Freres Charnaux
Paul Faiss
Foto Flury
Jean Gaberell
Emile Gos
Romedo Guler
Emanuel Gyger
Alfred Heinze
Jean-Pascal Imsand
Arnold Klopfenstein
Emil Meerkamper
Andreas Pedrett
Othmar Rutz
Wilhelm Salzborn
Bartholome Schocher
Foto Schonwetter
Gustav Sommer
Albert Steiner
Roberto Raineri-Seith
Othmar Rutz
Group show
Atmosphere, grandeur, purity – mountain images have triggered intense feelings and
fascinated people ever since photographers first explored the subject in the middle of the
19th century. It is therefore astonishing that there has never been a significant photography
exhibition on this theme in Switzerland. The «Swiss Alpine Photography» exhibition aims to fill
this gap with a first-class selection of Swiss mountain photographs.
In the first half of the twentieth century, when the Swiss Alps – not least through the influence
of photography – became a landscape of cure and culture, the sale of mountain images
was a profitable business. In every large spa resort there was at least one photographer’s
studio, where, alongside portraits, mountain landscapes were in great demand.
The most famous of these alpine photographers today is Albert Steiner (1877-1968) from the
Bernese highlands, who owned a photography business in St. Moritz from 1909. Greater than
his contemporaries, who were concerned with a more documentary style, Steiner focused on
the tradition of painting, and above all on Giovanni Segantini and Ferdinand Hodler. Steiner’s
photographs of the Upper Engadine lakes region, where his spiritual and symbolic approach
to nature is reflected, have significantly shaped our sense of Switzerland as an alpine country
of timeless beauty.
However, still to be discovered is Bartholome Schocher (1901-1979) from Pontresina. The son of
a mountain guide and chamois hunter, who was a pioneer of Engadine alpinism, Schocher
was likewise an enthusiastic mountain climber and often accompanied his father on tours
with his old plate camera. His seemingly classic landscape photographs are distinguished by
careful composition and effective light-dark shades. In «Durchblick zur Berninagruppe» (View
of Bernina mountain range), for example, the brightly lit, eternally snow-covered mountain
range in the background contrasts effectively with the dark trees in the foreground.
Andreas Pedrett (1892–1977) came to be known above all for images of high mountain
ranges. He also owned a photography business in St. Moritz from 1917. In the exhibition one of
his rare images can be seen, which shows an old, bearded man sitting on a gnarled larch. A
partly snow-covered mountain valley stretches across the background, the threatening
clouds announcing a change in the weather.
At first there were painted landscapes, which fulfilled people’s desire for an ideal world, close
to nature. Later photography took over this role. In contrast to painting, photography reflects
the subject more richly, more accurately and more diversely and as a medium of individual,
artistic expression has long enjoyed this same high regard. In addition to images from the first
half of the twentieth century, the «Swiss Alpine Photography» exhibition also includes
mountain images by contemporary photographers such as Roberto Raineri-Seith (1959) und
Jean-Pascal Imsand (1960-1994).
Photographers
Frères Charnaux, Paul Faiss, Foto Flury, Jean Gaberell, Emile Gos, Romedo Guler, Emanuel
Gyger, Alfred Heinze, Jean-Pascal Imsand, Arnold Klopfenstein, Emil Meerkämper, Andreas
Pedrett, Othmar Rutz, Wilhelm Salzborn, Bartholome Schocher, Foto Schönwetter, Gustav
Sommer, Albert Steiner, Roberto Raineri-Seith, Othmar Rutz.
Opening Saturday, August 30, 11 - 17 pm
ArteF Galerie
Splugenstrasse 11 - Zurich
Opening hours: Tuesday – Friday, 13.00 – 18.00 Saturday, 11.00 – 16.00
Free admission