The gallery Helga de Alvear exhibits a series of impressive landscapes of one of the most interesting photographers of the current panorama Axel Hütte (Essen, Germany 1951).
Under the title In anderen Welten (In other worlds), the gallery Helga de Alvear present an extraordinary set of conceptual, timeless images by German photographer, Axel Hüte, in which there are no characters, an intentional nudity in which narrative elements are avoided, a de-coding process to approach a different vision of the landscape.
 
“I have been travelling to far away countries for 38 years, that is to say, I have been in all the places that appear in my photographs."

In the exhibition In anderen Welten – In Other Worlds – Axel Hütte (Essen, 1951) presents studies on different methods of contemplating landscapes. The images are conceptual and avoid narrative elements.

The works also give a sense of timelessness while spatial locations and proportions are likewise not unequivocally noticeable, thus encouraging the viewer to imagine them. The reproduction of what is visible is the basis of the photographs but through the construction of drama by means of specific lighting the artist produces works of great “hallucinogenic sobriety”.

Rudolf Schmitz, As Dark as Light, Schirmer/Mosel Verlag / Huis Marseille, Ámsterdam 2001

 
Deciphering the images is the challenge; a task that offers a space of freedom for individual interpretations.

Axel Hütte lives and works between Düsseldorf and Berlin. His latest exhibitions: Imperial-Majestic-Magical. Kunsthalle Krems; Unterwegs. In der Ferne. Museum Franz Gertsch, Burgdorf (2018); Frühwerk Josef Albers Museum Quadrat, Bottrop; Night and Day. Museum Kunstpalast Ehrenhof, Düsseldorf (2017). His work has been part of collective exhibitions: Bernd, Hilla and the Others. Photography from Düsseldorf. Huis Marseille stichting voor fotografie, Amsterdam (2018); Fotografien werden Bilder. Städel Museum, Frankfurt; Visions of Nature. Kunst Haus Wien, Vienna (2017).

His work is present in collections such as the Center Pompidou, Paris; Folkwang Museum, Essen; Helga de Alvear Foundation, Cáceres; Jumex Foundation, Mexico City; Hamburger Kunsthalle, Hamburg; MACBA, Barcelona: MNCARS, Madrid; Museum Kunstpalast, Düsseldorf, among others.
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Venue Lugar
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Calle del Dr. Fourquet, 12, 28012 Madrid. Spain
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Dates Fechas
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29.11.2018 > 09.02.2019
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Axel Hütte. Essen, Germany, 1951. Lives and works in Düsseldorf, Germany. The work of Axel Hütte follows a long tradition of German photographers indebted to the conceptual aesthetics and the teachings of Bernd and Hilla Becher, whose unique artistic approach turned to the original New Objectivity project and adapted it to the eighties. Hütte shared similar conceptual concerns and approaches with his colleagues at the Düsseldorf Kunstakedemie, who included Andreas Gursky, Candida Höfer, Thomas Ruff and Thomas Struth. An obstinate user of large-format cameras, Hütte's style is cold, his gaze is as neutral and disaffected as possible, and his flat and technically impeccable images are rich in details, evincing his formal concern with bareness and pure captures.

Under the generic name of the “School of Düsseldorf,” these artists reinvented the long standing tradition of genres such as architectural photography and portraits in which fragments were understood as the maximum expression of the whole, becoming the defining trait of the images of parts of bodies or buildings.

While Hütte has focused on all these elements, landscape is the genre in which he has become one of the most respected photographers on the international art scene. Hütte approaches his subject matter by calling its tradition into question. By doing away with the human figure and trying to capture the intangible quality of nature, he challenges the sublime picturesque vision of Romantic landscape that was popularised in the late nineteenth century and ended up conveying and establishing an iconography that survives today as a construct of collective memory.
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