THOMAS
DEMAND
Thomas Demand
Hardbound,
11½" x 11", 226
pages
35 color illustrations
2010, SteidlMack
Text by Walter Abish, Mark Godfrey
From the Piblisher:
Thomas Demand provokes confrontations between photography’s
poles of fact and fiction. True-to-size paper models are photographed
and then scaled down, while traces of event and person are systematically
removed, leaving phantom images of the proposed “crime scene”
that seem at once familiar and dreamlike. Demand’s 2009
Nationalgalerie (Berlin) exhibition and catalogue bring together
his work on German history since 1945—a scrutiny of the
“Deutschlandbild,” the “German image.”
These reflections, reconstructed in photographs from a variety
of scenarios in the postwar period, encourage the viewer to consider
the complexity of the photographic document. Demand’s representations
of the social and historical are introduced not as monoliths but
as places of multiple possibility, halls of mirrors in which the
viewer is forced to confront—rather than be fed—potential
distortions. His concern for the pliability of human memory and
the play between the central and peripheral image contributes
to the vibrancy of his art. For Demand, the photographer’s
accomplishment lies in “re-privatisating that which is constructed
as a public opinion.”
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