Evidence as to man's place in nature. His black and white photographs observe the relationship between Man and Animal, and that of the Natural Sciences and Art. Combining the systematic approaches and methods of scientific research on the one hand, with free association and artistic license on the other.
Evidence as to man's place in nature
Galerie Reinhard Hauff is pleased to announce the opening of its first
solo show with the Hamburg artist Jochen Lempert (*1958) on June 16th.
Lempert, who this month receives the prestigious Edwin-Scharff-Prize
from the City of Hamburg, has a degree in biology. His black and white
photographs observe the relationship between Man and Animal, and that
of the Natural Sciences and Art. Combining the systematic approaches
and methods of scientific research on the one hand, with free
association and artistic license on the other, his photographs present
subtle, frequently humourous analogies and juxtapositions of Man and
Animal, and guide the viewer towards the discovery of some of those
many things in the world that surrounds us, which do not immediately
meet the eye.
Lempert photographs an aphid sitting on the leaf of a lime tree in the
street, but enlarges the image so much that the aphid itself becomes
precisely the size of a grain in the structure of the photographic
paper, and thereby no longer visible in the print. When working in his
darkroom, he fixes traces of the glow of the "Alge Noctiluca" - also
known as Ocean Sparks - on the paper as a photogramme. In such
situations, an ambiguitiy between natural phenomena and photographic
image comes about, and this is what the educated biologist is
interested in. On expeditions through the animal world surrounding Man,
the artist looks for seemingly unspectacular occurences such as a train
of wild geese, Magpies building nests, dogs marking their territory -
or spiderwebs in the wind. The results of these fieldtrips - as caught
on camera - are presented in Lempert's exhibitions, so that the
ambivalence between technical equiment and nature observed make endless
possible relationships between natural habitat and artificial
environment obvious. Nature and artificial forms blend into each other
to the extent that it is often unclear whether it is an actual object
which appears on a photo, or just a scratch in the negative.
The titel of the exhibition Evidence as to Man's Place in Nature is
taken from a book by the British natural scientist and biologist Thomas
Henry Huxley (1825-1895), in which - inspired by Darwin's Theory of
Evolution - Man's origin from apes is proven for the first time. In an
age where photography has lost its credibility as bearer of evidential
values, Lempert's consistent adherence to analogous photography seems
like an anachronistic, poetic reflex. The questions which are
implicitly and repeatedly asked in Lempert's encyclopedic work, namely
how we perceive our natural environment - leave open if, when and what
photography can indeed reproduce and/or transmit in an open
environment of scientific (observation) research and artistic
perception.
Opening: Friday, 16th June 2006, 7 PM
Galerie Reinhard Hauff
Paulinenstr. 47 D-70178 Stuttgart