Showing posts with label Elger Esser. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Elger Esser. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Elger Esser @Sonnabend

JTF (just the facts): A total of 10 large scale color photographs, framed in light brown wood and unmatted, and hung in the entry gallery and two of the smaller rooms in the back (center and left). All of the works are c-prints on Diasec, made in 2011 and 2012. The prints come in one of two sizes: 73x95 or 55x73, both in editions of 7+1AP; there are 8 of the largest prints and 2 of the more medium sized prints in the show. The photographs were taken in Egypt and France. (Installation shots at right.)
 
Comments/Context: Elger Esser's newest photographs take us back to familiar territory: standing at the water's edge, looking out to a broad landscape with a low horizon and a big featureless sky. They are variations on pictures we have seen before from Esser, but this does nothing to lessen their contemplative power. When he gets the proportions of land, sea, and sky just right and the soft hues diffuse across the frame like watercolors, they reach a meditative sublime that few contemporary photographers can match.
 
The images in the first two rooms of the show travel the length of the Nile River, like modern day Grand Tour pictures that hearken back to the masters of 19th century landscape photography. But there are no pyramids or Sphinxes here, only slow river scenes with traditional sailboats, sandy banks, and oasis-style greenery, all bathed in a dry, warm, washed out yellow light. Evidence of modernity is subtle and fleeting - geometric concrete building shells perched on the banks, the ghost of an electrical tower or telephone pole, new whitewashed buildings nestled into the hillside in front of a timeless, hazy mosque. Their elegance seems faded in the heat, the water quietly lapping at the hulls of wooden boats.
 
The works in the final back room come from France and explore nuances of pastel color more deeply. A concrete dock looks out on a light green sea, long exposure waves crashing over it like wispy white fog. A dark band of land bisects a composition in soft cornflower blue, with a slight tint of pink wandering through the sky. The red cupola of shoreline church punctuates a rocky shoreline in desolate yellow. And the layers of clouds above tiny Mont St. Michel in the distance settle into an ethereal blend of gorgeous light blue; in my view, this last image is a breathtaking showstopper, its enveloping presence far better in person than in my marginal installation shots.
 
While not every image in this show entirely hits the mark for me, the few that do find the center of the target are memorably magnificent. This show is like the refrain of the chorus at the end of a well known song, when the singer cranks it up a notch with a little extra flourish to keep it fresh and exciting. We've been down this road with Esser in the past, but he still has the power to astonish us with his timeless sense of grace.
 
Collector's POV: The works in this show are priced based on size, with the 73x95 prints at 40000€ each and the 55x73 prints at 25000€ each. Esser's work is now routinely available in the secondary markets for both photography and contemporary art, with recent prices ranging from $5000 to $110000, with a sweet spot between $25000 and $75000.
 
Rating: ** (two stars) VERY GOOD (rating system described here)
 
Transit Hub:
  • Artist site (here)

Elger Esser
Through March 16th

Sonnabend Gallery
536 West 22nd Street
New York, NY 10011

Friday, October 21, 2011

Elger Esser, "Et nous avons des nuits plus belles que vos jours." @Sonnabend

JTF (just the facts): A total of 13 works, hung in the entry gallery and two of the smaller rooms in the back (center and left). 8 of the works are large scale c-prints from 2010, framed in black and unmatted. These images range in size from 48x73 to 73x92, in editions of 7+1AP. The 5 other works are heliogravures on Butten papier from 2010, mounted and framed in black but unmatted. Each of these prints is 46x52, in editions of 12+3AP. (Installation shots at right.)

Comments/Context: Monet's gardens at Giverny have become a place of pilgrimage for countless artists, and the now famous bridge, ponds, water lilies, and reflections have been reinterpreted over and over again to such an extent that it seems difficult to imagine there is much more to be said about this particular location. Elger Esser has taken on this familiar landscape subject, and turned it on its head by making long exposure photographs at night. The results are extremely dark and shadowy, bathed in a silent stillness.

Rather than point his camera at the obvious sight lines, Esser's images take in smaller, more intimate views of the pond, with dense bunches of trees growing along the banks. The long exposures create misty blurs as the wind moves across the land and water, and stars leave linear trails across the sky. His palette moves between opaque painterly blackness to a muted silver not unlike a tintype, with a few images that bring in an infusion of orange or blue at the beginning or end of the day. Silhouetted tree trunks punctuate the scenes, leaving the viewer with a sense of timeless emptiness.

