Elger Esser 'New works'
January 23 – March 20, 2010
Opening in presence of the artist on Saturday, January 23rd, 2010 at 11:00 a.m.
We are pleased to announce our ninth solo exhibition with new works from Düsseldorf artist Elger
Esser (born in 1967). It coincides with the first extensive museum exhibition of Elger Esser that can be
seen in the Kunstmuseum Stuttgart until April 11th, 2010. As one of the recent and youngest graduates
of the famous class of Bernd and Hilla Becher at Düsseldorf Kunstakademie, Elger Esser is
unquestionably among todayʼs most important German photo artists.
The classic genres of vedute and landscape are central themes in Elger Esserʼs photographs. Recent
years have seen the development of formal relationships with these genres due to extensive
monochromatic colouring, a preference for diffuse, uniform lighting, and constant tension between
micro and macro structures. The perfect synthesis of the timeless ideal of the beauty of the old
masters and the technical exploration of the medium of photography is unique nowadays. Sensitive
and precise in his observation, Elger Esser searches for and finds those moments in scenes that
reveal the character and mood of a landscape. He frequently develops the personality of a landscape
in the context of regional architecture. It is not by chance that Elger Esserʼs photographs often have
associations with the travel literature of the late 18th and 19th Centuries. His extensive background
knowledge appears in his photographs. And just as often there are art historical references that evoke
the art form of the 19th Century postcard and 17th Century Dutch painting.
Based on his very unique world of images, Esser also reflects 19th Century French art. Associations
with the artistic trends of Impressionism and Pointillism are apparent. On the relationship between
photography and painting, Esser remarks: “Photography today satisfies demands that historically were
satisfied by painters. I clearly see my work as reminiscent of this” (Elger Esser, 2001). The cool
objective view of Bernd Becher, his instructor at the Düsseldorf Kunstakademie, is not as evident in
Elger Esserʼs work – whose photographs could be described as poetic documentation of subjective
recollections – as it is in the work of his fellow students. Comparable however is the formal austerity of
the pictorial composition, which is a leitmotif running throughout his works.
“[Many] of Elger Esserʼs landscape photographs reveal endlessness as an artistic principle. The parts
again and again dissolve into an intentional abstraction of the whole picture. As with his predecessors
Courbet, Monet, Turner and Maupassant, water is a recurring motif in Elger Esserʼs images, whether
in the form riverscapes, pounding surf, or wetlands stretching deep into the landscape. [...] Some of
his landscapes seem like dream images or sequences in a borderline world between reality and
imagination” (Alexander Pühringer, 2009).
In addition to classic photographs, we are also showing a series of heliogravures. Heliogravure (from
the Greek helios – sun) is a printing technique invented in the late 19th Century in which a printing
plate is made using photographic processes. What is special about this is that it enables precise
reproduction of half-tone images allowing a great sense of depth to be achieved. Heliogravure
flourished between 1890 and 1910 when it was mainly used for monochrome illustrations in
particularly valuable books. Esser created the group of heliogravures in Kurt Zeinʼs famous etching
workshop in Vienna.
Esserʼs works are found in numerous institutional collections including the Metropolitan Museum of Art
New York, the Guggenheim Museum New York, Kunsthaus Zurich, Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam, the
Albright-Knox Art Gallery Buffalo and the Fonds régional dʼart contemporain (FRAC) Paris.
For more information, please contact Dr. Arne Ehmann
at + 43 662 881 393 17 or at [email protected]