The Lives and Loves of Images; Biennale für aktuelle Fotografie 2020: When Images Collide (Wilhelm-Hack-Museum, Ludwigshafen)
Photography has always given rise to striking individual images, but in general, it has
been a medium of combination. Photographs are brought together to form larger and
more complex propositions about the world. Series, archives, collections, albums,
suites, sequences, stories, narratives.
72 artists in six thematic exhibitions.
Artists include:
Dennis Adams, Claudia Angelmaier, Adam Broomberg & Oliver Chanarin, Jean-Marc Caimi & Valentina Piccinni, David Claerbout, Jojakim Cortis & Adrian Sonderegger, Jeff Cowen, Julia Curtin, Tim Davis, John Divola, Stéphane Duroy, Walker Evans, Camille Fallet, Joan Fontcuberta, Pablo Genovés, George Georgiou, Hein Gorny, Sara Greenberger Rafferty, Darren Harvey-Regan, Aaron Hegert, Sohrab Hura, David Jiménez, Lisa Kereszi, Christoph Klauke, Steffi Klenz, Kensuke Koike, Justine Kurland, Sherrie Levine, Mark Lewis, Ute Mahler & Werner Mahler, Michael Mandiberg, Josh Murfitt, James Nares, Antonio Pérez Río, Max Pinckers & Dries Depoorter, Max Pinckers & Sam Weerdmeester, Jessica Potter, Patrick Pound, Peter Puklus, Timm Rautert, Sebastian Riemer, RaMell Ross, Thomas Ruff, Mark Ruwedel, Anastasia Samoylova, Martina Sauter, Maurice Scheltens & Liesbeth Abbenes, Bryan Schutmaat, Stephen Shore, Eva Stenram, John Stezaker, Daniel Stier, Clare Strand, Batia Suter, Nick Waplington, Christopher Williams, Vanessa Winship, Stanley Wolukau-Wanambwa, Thomas Wunsch, Ewa Monika Zebrowski.
Introduction
Photography has come to symbolize the extremes of contemporary society. It is deeply personal, and yet thoroughly public. Freeing at times, yet also limited and limiting. Expressive, yet culturally dominant. Pleasurable, but worrying. There is affection for photography, and it is a source of great fascination but we are, or ought to be, suspicious of its power and manipulations. If we are dependent upon the photographic image, as so many have claimed over the last century, this dependence gives us mixed feelings. If we were to teach young children about photography – which we really should – we would teach them to appreciate it and enjoy it but also to be aware of its manipulations, and distractions.
Across three cities, six museums and an extensive programme of talks, discussions and workshops, The Lives and Loves of Images explores how these tensions shape our understanding and appreciation of photography. A series of exhibitions, each thematically distinct, considers the hold, good and bad, which photographs have over us, viewers and image makers alike.
The emphasis is on contemporary practices, but throughout the Biennale we also showcase older approaches from the last century, placing the issues we face now in longer historical continuity. Although photography is supposed to be a medium of memory and history, it easily forgets its own past, but many of the possibilities and problems have arisen before. We should lay claim to that history. It is humbling, and gives much needed perspective on what often seems like a disturbingly amnesiac present.
At times the Biennale’s attention turns well known images, and image-makers, looking at the way contemporary artists understand them, absorb them, and contest them. At other times, artists return to quite forgotten or anonymous images and overlooked practices. Sometimes the artists are making new meanings from old images. Sometimes they are exploring different social contexts in which photography operates, while mixing images from different social sources. Sometimes the artists are working in modes first established by artists from the past, extending and expanding them. No single approach or theme unites all the works in this Biennale. Rather, their combined presence adds up to a set of propositions about the compellingly ambivalent status of photography.
Photographs do not explain themselves very well. They show, but they do not tell. They are good at the ‘what’ of appearance, but not the ‘why’ or the ‘how’. That means they are perhaps better at posing questions than answering them, and in this they are more like poetry than prose. The ‘messages’ they have for us are fragmentary and incomplete. It is for this reason that photography in visual culture has developed alongside language. Words explain, or supplement or expand upon what we see. It is often said that we live in a culture dominated by images, but really it is an image-text culture. Wherever there is an image there are words. Confronted by images without words, what to we do? Are we prepared to simply look and think for ourselves? What do we need to know in order to look? What if we feel we do not understand? What kind of understanding comes from simply looking? Above all else, The Lives and Loves of Images is an invitation to do just that, to look. Slowly, carefully, pleasurably, openly and thoughtfully. On the walls of the Biennale’s exhibition spaces, words are kept to a minimum. The images are arranged to form their own conversation, and to invite viewers to form theirs.
This catalogue is slightly different to the exhibitions. Here is where you can find a little more information about each of the artists, their projects, and the thoughts that motivated the various exhibitions. But of course, there is no substitute for looking, no substitute for confronting those moments when we are uncertain what to think of an image. In the end, and for art at least, uncertainty is a source of hope.
David Campany, Curator, Biennale für aktuelle Fotografie, 2020
Exhibitions:
All Art is Photography (Kunstverein Ludwigshafen)
Between Art and Commerce (Port25 – Raum für Gegenwartskunst, Mannheim)
Reconsidering Icons (Museum Weltkulturen der Reiss-Engelhorn-Museen, Mannheim)
Walker Evans Revisited (Kunsthalle Mannheim)
When Images Collide (Wilhelm-Hack-Museum, Ludwigshafen)
Yesterday’s News Today (Heidelberger Kunstverein)
When Images Collide
Wilhelm-Hack-Museum, Ludwigshafen
Photography has always given rise to striking individual images, but in general, it has
been a medium of combination. Photographs are brought together to form larger and
more complex propositions about the world. Series, archives, collections, albums,
suites, sequences, stories, narratives.
When visual culture was dominated by the printed page, the relations between images
could be fixed. In the era of the electronic screen and the Internet, the daily experience
of images often feels more like montage and collage: fragmentary, multi-directional and
deferred. It is an environment suggestive of possible meanings but also one that distracts
from resolution or conclusion.
When Images Collide brings together a range of current practices that explore image
combination. At the core is the diptych form, which is perhaps the building block of all
editing, all image assembly. From here, the exhibition moves in several directions, toward
complex collage in analogue and digital forms, toward the uses of the still image
in film and video, and toward 3D image sculpture and installation.
Artists: Jean-Marc Caimi & Valentina Piccinni, Jeff Cowen, John Divola, Stéphane
Duroy, Sara Greenberger Rafferty, Richard Hamilton, Aaron Hegert, Sohrab Hura,
David Jiménez, Christoph Klauke, Kensuke Koike, Peter Puklus, Timm Rautert,
Anastasia Samoylova, Martina Sauter, Peter Sorge, Eva Stenram, John Stezaker,
Batia Suter