Nr 82828035

Såld
Heinrich Riebesehl - Agrarlandschaften - 1979
Slutgiltigt bud
€ 85
1 vecka sedan

Heinrich Riebesehl - Agrarlandschaften - 1979

MOST FAMOUS BOOK TITLE by the IMPORTANT GERMAN PHOTOGRAPHER Heinrich Riebesehl (1938-2010), mentioned here: Martin Parr, Gerry Badger, The photobook, vol 2, page 267 TRUE ORIGINAL FIRST PRINTING in the VERY IMPRESSIVE OVER-SIZE-FORMAT (there was much more later, in 2002, a much more smaller format edition published). SCARCE GERMAN PHOTOBOOK TITLE - with the VERY SCARCE ORIGINAL DUSTJACKET. Heinrich Riebesehl is - alongside Bernd and Hilla Becher - the great documentarist of German photography in the second half of the 20th century. Welcome to the "GERMAN PHOTOBOOKS" auction by Ecki Heuser (5Uhr30.com, Cologne) - with more than 100 fantastic lots. IF YOU WIN MORE THAN 1 OF MY BOOKS IN THIS AUCTION, YOU WILL PAY ONLY 1 X SHIPPING COSTS - WORLDWIDE. Schmalfeldt, Bremen. 1979. First edition, first printing. Hardback with full black cloth and dustjacket. 296 x 402 cm. 96 pages. 84 black and white photographs. Photos: Heinrich Riebesehl. Additional photos: Albert Renger-Patzsch, Ansel Adams, Bernd and Hilla Becher and Minor White. Design: Hartmut Brückner. Text (introduction essay): Peter Sager. Text in German. Condition: Book inside and outside excellent, very fresh and flawless; clean with no marks and with no foxing. The extrem fragile dustjacket complete with no missing parts, but used; lightly yellowed (like mostly), rubbed at the right edges of the front (like often), triangle creases and tears at the bottom right corner of the front and some more smaller tears (all tears stronger taped on reverse). Overall very good condition. Excellent photobook - with the original dustjacket. "Heinrich Riebesehl was a German post-war photographer and university lecturer. In April 1963 Heinrich Riebesehl began his studies with Otto Steinert at the Folkwangschule für Gestaltung in Essen in the photography work group. In 1965 he left the Folkwangschule after a conflict with Otto Steinert, but resumed his studies in October 1972 after being accepted into the final semester on Steinert's advice. In January 1973, Riebesehl completed his studies with an overall grade of "very good". As his practical final thesis, he submitted photographs from the series Locomotives, Sabine, People in Lifts and Self-Portrayals, among others. Riebesehl wrote his theoretical thesis on the subject of "photographic memories." The work "Situationen und Objekte" ("Situations and Objects") brings together individual images taken by Riebesehl between 1973 and 1977 in Germany, Japan and Scotland, which can be stylistically assigned to "Magical Realism" and "Subjective Photography" as influenced by Otto Steinert. Situations and Objects is an attempt to make visible the element of the magical, the unreal, inherent in seemingly everyday situations or ordinary objects. Riebesehl worked with hard contrasts and unusual perspectives in order to isolate the objects or people from their surroundings and to situate them in a new context, contrary to the usual viewing habits. Here too, as in the conceptual portrait photographs, the images are numbered consecutively instead of having titles. The subjective approach Riebesehl pursued in Situations and Objects gives way to working in a documentary style in the series "Agricultural Landscapes", taken from 1976 to 1979. The photographs show a sober, objective image of North German landscapes, mostly deserted and distanced. By choosing a wide-angle framing and a light that is as neutral as possible and by refraining from technical manipulation, Riebesehl pursues the goal of creating an "image that is as simple as possible and easy for the viewer to comprehend". While Riebesehl initially photographed with a 35 mm camera, he first switched to medium format for the agricultural landscapes and finally to large format (plate camera) in the following series. On the one hand, this technique made it possible to produce detailed, large-format prints with many gradations between black and white; on the other hand, the size and weight of the camera and the resulting need to work with a tripod and slow shutter speeds created a certain static and distance in the pictures. The spontaneity of situations and objects gives way in Agricultural Landscapes to a slower, more considered way of working. Based on the documentary visual language developed in "Agricultural Landscapes", further series of North German cultural landscapes were created in the 1970s, including industrial buildings, port facilities and railway landscapes. Taken together, these represent an attempt at a topographical survey of the North German landscape and its transformation in the course of increasing industrialisation. Riebesehl worked on this complex of works until the beginning of 2000, which he completed in 2001 with the series Dorfansichten, for which he photographed in colour for the first time. For Agricultural Landscapes, Heinrich Riebesehl was the first photographer to receive the Bernhard Sprengel Prize for Fine Arts in 1981." (Wikipedia)

Nr 82828035

Såld
Heinrich Riebesehl - Agrarlandschaften - 1979

Heinrich Riebesehl - Agrarlandschaften - 1979

MOST FAMOUS BOOK TITLE by the IMPORTANT GERMAN PHOTOGRAPHER Heinrich Riebesehl (1938-2010), mentioned here: Martin Parr, Gerry Badger, The photobook, vol 2, page 267

TRUE ORIGINAL FIRST PRINTING in the VERY IMPRESSIVE OVER-SIZE-FORMAT
(there was much more later, in 2002, a much more smaller format edition published).

