Chargesheimer - Schöne Ruinen ("Beautiful Ruins") - 1994





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Description from the seller
BEAUTIFUL, WIDELY UNKNOWN SMALL BOOK by famous German photographer Chargesheimer,
who published 14 books in total during short life-time (1924-1971).
The book "Beautiful Ruins" was published 23 years after his death, created on the basis of a book project conceived in 1949 by Günther Weiß-Margis and Chargesheimer. With a contribution by Anke Solbrig, using original texts by Günther Weiß-Margis, and an afterword by Anneliese Weiß-Margis.
QUITE RARE CHARGESHEIMER TITLE - COMPLETE WITH THE ORIGINAL SLIPCASE.
THIS IS THE FIRST BEST-OF-PHOTOBOOKS AUCTION by 5Uhr30.com, starting in 2026.
With more than 100 great lots from my personal collection and from recent acquisitions.
Chargesheimer is famous for "Köln 5Uhr30" ("Cologne at 5.30") and many other photobooks like "Im Ruhrgebiet" (1958) or "Unter Krahnenbäumen" (1958).
This is a lot by 5Uhr30.com (Ecki Heuser, Cologne, Germany).
We guarantee detailed and accurate descriptions, 100% transport protection, 100% transport insurance and of course combined shipping - worldwide.
Wienand, Cologne. 1994. First edition, first printing.
Hardcover in linen with cardboard slipcase (as issued). 170 x 227 mm. 96 pages. 31 black-and-white photographs. Photos: Chargesheimer. Design: Julia Schäfer. Foreword: Reinhold Mißelbeck ("Chaos as a Principle of Life". Text: Anke Solbrig ("The Early Concept of the Beautiful Ruins"). Afterword: Anneliese Weiß-Margis. Text in German.
Condition:
Book inside and outside excellent, fresh and flawless, clean with no marks and with no
foxing. Slipcase lightly used and lightly toned. Overall in very fine condition.
Great, widely unknown photobook by Chargesheimer - with the original slipcase.
'Chargesheimer is regarded as one of Cologne's central photographic personalities after the Second World War. But to categorize him only as a photographer is not enough. Rather, he saw himself as an artist and was active in many fields in this sense. He painted, created sculptures and designed stage sets, but his photographic work runs like a common thread through his life's work.
He did not complete any regular training, but spent several semesters in the photography class at the Cologne Werkschulen and at the Bavarian State Institute for Photography. During these years, he worked with light graphics and as a stage photographer.
From the early 1950s, he also took on various photographic assignments for advertising, a field which he also taught as a lecturer at the Bi-Kla School in Düsseldorf until 1955. This was followed by exhibitions in which a new thematic focus, people photography, began to emerge, which was ultimately reflected in a dense series of illustrated books.
Between 1957 and 1960, seven books were published - on Cologne and the Rhineland, the Ruhr region and Berlin - with which he established his reputation as an exceptional observer of his environment and his contemporaries. These books, although not always unchallenged at the time, are now considered landmarks in the history of photography. After these successes, he turned increasingly to the theater, creating stage sets and directing, while at the same time working on kinetic objects, the so-called 'meditation mills'. His work in the theater resulted in the illustrated book 'Theater - Theater' (1967) with a very direct, non-theatrical, but occasionally stylized image of people and situations. The fact that many books received introductions by well-known authors, including Heinrich Böll and Martin Walser, shows the great esteem in which Chargesheimer was held in intellectual circles.
In his last works, illustrated books about Hanover and Cologne (1970), a new pictorial style emerges that has its roots in New Objectivity, but also contains clear critical potential in the choice of locations and exaggerated perspectives.
This peculiarity, combined with an adherence to the black and white mode that went against the trend of the time, can be interpreted as a new stylistic stage, but probably also as a sign of a burgeoning depression. Chargesheimer retired voluntarily at the end of 1971.'
(Gallery Julian Sander)
Seller's Story
BEAUTIFUL, WIDELY UNKNOWN SMALL BOOK by famous German photographer Chargesheimer,
who published 14 books in total during short life-time (1924-1971).
