Robert Adams
Diane Arbus
Lewis Baltz
Bernd and Hilla Becher
Philip-Lorca diCorcia
Rineke Dijkstra
William Eggleston
Walker Evans
Robert Frank
Lee Friedlander
Paul Graham
Andreas Gursky
Boris Michailov
Nicholas Nixon
Martin Parr
Albert Renger-Patzsch
Thomas Ruff
August Sander
Michael Schmidt
Fazal Sheikh
Stephen Shore
Thomas Struth
Garry Winogrand
Photography and the Real. The exhibition takes an in-depth look at the type of photography which aims to present unvarnished reality. The works selected are characterized by their factual way of representing reality, with the artist keeping a seemingly low profile. A closer look, however, clearly reveals a subjective, individual approach and a keen interest in the objects depicted.
Photography and the Real
The exhibition takes an in-depth look at the type of photography which
aims to present unvarnished reality. The works selected are characterized
by their factual way of representing reality, with the artist keeping a
seemingly low profile. A closer look, however, clearly reveals a
subjective, individual approach and a keen interest in the objects
depicted.
The exhibition title "Cruel and Tender" highlights the paradox of
detachment and commitment. It goes back to a statement by Lincoln
Kirstein, an art and literature scholar, who characterized the works of
the American photographer Walker Evans using the expression "tender
cruelty". The tension between objective description and subjective
interest in the object becomes apparent in works which are completely
different in character such as August Sander's major portrait project
"people in the 20th century" and Boris Michailov's contemporary works
depicting the predicament of the homeless and deprived in the former
Soviet Union.
This major exhibition will present works by more than twenty photographers
whose photographs depict reality and who have been trend-setters in this
field. The exhibition will present comprehensive groups of works by Robert
Adams, Diane Arbus, Lewis Baltz, Bernd and Hilla Becher, Philip-Lorca
diCorcia, Rineke Dijkstra, William Eggleston, Walker Evans, Robert Frank,
Lee Friedlander, Paul Graham, Andreas Gursky, Boris Michailov, Nicholas
Nixon, Martin Parr, Albert Renger-Patzsch, Thomas Ruff, August Sander,
Michael Schmidt, Fazal Sheikh, Stephen Shore, Thomas Struth and Garry
Winogrand.
The photographer's unemotional and cold, yet sympathetic view of the
objects depicted, which is the central theme of this exhibition,
pre-supposes a detailed and objective description. Thus, formalistic,
surrealist and romantic photographic trends are excluded right from the
outset. This kind of photography creates pictures about objects, not
pictures with objects. "Cruel and Tender - Photography and the Real" is
not arranged in a chronological order, but creates a dialogue of
individual positions. This dialogue takes place at different places and
times and will reveal differences and affinities in the realistic
photography of the 20th century.
The exhibition "Cruel and Tender - Photography and the Real" - is being
created in a joint venture by the Museum Ludwig and the Tate Modern. It is
being designed by Emma Dexter, senior curator at the Tate Modern and by
Thomas Weski, senior curator at the Museum Ludwig.
For the Tate Modern this first major exhibition of photography, which had
nearly 100.000 visitors in London, signals a successful start in the
dealing with photography. It will provide the Museum Ludwig, which has a
comprehensive, but heterogeneous photographic collection, with the
opportunity to review the role of photography in the context of a
collection of 20th century and contemporary art. The exhibition reflects
in the area of photography the structure of this collection with its focal
point of an artistic dialog between Europe and the USA.
The exhibition in the Museum Ludwig is supported by the German Savings
Banks Association.
A comprehensive exhibition catalogue will be published by Hatje Cantz with
essays by David Campany, Emma Dexter, Susanne Lange and Thomas Weski, 210
illustrations, 287 pages.
contact:
Annegret Buchholtz
Press officer
Bischofsgartenstrasse 1, 50667 Koln
Telefon 0221 - 221 - 23491
Telefax 0221 - 221 - 24114
Museum Ludwig
Bischofsgartenstr. 1, 50667
Koln