Andreas Gursky. 99 Cent.
1999.
Chromogenic color print.
6 ' 9 1/2" x 11' (207 x 337 cm).
Lent by the artist, courtesy Matthew Marks Gallery, New York, and Monika
Sprüth Galerie, Cologne
© 2001 Andreas Gursky.
Andreas Gursky. Shanghai.
2000.
Chromogenic color print.
9' 11 5/16"x 6' 9 1/2" (280 x 200 cm).
Lent by the artist, courtesy Matthew Marks Gallery, New York, and Monika
Sprüth Galerie, Cologne
© 2001 Andreas Gursky.
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One might say that Andreas Gursky learned photography three
times. Born in 1955, he grew up in Düsseldorf, the only child of
a successful commercial photographer, learning the tricks of that trade
before he had finished high school. In the late 1970s, he spent two years
in nearby Essen at the Folkwangschule (Folkwang School), which Otto Steinert
had established as West Germanys leading training ground for professional
photographers, especially photojournalists. At Essen, Gursky encountered
photography's documentary tradition, a sophisticated art of unembellished
observation, whose earnest outlook was remote from the artificial enticements
of commercial work. Finally, in the early 1980s, he studied at the Staatliche
Kunstakademie (State Art Academy) in Düsseldorf, which thanks to
artists such as Joseph Beuys, Sigmar Polke, and Gerhard Richter had become
the hotbed of Germany's vibrant postwar avant-garde. There Gursky learned
the ropes of the art world and mastered the rigorous method of Bernd and
Hilla Becher, whose photographs had achieved prominence within the Conceptual
and Minimal art movements.
When Gursky, together with other Becher students, began to win recognition
in the late 1980s, his photography was interpreted as an extension of
his teachers' aesthetic. But the full range of Gursky's photographic educations
has figured in his mature work, enabling him to outgrow all three of them.
His photographsbig, bold, rich in color and detailconstitute
one of the most original achievements of the past decade and, for all
the panache of his signature style, one of the most complex. The exhibition
Andreas Gursky surveys that achievement from 1984 to the present.
It focuses on work since 1990, when Gursky turned his attention to subjects
that struck him as representative of a contemporary zeitgeistand
found equally contemporary ways of picturing them. In pursuit of this
project, Gursky expanded his scope of operations from Düsseldorf
and its environs to an international itinerary that has taken him to Hong
Kong, Cairo, New York, Brasília, Tokyo, Stockholm, Chicago, Athens,
Singapore, Paris, and Los Angeles, among other places. His early themes
of Sunday leisure and local tourism gave way to enormous industrial plants,
apartment buildings, hotels, office buildings, and warehouses. Family
outings and hiking trips were replaced by the Olympics, a cross-country
marathon involving hundreds of skiers, the German parliament, the trading
floors of international stock exchanges, alluring displays of brand-name
goods, and midnight techno music raves attended by casts of thousands.
Gurskys world of the 1990s is big, high-tech, fast-paced, expensive,
and global. Within it, the anonymous individual is but one among many.
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