The book "Beautiful Ruins" was published 23 years after his death, created on the basis of a book project conceived in 1949 by Günther Weiß-Margis and Chargesheimer. With a contribution by Anke Solbrig, using original texts by Günther Weiß-Margis, and an afterword by Anneliese Weiß-Margis.
QUITE RARE CHARGESHEIMER TITLE - COMPLETE WITH THE ORIGINAL SLIPCASE.
THIS IS THE FIRST BEST-OF-PHOTOBOOKS AUCTION by 5Uhr30.com, starting in 2026.
With more than 100 great lots from my personal collection and from recent acquisitions.
Chargesheimer is famous for "Köln 5Uhr30" ("Cologne at 5.30") and many other photobooks like "Im Ruhrgebiet" (1958) or "Unter Krahnenbäumen" (1958).
This is a lot by 5Uhr30.com (Ecki Heuser, Cologne, Germany).
We guarantee detailed and accurate descriptions, 100% transport protection, 100% transport insurance and of course combined shipping - worldwide.
Wienand, Cologne. 1994. First edition, first printing.
Hardcover in linen with cardboard slipcase (as issued). 170 x 227 mm. 96 pages. 31 black-and-white photographs. Photos: Chargesheimer. Design: Julia Schäfer. Foreword: Reinhold Mißelbeck ("Chaos as a Principle of Life". Text: Anke Solbrig ("The Early Concept of the Beautiful Ruins"). Afterword: Anneliese Weiß-Margis. Text in German.
Condition:
Book inside and outside excellent, fresh and flawless, clean with no marks and with no
foxing. Slipcase lightly used and lightly toned. Overall in very fine condition.
Great, widely unknown photobook by Chargesheimer - with the original slipcase.
'Chargesheimer is regarded as one of Cologne's central photographic personalities after the Second World War. But to categorize him only as a photographer is not enough. Rather, he saw himself as an artist and was active in many fields in this sense. He painted, created sculptures and designed stage sets, but his photographic work runs like a common thread through his life's work.
He did not complete any regular training, but spent several semesters in the photography class at the Cologne Werkschulen and at the Bavarian State Institute for Photography. During these years, he worked with light graphics and as a stage photographer.
From the early 1950s, he also took on various photographic assignments for advertising, a field which he also taught as a lecturer at the Bi-Kla School in Düsseldorf until 1955. This was followed by exhibitions in which a new thematic focus, people photography, began to emerge, which was ultimately reflected in a dense series of illustrated books.
Between 1957 and 1960, seven books were published - on Cologne and the Rhineland, the Ruhr region and Berlin - with which he established his reputation as an exceptional observer of his environment and his contemporaries. These books, although not always unchallenged at the time, are now considered landmarks in the history of photography. After these successes, he turned increasingly to the theater, creating stage sets and directing, while at the same time working on kinetic objects, the so-called 'meditation mills'. His work in the theater resulted in the illustrated book 'Theater - Theater' (1967) with a very direct, non-theatrical, but occasionally stylized image of people and situations. The fact that many books received introductions by well-known authors, including Heinrich Böll and Martin Walser, shows the great esteem in which Chargesheimer was held in intellectual circles.
In his last works, illustrated books about Hanover and Cologne (1970), a new pictorial style emerges that has its roots in New Objectivity, but also contains clear critical potential in the choice of locations and exaggerated perspectives.
This peculiarity, combined with an adherence to the black and white mode that went against the trend of the time, can be interpreted as a new stylistic stage, but probably also as a sign of a burgeoning depression. Chargesheimer retired voluntarily at the end of 1971.'
(Gallery Julian Sander)
Seller's Story
Details
Rechtliche Informationen des Verkäufers
- Unternehmen:
- 5Uhr30.com
- Repräsentant:
- Ecki Heuser
- Adresse:
- 5Uhr30.com
Thebäerstr. 34
50823 Köln
GERMANY - Telefonnummer:
- +491728184000
- Email:
- photobooks@5Uhr30.com
- USt-IdNr.:
- DE154811593
AGB
AGB des Verkäufers. Mit einem Gebot auf dieses Los akzeptieren Sie ebenfalls die AGB des Verkäufers.
Widerrufsbelehrung
- Frist: 14 Tage sowie gemäß den hier angegebenen Bedingungen
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