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Andreas Gursky.


MATTHEW MARKS GALLERY

The discourse around Andreas Gursky Andreas Gursky (1955) is a German photographer known for the highly textured feel of his enormous photographs often using a high point of view.

Gursky received a strong influence from his teachers, Hilla and Bernd Becher, who are known for their distinctive method of
 tends to get trapped in an outdated modernist impulse to define a medium by its physical properties. Because his monumental color photographs are digitally manipulated, they must be not photographs but "photographic paintings." But it might be more useful to consider Gursky's work in terms of effect rather than category.

Gursky's latest offering featured his signature panoramic vistas of the weirdly spectacular yet antiseptic public spaces of late capitalism In his work Late Capitalism Ernest Mandel argues for three periods in the development of capitalism. First is market capitalism, which occurred from 1700 to 1850 and is characterized largely by the growth of industrial capital in domestic markets. : discount superstores, cavernous cavernous /cav·er·nous/ (kav´er-nus)
1. pertaining to a hollow, or containing hollow spaces.

2. having a hollow sound, such as certain abnormal breath sounds.
 hotel lobbies, stock-market trading floors. Also on display were three "micro-panoramas," massively enlarged close-ups of a page from a book (Robert Musil's Man Without Qualities) and of paintings (a Constable, a van Gogh). In the early '90s, Gursky began applying the formal tropes of modernist painting to his photographic images, and the works here further that trend. The swarming blue-and-red-smocked figures in Chicago, Board of Trade II, 1999, look uncannily like Pollockesque drips, and the rows of mass-produced goods in 99 Cent, 1999, conform precisely to the dictates of a modernist grid. The micro-panoramas, which update Jasper Johns's application of modernist flatness to the representation of objects that, by definition, are already flat, operate along similar lines.

Also in the early '90s, Gursky started to doctor his pictures digitally, largely to eliminate anecdotal detail and accentuate the underlying formal structure. However, unlike most artists working with computers, he still makes color prints from celluloid celluloid [from cellulose], transparent, colorless synthetic plastic made by treating cellulose nitrate with camphor and alcohol. Celluloid was the first important synthetic plastic and was widely used as a substitute for more expensive substances, such as  negatives. As a result, his images retain crystalline definition, minuscule grain, and a high-gloss sheen. They still read, in other words Adv. 1. in other words - otherwise stated; "in other words, we are broke"
put differently
, as photographs-not as computer-generated images-despite the digital manipulation. They read as photographs also because Gursimy's images do more than mimic abstract painting: They rigorously adhere to adhere to
verb 1. follow, keep, maintain, respect, observe, be true, fulfil, obey, heed, keep to, abide by, be loyal, mind, be constant, be faithful

2.
 the conventions of documentary photography Documentary photography usually refers to a type of professional photojournalism, but it may also be an amateur or student pursuit. The photographer attempts to produce truthful, objective, and usually candid photography of a particular subject, most often pictures of people.  (flawless technique, a dispassionate dis·pas·sion·ate  
adj.
Devoid of or unaffected by passion, emotion, or bias. See Synonyms at fair1.



dis·pas
 treatment of subject matter) made famous by artists like Bernd and Hilla Becher Bernd and Hilla Becher were a German photographer team and a married couple, best- known for their collection of industrial building images examining the similarities and differences in structure and appearance.

Bernd (1931 – 2007) and Hilla (b.
, Gursky's mentors.

But in his pictures something is always slightly off. The colors, though lushly saturated, are too metallic. The spaces, while perspectival, appear oddly flat. This effect (most obvious in works like 99 Cent and Rhein II, 1999) is achieved by photographing a scene of deep space, scanning the image into a computer and dividing it into horizontal bands, adjusting objects near the vanishing point so that their resolution matches that of objects in the foreground, and then pasting the whole thing back into its original configuration. The results are twofold: First, atmospheric perspective is eliminated; second, things that originally lay one behind the other now lie next to each other on the same spatial plane. At the same time, singlepoint perspective remains intact, creating a disturbing sense of spatial dislocation and an even more disturbing gap between what we think we're looking at and what we're actually seeing. The problem with Gursky's pictures is that there's always a point at which it becomes impossible to tell the difference.

Gursky primes viewers to read his work in terms of the conventions that signify "photographic objectivity." But then he thwarts expectations--without giving us the means to understand where they have gone awry. He forces us to confront the presence of a technology that, although apparent, remains incomprehensible. This-and not the debate it incites about medium specificity-is the most meaningful aspect of Gursky's digital manipulations. Gursky leaves his viewers with two options: either persist in Verb 1. persist in - do something repeatedly and showing no intention to stop; "We continued our research into the cause of the illness"; "The landlord persists in asking us to move"
continue
 trying to figure out how the images are made and get bogged down in an obfuscating technology; or abandon the effort entirely and submit to a pleasurable, but directionless, cognitive drift across the surface of his "allover" compositions. It hardly seems accidental that this is increasingly the alternative technology offers us every day. Less obvious is whether Gursky's images serve as a critical allegory of latecapitalist anomie anomie, a social condition characterized by instability, the breakdown of social norms, institutional disorganization, and a divorce between socially valid goals and available means for achieving them.  or whether they are simply another instance of it.
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Title Annotation:photographer
Author:Sundell, Margaret
Publication:Artforum International
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Mar 1, 2000
Words:623
Previous Article:Tim Gardner.(painter)
Next Article:LAWRENCE GIPE.(Brief Article)
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