In recent years, Esser has spent quite a bit of effort examining the nature of memory, especially in his heliogravures, which intentionally recall 19th century photographic landscapes in their framing and style. These new images of Givery are in many ways the exact negative of our expectations, the lively, colorful pond we all recognize turned into something dark and almost foreboding. Given the quiet and melancholy mood, I think viewer reactions to these pictures will range from underwhelmed (and potentially bored) to engrossed by a fleeting glimpse of something previously unseen.

Collector's POV: The works in this show are priced as follows: the large scale c-prints are either 25000€ or 40000€ each, based on size, and the heliogravures are 8000€ each. Esser's work has become routinely available in the secondary markets for both photography and contemporary art, with prices ranging from $5000 to $110000 in recent years.

Rating: * (one star) GOOD (rating system described here)

Transit Hub:
Elger Esser, "Et nous avons des nuits plus belles que vos jours."
Through October 29th

Sonnabend Gallery
536 West 22nd Street
New York, NY 10011

Monday, June 20, 2011

Auctions: Contemporary Art Evening and Day Sales, June 27 and 28, 2011 @Phillips London

Phillips begins the June Contemporary Art season in London next week with a pair of Evening and Day sales. It's a generally straightforward selection, with few notable or unexpected standouts. Overall, there are a total of 53 lots of photography available across the two sales, with a Total High Estimate for photography of £1736000.

Here's the statistical breakdown:

Total Low Lots (high estimate up to and including £5000): 5
Total Low Estimate (sum of high estimates of Low lots): £24000

Total Mid Lots (high estimate between £5000 and £25000): 35
Total Mid Estimate: £437000

Total High Lots (high estimate above £25000): 13
Total High Estimate: £1275000
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The top lot by High estimate is lot 5, Cindy Sherman, Untitled Film Still #4, 1977, at £250000-350000.

Here is the short list of the photographers who are represented by more than one lot in the two sales (with the number of lots in parentheses):

Ryan McGinley (3)
Doug Aitken (2)
Thomas Demand (2)
Nan Goldin (2)
Gordon Matta-Clark (2)
Marilyn Minter (2)
Zhang Huan (2)

(Lot 145, Walead Beshty, The Phenomenology of Shopping, 2001-2003, at £10000-15000, image at right, middle, lot 293, Elger Esser, Ameland Pier IX, 2000, at £20000-30000, image at right, bottom, and lot 296, Gordon Matta-Clark, Splitting, 1974, at £12000-18000, image at right, top, all via Phillips.)

The complete lot by lot catalogs can be found here (Evening) and here (Day).

Contemporary Art Evening Sale
June 27th
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Contemporary Art Day Sale
June 28th

Phillips De Pury & Company
Howick Place
London SW1P 1BB

Monday, April 4, 2011

Auction: Photographs, April 9, 2011 @Phillips

Phillips wraps up the flurry of major activity in the New York spring Photographs season with its broad various owner sale on Saturday. The auction includes a well-balanced selection of vintage and fresh contemporary work, with plenty of high end lots (headlined by a Cindy Sherman). Overall, there are a total of 261 lots on offer, with a total High estimate of $4913400.
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Here's the statistical breakdown:

Total Low Lots (high estimate up to and including $10000): 138
Total Low Estimate (sum of high estimates of Low lots): $931400

Total Mid Lots (high estimate between $10000 and $50000): 102
Total Mid Estimate: $2217000

Total High Lots (high estimate above $50000): 21
Total High Estimate: $1765000

The top lot by High estimate is lot 171, Cindy Sherman, Untitled #278, 1993, at $200000-300000.
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The following is the list of the photographers represented by five or more lots in this sale (with the number of lots on offer in parentheses):

Robert Mapplethorpe (8)
Vik Muniz (7)
Edward Weston (7)
Henri Cartier-Bresson (6)
Robert Frank (6)
Candida Höfer (6)
Irving Penn (6)
Harry Callahan (5)
Hiroshi Sugimoto (5)

(Lot 86, Candida Höfer, Playfair Library Hall, The University of Edinburgh, II, 1998/1999, at $8000-12000, image at right, middle, lot 196, Elger Esser, Doubt, Frankreich, 1999, at $50000-70000, image at right, top, and lot 211, Desiree Dolron, Xteriors VI, 2003, at $40000-60000, image at right, bottom, all via Phillips.)

