Anders Petersen in Hamburg's Reeperbahn, the Café Lehmitz was a gatherhing place for people on the margins of society (alcoholics, pimps, petty criminals, prostitutes) and he spent two years documenting an authentic view, devoid of romantic cliches.
"When Petersen discovered the Lehmitz and began to photograph it at the end of the 1960s the cafe exuded a similar kind of world-weary decadence to that found in the Weimar Republic... And Petersen documented it, candidly, warmly and non-judgementally, wholly avoiding the sentimental but exploitative gaze of conventional social reportage."
Petersen "was a regular at the Lehmitz for two years or more while gathering these images. Although this does not make him a total 'insider' - the photographer always keeps some distance - it ensured that he was accepted as one of the crowd. He showed his sitters the work, even exhibiting it in the cafe, and regulars sometimes borrowed his camera and took pictures of each other. Under such circumstances, his photos become a diary of the riotous, drunken nights on which it was made."
"Petersen captured what more distinguished names have failed to convey - the authentic whiff of downbeat urban life." (Parr and Badger, p.231)
This compact paperback version of this important photobook was Anders Petersen's favourite edition.
Included in:
Martin Parr & Gerry Badger - The Photobook Vol.1, pp. 230-231
Andrew Roth, The Open Book, p. 318
Condition:
Good paperback edition from 1985. Binding tight. Small area of rippling on lower edges of all pages. One short line of text highlighted. Mark to underside of book. Please examine listing photos carefully.
Made between 1968-70 by Swedish photographer Anders Petersen in Hamburg's Reeperbahn, the Café Lehmitz was a gatherhing place for people on the margins of society (alcoholics, pimps, petty criminals, prostitutes) and he spent two years documenting an authentic view, devoid of romantic cliches.
"When Petersen discovered the Lehmitz and began to photograph it at the end of the 1960s the cafe exuded a similar kind of world-weary decadence to that found in the Weimar Republic... And Petersen documented it, candidly, warmly and non-judgementally, wholly avoiding the sentimental but exploitative gaze of conventional social reportage."
Petersen "was a regular at the Lehmitz for two years or more while gathering these images. Although this does not make him a total 'insider' - the photographer always keeps some distance - it ensured that he was accepted as one of the crowd. He showed his sitters the work, even exhibiting it in the cafe, and regulars sometimes borrowed his camera and took pictures of each other. Under such circumstances, his photos become a diary of the riotous, drunken nights on which it was made."
"Petersen captured what more distinguished names have failed to convey - the authentic whiff of downbeat urban life." (Parr and Badger, p.231)
This compact paperback version of this important photobook was Anders Petersen's favourite edition.
Included in:
Martin Parr & Gerry Badger - The Photobook Vol.1, pp. 230-231
Andrew Roth, The Open Book, p. 318
Condition:
Good paperback edition from 1985. Binding tight. Small area of rippling on lower edges of all pages. One short line of text highlighted. Mark to underside of book. Please examine listing photos carefully.

