Documentary photos for the Urban Panorama installation in the “Centrum” underground railway station in Warsaw in front of the Palace of Culture and Science. Urban Panorama I, 2007/2008, 5oo x 18oo cm.
Stefan Szczygieł. Courtesy: Claus Friede*Contemporary Art, Hamburg.
Stefan Szczygieł (1961-2011) studied under Bernd Becher and Nam June Paik at the Düsseldorf Academy of Art from 1984 till 1992. He was almost unique among Polish artists in that he linked the eastern and western parts of Europe via the medium of digital photography, in the use of language and his cultural approach. Following an old central European tradition of discussing art beyond the borders of countries, languages and ideologies and encouraging mutual inspiration, Szczygieł was part of a generation that not only thinks and acts in a European way, he also felt Europe to be his natural home.
As different as the motifs in his series might be, his photographs and moving pictures remain faithful to his artistic themes. It made no difference whether they were magnified objects, landscapes,. townscapes or abandoned places, Stefan Szczygieł was always interested in asking critical questions about the real and conceptional use of things and spaces.
Mediathek Sorted
ZEITFLUG - Hamburg
From ‘Urban Spaces’, video: 12:00 min. Stefan Szczygieł. Courtesy: Claus Friede*Contemporary Art
ZEITFLUG - Warsaw
From ‘Urban Spaces’, video: 13:19 min. Stefan Szczygieł. Courtesy: Claus Friede*Contemporary Art
Documentary photos for the Urban Panorama installation in the “Centrum” underground railway station in Warsaw in front of the Palace of Culture and Science. Urban Panorama I, 2007/2008, 5oo x 18oo cm.
Stefan Szczygieł. Courtesy: Claus Friede*Contemporary Art, Hamburg.
Interestingly enough Szczygieł photographs his “Domki” (the plural of “Domek”) in springtime when nature begins to awaken once more. Hence the buds and blossoms on the bushes make an even greater contrast to the abandoned morbid garden huts.
In his Domek too, Szczygieł remains true to his artistic questioning and once more points out relationships between usage, wear and tear, and aesthetics, without commenting in either the one or the other direction. The photos are sufficient unto themselves and scarcely need any “viewing instructions”.
The quality inherent in this series links Szczygieł with other series taken by international photographers. We only have to consider the urban photographs taken by the Americans, William Egglestone and Stephen Shore, or those of a younger generation taken at almost the same time as Szczygieł’s work, like the beach huts o.T. (Gouville) taken by the German photographer, Götz Diergarten. Other parallels can be seen in the Playhouses (plastic garden playhouses for children) made by the Dutch artist Wim Bosch: or in Malte Brandenburg’s Stacked, a series of photos of high-rise blocks in the suburbs of Berlin, and Kevin Bauman’s photo series of 100 Abandoned Houses in Detroit. Within the Polish art scene Szczygieł’s work is uniquely outstanding for its international themes and contexts.
Zeitflug
Between 2008 and Szczygieł’s death in 2011 he shot his first art films with a digital camera. He gave all the films a German title, ZEITFLUG, followed by the name of the respective city (like ZEITFLUG – Warsaw for example). The series of films was shot in a number of different major European cities and not only shows urban and architectural features but, once again, how they are used in public spaces. He pointedly called his films “portraits between affinity and difference”.
Documentary photos for the Urban Panorama installation in the “Centrum” underground railway station in Warsaw in front of the Palace of Culture and Science. Urban Panorama I, 2007/2008, 5oo x 18oo cm.
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