The complete lot by lot catalog can be found here.
April 9th

450 Park Avenue
New York, NY 10022

Thursday, September 16, 2010

Auction: Contemporary Art, September 27, 2010 @Sotheby's

Sotheby's has its own version of the Fall Contemporary Art warm-up sale in New York later this month, with a decidedly mixed bag of photography (both known and unknown) buried among the paintings, sculpture and other artworks. There are only 24 lots of photography on offer in this sale, with a total High estimate for photography of $329700.

Here's the statistical breakdown:

Total Low Lots (high estimate up to and including $10000): 11
Total Low Estimate (sum of high estimates of Low lots): $52700

Total Mid Lots (high estimate between $10000 and $50000): 13
Total Mid Estimate: $277000

Total High Lots (high estimate above $50000): 0
Total High Estimate: NA

The top photography lot by High estimate is lot 245, Elger Esser, Saone, France, 2001, at $30000-40000. (Image at right, top, via Sotheby's.)

Here's the very short list of photographers represented by more than one lot in the sale (with the number of lots in parentheses):

Vanessa Beecroft (2)
Philip-Lorca diCorcia (2)
Laurie Simmons (2)

The complete lot by lot catalog can be found here.

Contemporary Art
September 27th

Sotheby's
1334 York Avenue
New York, NY 10021

Monday, June 14, 2010

Book: Elger Esser, Eigenzeit

JTF (just the facts): Published in 2009 by Schirmer/Mosel (here). 180 pages, with 73 color and black and white images. Includes essays by Simone Schimpf, Cees Nooteboom, Alexander Pühringer, Friedrich Wolfram Heubach, Peter Herzog, and Hubertus von Amelunxen, as well as a short biography, exhibition list, and bibliography. In English, German, and Dutch. (Cover shot at right, via Amazon.)

The works in the catalog have been divided into six groups, along with additional images by both Esser and other artists reproduced amongst the essays:

Landscapes, 1996-2009 (8 images)
Wrecks, 2006-2009 (9)
Views, 2004-2006 (6)
Vedutas, 1996-2009 (6)
Combray, 2007-2009 (7)
Palimpsests, 2007 (5)

Comments/Context: Having carefully reviewed this catatlog from the recent retrospective show of Elger Esser's work at the Kunstmuseum Stuttgart, I'd like to think that I have finally begun to understand a photographer who has puzzled me for years. Part of my problem as a viewer of Esser's work seems to have stemmed from some preconceived and now obviously incorrect notions about what the work of a Becher student from Düsseldorf was "supposed" to look like and how landscape photography could or should incorporate conceptual methodologies. When placed in the context to Gursky, Ruff, and Struth, I could never seem to see how Esser fit, or really even come to grips with what he was trying to accomplish.

This book gathers together a representative sample of his work from the past two decades, and so provides a mix of images from different projects, all placed together in the larger framework of his aesthetic approach. While I had always recognized the allusions to the conventions of Romantic painting and 19th century photography in his monumental washed out yellow seascapes and cityscapes, I had never really seen the connection between these works and his recent blown-up seaside postcards of shipwrecks and crashing waves or his seemingly unremarkable black and white village scenes executed in perfect heliogravure.

I can now see that Esser's works all revolve around an exploration of time and memory, always with a touch of melancholy for what has been lost along the way. Some of the works echo Proust, and look for contemplative moments of timelessness; others follow the thin thread of a forgotten narrative, only to be left with the essence of the moment, not its details. In all of Esser's works, he has rigorously recaptured approaches to picture-making (both compositional and technical) that look backward, and then updated, synthesized, and executed them using today's photographic tools. As such, their conceptualism is a bit more concealed, requiring some additional patience and quiet consideration to discern the patterns and relationships; this is one case where a bit of education about the artist's intent goes a long way toward enhancing the viewer's overall understanding of what hangs on the wall.

While I still enjoy Esser's yellow riverfront cityscapes and open seaside vistas most, this catalog has provided both a much needed roadmap of where Esser has gone since and a lucid explanation of how these newer works reflect on the foundational themes he has been wrestling with for years.

