Elina Brotherus, Still images from The Black Bay Sequence, 2010, 60 min, 12 sec, HD video (Apple ProRes 422), 16:9, silent. Credit: Commissioned by COMMA at Bloomberg SPACE, London, by Bloomberg LP, 2010.

Andreas Gursky, Rhein II, 1999, c-print 187 x 346 x 6,2 cm, Credit: Andreas Gursky / VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn / SOFAM 2012 Courtesy Sprüth Magers Berlin London.

Augusto Alves da Silva, Iberia, 2009, random projection of 5.148 colour digital images, with sound (spanish radio stations live via internet). Credit: Courtesy of the artist.

European Landscapes in Bozar's Biannual Summer of Photography

Per Bak Jensen, Døren / The Door, 2007, C-print / Diasec, 165 cm x 205 cm (including frame) Credit: Courtesy Galleri Bo Bjerggaard.

Artura Raila, River, 2006, Lambda print on aluminium, 125 x 184, Credit: Courtesy the artist.

Nikos Markou, 15.04.2005 (Athens), 2005, Archival Inkjet Print on fine art paper pasted on aluminum, 119 X 150 cm Credit: Courtesy: AD Gallery, Athens, Greece.

Celine Clanet, Roselend dam, Méraillet buttresses, 2010, Tirage jet d’encre longue conservation (négatif argentique couleur) Contre-collé sur Dibond / Finition Caisse américaine Format 120X95 cm, édition 1/5 Signé et numéroté sur étiquette à l’arrière du cadre Credit : Céline Clanet/Fondation Facim, 2010 - Fonds des Archives Départementales du Conseil général de Savoie.

Massimo Vitali, Catania Under The Volcano, 2007, Credit: Courtesy of the artist.

Arion Kudasz, Cemetery, Latvia, 2008, c-print, aluminium, wood, glass, 100 x 84cm, Credit: Courtesy of the artist and Zsófi Faur Gallery.

 

Bozar
23 Rue Ravenstein
+ 32 (0) 2 507 82
Brussels
Sense of Place:
European Landscape Photography

June 14-September 16, 2012

Every two years, as part of the Summer of Photography, BOZAR invites around 30 partners in Belgium to work together on a collective photography festival. The theme of the 2012 edition is landscape photography. In relation to fine art, photography initially served as a model for painting; over time the discipline has grown to become a medium in its own right, with its own landscape practices.

Central to the programme is the exhibition Sense of Place: European Landscape Photography being held at the Centre for Fine Arts. With around 160 pieces by 40 European photographers, the exhibition paints a picture of the diversity of national and regional landscapes within the European Union. The exhibition simultaneously focuses on the similarities and differences across Europe, both in the landscapes and in the attitude of people towards those landscapes. The works are divided into three main areas within Europe: North, Central, and South. Curator Liz Wells, Professor in Photographic Culture at Plymouth University, selected works by young talents as well as by internationally renowned photographers such as Andreas Gursky (Germany), Elina Brotherus (Finland), Massimo Vitali (Italy), Olafur Eliasson (Denmark), Chrystel Lebas (France), Joan Fontcuberta (Spain), Pedro Cabrita Reis (Portugal), and Carl De Keyzer (Belgium). Through their pictures, they each provide a personal vision of the landscapes of their homeland.

Sense of Place is built around three key themes. The first of these is the concept of the national landscape, situated within the wider context of Europe. National and regional identities arise historically in part from a common relationship within a region and from the degree of dependence on that place. With its diversity of climate, agriculture, population density, and natural resources, Europe is characterized by enormously varied landscapes geologically, agriculturally and sociologically.

The exhibition explores ways in which cultural differences persist despite the political and economic unity that now exists across national boundaries. The second theme has its roots in the wider debate surrounding the aesthetics of landscape photography and the concept of “place." Places gain significance through the stories that are told about them and through the manner in which they are represented. How does contemporary photography contribute to forming perceptions of our environment? The third and final theme suggests more philosophical approaches to the relationship between people and nature. Nowadays, many areas of Europe are highly urbanized, marked by legacies of Western industrialism and by the office, service and retail centres that characterize the post-industrial economy. We may have a less immediate relationship to the natural environment than our predecessors, yet images of nature continue to affect us spiritually and to influence and inspire our sense of identity, personally, nationally and regionally.

