Monday, July 4, 2011
  • "El Capitan," California, 1999
    Photo by Thomas Struth

  • "Semi-Submersible Rig," 2007
    Photo by Thomas Struth

  • "Miländer Dom," Milan, 1988
    Photo by Thomas Struth

  • "Audience 1," Florence, 2004
    Photo by Thomas Struth

  • "Paradise 36," Florida, 2007
    Photo by Thomas Struth

  • "Ulsan 2, Lotte Hotel," Ulsan, 2010
    Photo by Thomas Struth

Monday, July 4, 2011 Replay
Thomas Struth: View Finder
A New Exhibition Puts the Artist's Epic Canon in Perspective
  • View Fullscreen
  • Credits

Thomas Struth: View Finder

A New Exhibition Puts the Artist's Epic Canon in Perspective

German photographer Thomas Struth has interpreted the gaze in myriad ways throughout his 30-plus-year career, from a neo-religious depiction of Yosemite’s El Capitan to the reflected awe of Michelangelo’s “David” on the faces of admirers. The full spectrum of sublimity is celebrated in Thomas Struth: Photographs 1978–2010, a new survey at London’s Whitechapel Gallery. “Thomas sees his photos as working more as a family than a series; they all comment on our individual place in the world,” says co-curator Achim Borchardt-Hume. The artist is best known for his collection of Museum Photographs, which dwell on the viewer's reception to great artwork, but the Deutsche Börse Prize-nominee has recently taken to examining technology from an architectural standpoint, with meticulously composed portraits of research facilities including Florida’s Cape Canaveral. “The images are what you would normally see, only with a heightened focus,” says Borchardt-Hume. “They give a sense of history, but also a sense of what it is like to live in the present moment, constantly re-imagining the human endeavor.”


Add Comment
You must be logged in to comment
Login  |  Register
Comments
No comments have been added yet

Send to a friend

Thank you

Your email has been sent to your friend.

Follow us on twitter NOWNESS on Twitter
PLEASE SELECT YOUR LANGUAGE:   中文 | ENGLISH