WORKS
80-08
Andreas Gursky
Hardbound,
8" x 10",
272
pages
174 color illustrations
2009, Hatje Cantz
Text by Martin Hentschel
From the Publisher:
In all eras there have been artists who have aspired
to encyclopedic summation of the world, to find a form to accommodate
the mess,' as Samuel Beckett once put it. The Renaissance marked
the juncture at which it became impossible for any one person
to have read every book in existence (just as books became widely
available for the first time, ironically); today it would be a
feat even to count the number of toothpastes in your average grocery
store. Andreas Gursky's photographs are merciless in their vertiginous
will to make every last tube of toothpaste count, to compel every
constituent into legibility. His optical fanaticism is not an
effect of specific consumerist critique so much as a desire to
set before the eye what was deemed too much for the mind, pressing
the extreme surfeit of the world's contents against its limits.
For this volume, Gursky has chosen more than 150 works from his
fund of photographs, reaching back to his student days at the
Folkwang Hochschule Essen and his studies with Bernd and Hilla
Becher at the Kunstakademie Düsseldorf. The earliest exposures
here include the Desk Attendants series and other unpublished
photographs, and the most recent images were conceived especially
for the book. Every single exposure in Gursky's encyclopedic morphology
is a vital piece in the puzzle, which, over the course of his
28-year career, has amounted to an encyclopedia of the unencompassable.
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