Elger Esser: Sonnabend.Had Elger Esser deliberately set out to produce two apparently opposite bodies of work, he might well have settled on the landscape photographs for which he is best known and the enlarged shots of vintage seaside postcards in his recent show. The former photographs, large-scale in the manner of much current German photo art (Esser is yet another former student of 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. ), are beautiful in interesting ways. Some are striking for the flat feature-lessness of the expanses they show, often of water and sand; others describe coastal or riverine riv·er·ine adj. 1. Relating to or resembling a river. 2. Located on or inhabiting the banks of a river; riparian: "Members of a riverine tribe ... spots of no self-evident uniqueness, so that it is hard to tell what prompted their selection. In either case Esser seems to be attempting to unravel the codes of the picturesque, deflating the dramas of perspective and the carefully shaped view. The postcard series, on the other hand, is explicitly bound up with those codes, which are the stuff of this kind of image. Far-off mountains, crashing waves, scene-stealing children, local landmarks--all the features that were previously so painstakingly shunned have insinuated themselves here with a vengeance. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] And yet the new images are not merely picturesque. They recall, in fact, a group of mountain landscapes that Gerhard Richter Gerhard Richter (born February 9, 1932) is a prominent German artist. Richter is considered by some critics as one of the most important German artists of the post-World War II period and is also one of the world's most expensive, with his paintings often selling for several painted in the second half of the '90s, which scrupulously scru·pu·lous adj. 1. Conscientious and exact; painstaking. See Synonyms at meticulous. 2. Having scruples; principled. block the sense of expansive space and panoptic vision that mountain landscapes are specifically good for. Greatly enlarged--the largest work here was nearly ten feet wide--the postcards develop a mottled mottled /mot·tled/ (mot´ld) marked by spots or blotches of different colors or shades. grain, a screenlike barrier precluding total immersion Please help [ improve this article] by removing . in the view. The old-fashioned clothes of the figures and pictures like 52_Berck, 2004, which shows a beached fishing or cargo sailboat, place the pictures firmly in the past, adding to this sense of inaccessible remoteness. The color, similarly, is at once rich and faded, sumptuous and antique. Some of the images, including several of Saint-Malo in Brittany, show sweeps of coastline, high skies, and grand marine distances, and one guesses they pretty much follow the framing of the original postcard. Others, however--268_Le Havre Le Havre Seaport city (pop., 1999: 190,905), northern France. It lies along the English Channel and the Seine River estuary, northwest of Paris. The second port of France after Marseille, it serves as a base for exports; it is also an important industrial centre. II, 2004, for example, which focuses on the Chaplinesque oddity of the stance adopted by two men on a stone breakwater--are surely incidental details cropped out of some larger panorama. Here there may be no clear perspectival vanishing point, or a figure may be isolated against a flat field. Taken as a group, then, the works show an alternation alternation /al·ter·na·tion/ (awl?ter-na´shun) the regular succession of two opposing or different events in turn. alternation of generations metagenesis. between a nondescript non·de·script adj. Lacking distinctive qualities; having no individual character or form: "This expression gave temporary meaning to a set of features otherwise nondescript" dailiness--any beach, any summer, though always a long time ago--and a conventional loveliness that is reached for but always qualified. The effect, paradoxically, is quite lovely. Esser's approach to landscape reminds me of Beckett's to writing and to life, expressed in many tenderly contradictory apothegms: "imagination dead imagine"; "I can't go on, I'll go on." When the pictorial codes available for dealing with the world's geography have become stale and questionable, how do you make pictures that confront it anyway? Both here and in his earlier photographs, Esser is seeking out answers. |
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