Vanhofen refers his photos to transitions: from process to status or from one situation to another, and chooses his perspective so that we experience the images as a change of context which also implies a change in meaning. We frequently associate such a transition with catastrophe or irritation.
Solo show
Kuckei + Kuckei is happy to present, for the first time, works by Jorn
Vanhofen. You are cordially invited to this event.
Spain 2003: A passenger ship on the sea at sunset. The scene resembles a
postcard “ a memento of a sea voyage. But this clichè quickly
collapses, as “lying too close to the coast“ the proud vessel is revealed to be a
beached wreck. The rear of the ship has been torn off. Visible signs of rust
make it apparent that the catastrophe took place a long time ago. Sea,
sunset and wreck as a new type of postcard for catastrophe tourism?
Berlin 2002: Part of Berlin's cathedral can be seen peeping out from behind
the ruins of the former Palast Hotel. Jorn Vanhofen photographed this
constellation from a building opposite, which itself forms part of the
picture. A few steps forward and to the left would have sufficed to get a
clear view of the historical building. But the picture defines just this
view and thus disrupts the expectations inherent in the flow of our
perceptions. It presents a specific arrangement of reality. The various
buildings act as a block. The fragments of the ruin resemble the small
architectonic elements on the facade of the cathedral. The difference
between them disappears thanks to a pattern which is imposed onto both
buildings.
Berlin 2004: The photo of a pile of rubble within a ruined complex of
buildings has the effect of a close-up. Photographed during a light
snowstorm, the snow crystals are distributed and fixed over the space.
Falling snow and destruction have one thing in common: rubble and snow are
both perceived as particles but also as a pile or a white surface. We
experience the falling particles as a process in time, the result as
timeless form. The picture becomes a metaphor by organizing the
apparently
chaotic arrangement of tiny particles into a pattern and thus liberating
them from their meaning, so they can be projected as a structure onto a
constructed reality.
But this incurs the risk that the metaphor creates a relationship which
exists only as a picture – and is consequently seen only as a possible
arrangement of reality rather than a reproduction of it. The transition from
a process “falling snow or destruction“ to a state such as a blanket of
snow or a pile of rubble, describes a change of organization. And even
destruction generates order. Jorn Vanhofen seeks to make such
transformations accessible to our experience by means of the potential
ambiguity of various esthetic patterns. Ambiguity implies a lack of meaning
but also the transition from one meaning to another, traversing a phase
without meaning in order to establish another one.
Jorn Vanhofen refers his photos to transitions: from process to status or
from one situation to another, and chooses his perspective so that we
experience the images as a change of context which also implies a change in
meaning. We frequently associate such a transition with catastrophe or
irritation. Fires, stormy weather and wars, a chance meeting on a
dissecting table of a sewing machine and an umbrella (Lautreamont), the
presence of a bronze stag in a hotel foyer or a dog roaming about a beach
(Liguria 1988). Vanhofen takes his photos when ambiguity emerges in the
picture from constellations of reality. We then come into conflict with our
experience of reality, which aims to eliminate ambiguity. And yet ambiguity
needs this difference.
Manfred Schmalriede
Opening: march 24, 2007
Kuckei + Kuckei
Linienstr. 158 - Berlin
Free admission