Andreas Gursky in Basel
Dubai World II, 2007, C-Print 307 x 223,3 cm, Copyright: Andreas Gursky / VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn, Courtesy: Monika Sprüth / Philomene Magers, Köln München LondonAndreas Gursky is one of the most influential photographers of Postmodernism, who creates icons of the zeitgeist in which only a subordinated position leaves to people in large spaces. Gursky documents what happens as a basis for a digital creation of reality. In this respect he goes back seemlessly to the media realities which designate the conception of our time. The artist reveals thus the propagandist of a time which appears to be value-free and where people long for values and orientation again. "Few artists have managed to distil the specific characteristics of a main culture, the mindset of a generation or the zeitgeist of an era into a single work. Just as a handful of iconic paintings have shaped our view of the Renaissance, so too has Andreas Gursky captured the essence of the economic and social situation of the late twentieth century in such works as Loveparade or 99 Cent." (Nina Zimmer1)
In the art museum of Basel his large format photography are still to be seen up to the 24th February, 2008.
Gursky tends to focus on crowds of people and the places where they assemble, and on the structures of the globalised world with its production, trade, consumption and leisure. In one of his most recent cycles of photographs, Pyongyang, he takes this theme one step further, casting his gaze on a country that is one of the last unmistakably non-globalised societies in the world. This is no everyday scenario, but an organised mass event with an ideological back-ground. Gursky, however, does not use the images to make a statement about the political background of the event. Instead, he uses them as visual raw material to be processed according to his own distinctive compositional approach. In addition to the Pyongyang series, other recent groups of works indicate a shift in direction away from his previous individual photographs. These new cycles cover a broad range of themes as diverse as landscapes, Gothic church windows and Formula 1-racing. For all their differences, however, the works share clear compositional similarities that speak the same aesthetic language that rings out in Gursky’s earlier work. In his choice of detail or the arrangement of digitally juxtaposed visual elements, Gursky explores the question of how to generate ornamental structures and even symmetries on the picture plane. This calls for an abstract take on the subject matter, seeing it not only in terms of its mimetic function, but also as a kind of construction kit filled with the building blocks of formal vocabulary that Gursky uses to compose his pictures. For this purpose, the artist often chooses an elevated vantage point, as in the James Bond Islands or Dubai World. By giving the structure precedence over the visual reality, and thereby making it absolute, Gursky manages to lend his photographs a universal validity. In this respect, his compositions go far beyond documenting the situation they describe, becoming symbolic forms that provide an insight into the way the world is today.This exhibition, in concentrated form, presents some 25 works by the artist, most of them created in 2007. They include new motifs within the familiar thematic spectrum of recent years, such as a stock exchange trading floor in Kuwait and the interior of a Frankfurt nightclub, as well as photographs from the latest series Pyongyang and F1 Pit Stop.

F1 Boxenstopp IV, 2007, C-Print, 223,4 x 609 cm, Copyright: Andreas Gursky / VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn, Courtesy: Monika Sprüth / Philomene Magers, Köln München London
1 Catalogue Andreas Gursky Bilingual edition German/English: Hatje Cantz, Ostfildern-Ruit Texts by Bernhard Mendes Bürgi, Beate Söntgen and Nina Zimmer approx. 120 pages, lavishly illustrated, CHF 55.– / ca. EUR 37.
During the exhibition there will be a wide-ranging programme of related events. For details, visit http://www.kunstmuseumbasel.ch/
Kunstmuseum Basel, St.-Alban-Graben 16, 4010 Basel, Switzerland
Opening Hours: Tue - Sun 10 a.m. - 5 p.m., during "Andreas Gursky" Wed - 8 p.m., closed on Monday
Public Holidays (closed): January 1 (New Year), February 26, 27, 28 (Carnival), April 6 (Good Friday), December 24 and 25








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