SCARCE GERMAN PHOTOBOOK TITLE - with the VERY SCARCE ORIGINAL DUSTJACKET.

Heinrich Riebesehl is - alongside Bernd and Hilla Becher - the great documentarist of German photography in the second half of the 20th century.

Welcome to the "GERMAN PHOTOBOOKS" auction by Ecki Heuser (5Uhr30.com, Cologne) -
with more than 100 fantastic lots.
IF YOU WIN MORE THAN 1 OF MY BOOKS IN THIS AUCTION, YOU WILL PAY ONLY 1 X SHIPPING COSTS - WORLDWIDE.

Schmalfeldt, Bremen. 1979. First edition, first printing.

Hardback with full black cloth and dustjacket. 296 x 402 cm. 96 pages. 84 black and white photographs. Photos: Heinrich Riebesehl. Additional photos: Albert Renger-Patzsch, Ansel Adams, Bernd and Hilla Becher and Minor White. Design: Hartmut Brückner. Text (introduction essay): Peter Sager. Text in German.

Condition:
Book inside and outside excellent, very fresh and flawless; clean with no marks and with no foxing. The extrem fragile dustjacket complete with no missing parts, but used; lightly yellowed (like mostly), rubbed at the right edges of the front (like often), triangle creases and tears at the bottom right corner of the front and some more smaller tears (all tears stronger taped on reverse). Overall very good condition.

Excellent photobook - with the original dustjacket.

"Heinrich Riebesehl was a German post-war photographer and university lecturer.
In April 1963 Heinrich Riebesehl began his studies with Otto Steinert at the Folkwangschule für Gestaltung in Essen in the photography work group. In 1965 he left the Folkwangschule after a conflict with Otto Steinert, but resumed his studies in October 1972 after being accepted into the final semester on Steinert's advice. In January 1973, Riebesehl completed his studies with an overall grade of "very good". As his practical final thesis, he submitted photographs from the series Locomotives, Sabine, People in Lifts and Self-Portrayals, among others. Riebesehl wrote his theoretical thesis on the subject of "photographic memories."
The work "Situationen und Objekte" ("Situations and Objects") brings together individual images taken by Riebesehl between 1973 and 1977 in Germany, Japan and Scotland, which can be stylistically assigned to "Magical Realism" and "Subjective Photography" as influenced by Otto Steinert. Situations and Objects is an attempt to make visible the element of the magical, the unreal, inherent in seemingly everyday situations or ordinary objects. Riebesehl worked with hard contrasts and unusual perspectives in order to isolate the objects or people from their surroundings and to situate them in a new context, contrary to the usual viewing habits. Here too, as in the conceptual portrait photographs, the images are numbered consecutively instead of having titles.
The subjective approach Riebesehl pursued in Situations and Objects gives way to working in a documentary style in the series "Agricultural Landscapes", taken from 1976 to 1979. The photographs show a sober, objective image of North German landscapes, mostly deserted and distanced. By choosing a wide-angle framing and a light that is as neutral as possible and by refraining from technical manipulation, Riebesehl pursues the goal of creating an "image that is as simple as possible and easy for the viewer to comprehend".
While Riebesehl initially photographed with a 35 mm camera, he first switched to medium format for the agricultural landscapes and finally to large format (plate camera) in the following series. On the one hand, this technique made it possible to produce detailed, large-format prints with many gradations between black and white; on the other hand, the size and weight of the camera and the resulting need to work with a tripod and slow shutter speeds created a certain static and distance in the pictures. The spontaneity of situations and objects gives way in Agricultural Landscapes to a slower, more considered way of working.
Based on the documentary visual language developed in "Agricultural Landscapes", further series of North German cultural landscapes were created in the 1970s, including industrial buildings, port facilities and railway landscapes. Taken together, these represent an attempt at a topographical survey of the North German landscape and its transformation in the course of increasing industrialisation. Riebesehl worked on this complex of works until the beginning of 2000, which he completed in 2001 with the series Dorfansichten, for which he photographed in colour for the first time. For Agricultural Landscapes, Heinrich Riebesehl was the first photographer to receive the Bernhard Sprengel Prize for Fine Arts in 1981."
(Wikipedia)

Skapa en sökbevakning
Skapa en sökbevakning för att få ett meddelande när nya matchningar är tillgängliga.

Detta objekt förekom i

                                        
                                                                                                    
                    
                                        
                                                                                                    
                    
                                        
                                                                                                    
                    

Hur du köper på Catawiki

Läs mer om vårt Köparskydd

      1. Upptäck något speciellt

      Bläddra bland tusentals speciella objekt som valts ut av experter. Se foton, detaljer och uppskattat värde för varje speciellt objekt. 

      2. Lägg det högsta budet

      Hitta något du älskar och lägg det högsta budet. Du kan följa auktionen till slutet eller låta vårt system sköta budgivningen åt dig. Allt du behöver göra är att ställa in ett bud på det maximala belopp du vill betala. 

      3. Gör en säker betalning

      Betala för ditt speciella objekt så håller vi din betalning säker tills det anländer välbehållet. Vi använder ett pålitligt betalningssystem för att hantera alla transaktioner. 

Har du något liknande att sälja?

Oavsett om du är ny på onlineauktioner eller säljer professionellt kan vi hjälpa dig att tjäna mer på dina speciella föremål.

Sälj ditt objekt