Collector’s POV: Elger Esser is represented in New York by Sonnabend Gallery (here) and in Paris/Salzburg by Galerie Thaddeus Ropac (here). Esser's work has generally been available at auction in recent years, typically ranging between $25000 and $75000 (with a few outliers).

Transit Hub:
  • Kunstmuseum Stuttgart, 2009 (here)

Wednesday, February 3, 2010

Book: The Düsseldorf School of Photography, Stefan Gronert (ed.)

JTF (just the facts): Published in 2010 by Aperture (here). 320 pages, with 162 color and black and white images by 11 different photographers. Includes a foreword by Lothar Schirmer, an essay by Stefan Gronert, and summary biographies, exhibition lists and bibliographies for each of the artists. The German version of the book is being published by Schirmer/Mosel (here). (Cover shot at right, via Amazon.)

The photographers included/discussed are:

Bernd & Hilla Becher
Laurenz Berges
Elger Esser
Andreas Gursky
Candida Höfer
Axel Hütte
Simone Nieweg
Thomas Ruff
Jörg Sasse
Thomas Struth
Petra Wunderlich

Comments/Context: The Düsseldorf school of photography is probably the largest topic in contemporary photography that has yet to receive the kind of in-depth scholarly treatment we would expect for such an important and influential artistic movement. While I'm sure there have been quite a few masters and Ph.D. theses that have been written about the Bechers and their students, until the publication of this book, there have been effectively no survey style volumes brought to market with the broader public in mind. Given the many monographs and exhibition catalogues that have been written about these photographers individually, the gathering of a representative sample of the various artists' work is the lesser of the challenges here; the real test falls to the essay and how coherently and insightfully it ties together what heretofore have been generally separate but parallel narratives. We have all been searching for someone to help connect the dots and fill in the gaps; I'm happy to report that this book is certainly a good start.

One important semantic definition is required before we get to the analysis: what is it we mean by the term the "school"? In general, I think there are two possible answers as applied to artistic movements: the narrow - the education derived from a specific set of teachings/learnings (i.e. the how/what of the curriculum at the Düsseldorf Kunstakademie or the Yale School of Art and how it was absorbed by specific students), and the broad - the larger geographic and temporal phenomenon (i.e. Düsseldorf or Helsinki as the umbrella term for a common style of working).

This volume (and its keystone essay) has chosen to focus on the Düsseldorf school in the broad sense, looking for the larger commonalities seen in its most successful and best known adherents. It lays at the feet of the Bechers the "emancipation of photography": the critical artistic mindset that photography was fully equal to painting, the results of which are embodied in the downstream success of the students who wholeheartedly embraced this unorthodox-at-the-time concept. It also implies an amorphous teaching by osmosis approach, where the Bechers were effectively leading by example: off doing their own highly stringent and objective documentary work, using the series and typology as modes for working and comparison, all underneath a rigid conceptual framework, with the students watching and absorbing some or all of what they saw as they saw fit. The narrative is thus one of commonality rather than causation: the students all started from a generally similar location; as they grew and matured as artists and selectively incorporated the Bechers' teachings over time, they went off in different but often parallel directions.

While there are some anecdotal comparisons and back and forth between the artists, in general, the book follows each photographer down his or her own particular evolutionary path, often starting prior to their involvement with the Bechers, and running to the present, now decades after the teacher/student relationship has ended. Each photographer gets a short biographical analysis, often through the lens of the Düsseldorf similarities. We see some exploring the limits of conceptual ideas (Ruff, Hütte, Esser, Struth, Sasse), while others have consistently worked in subject matter based series (Höfer, Wunderlich, Nieweg, Struth); over time, many have experimented with the use of large formats and prints (Höfer, Hütte, Nieweg, Struth, Berges, Ruff, Esser, Gursky). The challenge here is that most of these artists have worked through a handful of different projects over their careers to date, moving back and forth between working styles and approaches - the Düsseldorf narrative is therefore circular and cyclical rather than strictly linear, the Bechers' influence waxing and waning as the artists continually evolve and reinvent themselves.