Photographs in the exhibition When they hear the term “landscape” many people still think first of an idyllic unspoiled nature, a utopian place of calm and relaxation. Chrystel Lebas (France) documents the effects of movement of light at a lake over a 24 hour period. Per Bak Jensen’s photos are almost meditative images of the waterfalls, coastlines, and forests of his native Denmark. Amongst other subjects, Irene Kung (Italy) portrays olive trees, typical of the Italian countryside. The Breughelian landscapes of Alexander Gronsky (Latvia) or the quasi-stereotypical pictures of Irish country life by Jackie Nickerson seem almost to come from another era. Nature thus becomes almost a part of our heritage. Ilkka Halso (Finland) goes even further, showing digitally manipulated photos of fictional “nature museums”. Gerry Johansson (Sweden) presents a series of black and white photos including the village where he was born, which has since become a protected nature reserve. For him, taking photographs means documenting what remains. Likewise, Theodoros Tempos (Greece) explores a former fishing area. Mysterious, mist-covered places appear in the work of Peter Kostrun (Slovenia). Did he leave out what was not lyrical enough?

In reality, landscapes are often hugely influenced by human activity. The impressive photos of densely populated beaches by Massimo Vitali (Italy) are an allegory of contemporary mass culture. Economic progress also has a strong influence on the appearance of a landscape. As Thomas Weinberger (Germany) and Maros Krivy (Slovakia) both suggest, heavy industrialisation suppresses nature under cables, motorways, and industrial estates. In the Beaufortain region of the French Alps, a gigantic hydropower plant looms large, recorded by Céline Glanet. But the economic tide can also turn. Anthony Haughey shows how the Irish crisis changed the Irish landscape into an unfinished, overgrown building site. The area within a 150 km radius of Madrid, recorded by Gerardo Custance, provides an equally disturbing picture as does Arion Gábor Kudász’s portrait of his native Hungary.

Landscapes carry their history with them; they show political scars and signs of unrest. Marianna Christofides reminds us that Cyprus remains a divided nation. Bart Michiels (Belgium) subtly explores the effects of major battles in the history of the modern landscape with pictures of Bastogne and Passchendaele. Flo Kasearu (Estonia) places black dots on politically sensitive spots, thereby giving meaning to the landscape. Vesselina Nikolaeva portrays nature on the border of Bulgaria and Turkey – a frightening no man’s land. Jem Southam points out the similarities between the chalk cliffs along the coastlines of Great Britain and France, referring to the geological and, later, political division of the continent. Andreas Müller-Pohle lets himself be swept away by the Danube, the river that links the Black Forest to the Black Sea, and therefore a symbol of the tensions between Eastern and Western Europe. In contrast, Rhein II by Andreas Gursky (Germany) suggests a bucolic version of one of Europe’s busiest shipping routes, which flows from North to South.

Reproducing a landscape also means speaking the language of aesthetics. Joan Fontcuberta (Spain) references landscapes in Dali’s paintings. Andreas Gursky edits his landscapes so drastically that they almost become abstract works. Olafur Eliasson, with his series of wide, outstretched horizons, and Gerco de Ruijter, whose photos of the over cultivated Dutch landscape are reminiscent of Mondrian, could also both be compared to abstract art. Elina Brotherus (Finland) then takes us back to the romantic.

Photographers in the exhibition

North Per Bak Jensen (Denmark), Bruno Baltzer (Luxembourg), Elina Brotherus (Finland), Carl De Keyzer (Belgium), Gerco de Ruijter (The Netherlands), Olafur Eliasson (Denmark), Gina Glover (United Kingdom), Alexander Gronsky (Latvia), Ilkka Halso (Finland), Anthony Haughey (Ireland), Gerry Johansson (Sweden), Flo Kasearu (Estonia), Bart Michiels (Belgium),Jackie Nickerson (Ireland), Arturas Raila (Lithuania), Jem Southam (United Kingdom)

Central Pavel Banka (Czech Republic), Arion Gábor Kudász (Hungary), Andreas Gursky (Germany), Yenny Huber (Austria), Peter Kostrun (Slovenia), Maros Krivy (Slovakia), Andreas Müller-Pohle (Germany), Vesselina Nikolaeva (Bulgaria), Tudor Prisãcariu (Romania), Szymon Roginski (Poland), Thomas Weinberger (Germany)

South Nigel Baldacchino (Malta), Pedro Cabrita Reis (Portugal), Marianna Christofides (Cyprus), Céline Clanet (France), Gerardo Custance (Spain),Augusto Alves da Silva (Portugal), Joan Fontcuberta (Spain), Irene Kung (Italy), Chrystel Lebas (France), Nikos Markou (Greece), Nicos Philippou (Cyprus), Theodoros Tempos (Greece), Massimo Vitali (Italy)

Curator of the exhibition is Liz Wells.

 

Gerco de Ruijter, B.S. 2011, Ultrachrome print op dibond, 305x100cm. editie van 5, Credit:courtesy of the artist.

Olafur Eliasson, The river-raft series, 2000, 42 c-prints, each each 32 x 42 cm, allover dimensions: 232 x 348 cm, edition of 6.

Carl de Keyzer, Blankenberge, Belgium, from Moments before the Flood, 112cm x 132 cm framed, Credit: Carl De Keyzer.