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Beate Gütschow

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Beate Gütschow’s exploration as an artist directly probes questions of pictorial representations of reality. As a student in Hamburg and Oslo, she explored verisimilitude initially as a painter and installation artist and eventually became attracted to photography for its apparent, though qualified, ability to more faithfully and accurately represent reality.

Her final constructions at first glace appear as if captured from reality but upon closer inspection they are revealed as fiction.

The exhibition surveys two of Gütschow’s photographic series: LS and S. LS is an abbreviation of Landschaft, or landscape, and S is for Stadt, or city. Both series posit questions of idealization—one of nature and the other of urbanity. Drawing from her enormous archive of collected images, mostly taken with analog film, of trees, buildings, clouds, hills and people, Gütschow’s pictures are montages consisting of up to hundred different images assembled together digitally. Her final constructions at first glace appear as if captured from reality but upon closer inspection they are revealed as fiction.

Influenced by artists such as Claude Lorrain, John Constable, and Nicolas Poussin, the LS series follows the rules of romantic landscape painting of the 17th century. Traditional landscape paintings are organized with three distinct spaces: the foreground serves as the viewer’s entrance into the picture, usually framed by trees like a stages set; the middle ground contains a river or path and people looking outward; and the background vanishes in the far distance. The frame suggests an expansive terrain. Using these rules, Gütschow creates an idyllic landscape by mixing elements of pictures taken from parks, construction sites, pristine nature, and people engaged in leisure activities. The deliberate inclusion of familiar 21st century elements like garbage, trees cut by chainsaws, and people in T-shirts endows an otherwise romantic landscape with implausibility and suspicion.

While the LS series recallsz 17th century landscape painitng, the S series makes reference to more recent media—black-and-white architectural and documentary photography of the 1950s and ’60s. The LS series depicts an Arcadian state while the S series is post-apocalyptic, revealing failed social ideals through alienating architecture. Photographing in Berlin, Chicago, Kyoto, Los Angeles, New York, and Sarajevo, Gütschow appropriates buildings, parking lots, stairways, and people. Reconfiguring these elements of architecture from different areas of the world, she synthesizes a disorienting cosmopolitan space with a confused temporality. Just as she positions picnic-goers in her landscapes, her Gütschow recontextualizes the images of homeless people and tourists—fixtures of the modern city, That these displaced subjects seem hardly out of place in Gütschow’s S series reveals something about the cities in which they were photographed. Despite the utopian ideals behind the modern architecture, cities are less hospitable than we idealize them to be.

In spite of photography’s inherent ability to record facts, Gütschow creates a visual space that can be more readily accessed with the tools of fiction.

Gütschow’s process confers substantially more latitude for making ideas visual than photographers using analog film enjoy. The photographer’s ability to tell a story is constrained by the physical orientation of subjects in the focal field, but Gütschow starts like a painter with a blank canvas. She combines pictures from a variety of times and a wide range of geographical places while a traditional photographer is tied to the moment when, and the space where, the photograph is taken. In spite of photography’s inherent ability to record facts, Gütschow creates a visual space that can be more readily accessed with the tools of fiction.

In conjunction with the exhibition Beate Gütschow: LS/S the Museum of Contemporary Photography is collaborating with Aperture to release a monograph of the artist’s work in Fall 2007 comprised of her two most recent bodies of work.

“Beate Gütschow :LS/S.” Museum of Contemporary Photography 25 Oct. 2007 – 10 Jan. 2008

<http://www.mocp.org/exhibitions/2007/10/beate_guetschow.php&gt;.

S # 2

S # 10

S # 22

S # 24

Beate Gütschow: LS/S, the first monograph of this exceptional artist, features two bodies of work that compel the viewer to think about humankind’s celebration of nature and our ceaseless desire to control it.

In these luscious, digitally produced photographs each detail, including the subtle nuances of the palette and light, is carefully controlled, culled from an archive of images taken specifically for use in these seamless collages. Every blade of grass, pebble, and nonchalant passerby has been painstakingly orchestrated by the artist, who draws on the work and traditions of Romantic-era painters and photo legends Lewis Baltz and Bernd and Hilla Becher.

The landscapes (series LS) are constructed to convey the “perfect” pastoral scene. In stark contrast, the cityscapes (series S) present an eerily familiar vision of a nonexistent but clearly dystopian form of architecture. Although the two series present seemingly tranquil settings that at first appear as binary opposites, in fact, they are equally fraught with issues of control, inauthenticity, and the pursuit of perfection.

Copublished with the Museum of Contemporary Photography, Columbia College Chicago

This project was made possible, in part, with generous support from Andrew and Nicole Bernheimer, James Danziger, Paul Pincus, Howard and Patty Silverstein, and Jerome and Ellen Stern.

Beate Gütschow (born 1970, Mainz, Germany) studied at the School of Fine Arts, Oslo, as well as the School of Fine Arts, Hamburg, Germany, with Bernhard Johannes Blume and Wolfgang Tillmans. She has appeared in one-person and group shows throughout Europe and recently had her first solo shows in the United States at the Museum of Contemporary Photography, Columbia College Chicago, and at Danziger Projects. Gütschow has received numerous awards, including the 2006 Ars Viva Prize, an Otto-Dix-Prize of New Media, and a Villa Aurora fellowship. She lives and works in Berlin and is represented by Danziger Projects in New York, Barbara Gross Galerie in Munich, and Produzentengalerie in Hamburg.

S # 5
S # 9
S # 27
S # 1
S # 32
S # 33
S # 34
S # 31
S # 14
S # 13
S # 19
S # 30
S # 25
S # 29
S # 11
S # 16
S # 20
S # 21
LS # 04
LS # 04

Written by rebelsofaneongod

March 27, 2010 at 4:50 am

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At any street corner the feeling of absurdity can strike any man in the face.

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When the police came and they asked what happened, I told them “He’s reaping what he’s been sowing, that’s what.” They said “Fucker been sowing some pretty heavy shit.” -Inland Empire

Written by rebelsofaneongod

March 21, 2010 at 4:42 am

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Divided

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Written by rebelsofaneongod

March 21, 2010 at 1:28 am

Posted in Uncategorized