HALF LIFE
Michael Ackerman
Hardbound, 12" x 8", 168 pages
153 duotone illustrations
2011, Dewi Lewis Publishing
Introduction by Denis Kambouchner
From the Publisher:
According to Denis Kambouchner's introduction, Michael Ackerman's latest book Half Life is a haunted book. It is certainly
disturbing; in Michael Ackerman's world, something is always
disintegrating. A feeling of isolation pervades; a space weighed
down by history takes over everything.
The landscapes are harsh and unwelcoming, combining frozen
expanses, blackened houses, vestiges of the mining industry and
abandoned cemeteries. But it is the anguish of individuals that stirs
us most deeply – their expressions of distress and confusion, their
unfinished gestures, the sense of damage. These are people who
appear to live in the ruins of a drama. It is as if their whole bodies
were given over to a scream. What all these people, these bodies
and these images, have in common is the pure situation, that
something is wrong – out of joint. Everything in the book is in the
form of a response. Ackerman carefully constructs a whole system
of recalls and echoes, reinforcing a primordial desolation, set
against the backdrop of an entirely fragmented and disordered
world. It is an extraordinary and unsettling vision.
Born in Tel Aviv, Michael Ackerman moved to New York in 1984.
After studying he began to photograph in the city's streets, nightclubs and on its waterfronts. Between 1993 and 1997 he made
several trips to Benares, India. The photographs were published as
End Time City by Robert Delpire, the legendary Paris based publisher. A member of Agence/Gallerie Vu, his work has been exhibited internationally and he has won several international awards
including the Prix Nadar, the SCAM Roger Pic Prize and the International Centre of Photography Infinity Award. His work is in many
major collections and in 2010 it was included in Traverse, the book
and exhibition of the collection of Marin Karmitz which was shown
at Rencontres d'Arle |