As such, the story of the Düsseldorf school is not nearly as neat and tidy as one might expect from the rigid Germans; the Bechers put down some foundation concepts, but their students have long since moved beyond those initial ideas. Perhaps it is the mark of great teachers that they imparted their wisdom and experience about successful methods for discovering one's artistic voice through photography, without imposing their own specific vision too strongly.

While this book provides the satisfying summary and overview I have outlined, I found myself still wishing for more specifics; perhaps the next scholarly book on the Düsseldorf school needs to limit its scope to the period when the photographers were actually studying with the Bechers, and needs to cover in more detail how the curriculum was embodied in the early pictures. I'd also like to see more work from a broader range of the students (not just the "winners") to see how the teachings got applied in different ways. Similarly, I think some commentary from the artists themselves on what they took away from the Becher experience would be enlightening. Clearly, all of these photographers have long since moved beyond their early education, but I for one would be interested to hear what if anything they still find of value.

Overall, this book fills a gaping hole in the history of photography. It provides a well-selected sampler of the work of the best known members of the Düsseldorf school and offers a readable explanation of how it all fits together. While I have an insatiable appetite for more on this group of photographers, this volume certainly delivers a solid and thoughtful introduction to one of the most important movements in contemporary photography.

Collector’s POV: In many ways, there isn't much "new" information to be found in this book on the best known photographers in the group. It was therefore the sections on Petra Wunderlich, Simone Nieweg, Jörg Sasse, and Laurenz Berges that were the eye openers for me, in terms of exposing me more fully to some of the other students who are a little further out of spotlight. I also think the essay was helpful in clarifying my rudimentary understanding of the evolution of both Axel Hütte and Elger Esser, neither of which I have felt particularly comfortable with in the past.

Transit Hub:
  • Review: Conscientious (here)

Monday, March 16, 2009

Elger Esser: Wrecks and Landscapes @Sonnabend

JTF (just the facts): This show includes three different sets of new work. In the entry room, 3 wall sized silver prints with hand coloring are displayed, framed in black, all from 2007. In the main room, 3 color landscapes are shown, in two sizes (40x48 and 70x80), framed in blond wood, C-prints on Diasec, all from 2008. In the far left room, there are 9 black and white heliogravure landscapes, each 48x54, framed in black, all from 2008. (Installation shots at right.)

Comments/Context: If we play a word association game and start with "Elger Esser", the first word that comes to my mind is yellow. Esser's large scale landscapes have often been diffused with a soft, washed out earthy yellow that is reminiscent of dreamy, lyrical 19th century romantic paintings. For me, it is a signature color; I can immediately identify his works from across a room based on the use of this particular color; no one else uses it the way he does.

There are a few images in the new show at Sonnabend that continue in this same "yellow" direction, combinations of painterly sky and water, from beaches or valleys or picturesque wetlands, often with a subtle 20th century intrusion. While Esser did his studies with the Bechers in Dusseldorf, his work seems to have evolved away from their deadpan objectivity to a warmer, more subjective reality in his picture making.
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Three new works at Sonnabend seem to extend this romanticism further. Rather than starting with "real" images of sky filled landscapes, these pictures are built upon enlarged vintage postcard images of aging and decaying shipwrecks, hand colored with his same earthy palette, to create smoky, melancholy scenes, much darker in color and mood than his other works. The images are extremely grainy, to the point of almost having a Pointillist feeling, millions of tiny dots making the pictures vibrate. While they were completely unexpected in terms of my vision of what an Esser looks like, these pictures grew on me as I looked at them more. Perhaps we can place them in the context of a larger definition of his neo-Romanticism, not just sunny and idyllic visions, but also scary, sad, and almost apocalyptic ones.

In the back room, there were a group of more traditional black and white landscapes of France that seemed to lack emotional punch in comparison to the works in the other rooms. Perhaps I just needed some further background information on the significance of the images or their relationship to Esser's art, as on their own, they weren't particularly memorable.

Collector's POV: The large silver prints with hand coloring are priced at $50000 each. The color landscapes are either $10000 or $30000 based on size. The heliogravures are $8000 each, in editions of 12. Esser's work has generally been available at auction in recent years, typically ranging between $25000 and $75000 (with a few outliers).

Rating: * (one star) GOOD (rating system described here)

Elger Esser: Wrecks and Landscapes
Through March 21

Sonnabend Gallery (artnet page here)
536 West 22nd Street
New York, NY 10011