honorable mention
Peter Braunholz germany
title
ECKEN (Corners)
(Corners)
An unrealness lies in the strange beauty of these images, which also arouses a melancholic atmosphere. “Ecken” is strongly related to Arthur Danto’s idea of art as “The Transfiguration of the Commonplace” (Harvard University Press, 1981). Peter chose common corner spaces as the motifs for his work and strongly focuses not on their material, but on their immaterial quality. Therefore his work serves as an example for Danto´s ideas that art makes obvious things odd, art defamiliarizes and artworks have immaterial as well as material constituents.
Peter creates different, unique styles for his photographs, depending on the nature of objects and spaces, and he also chooses the formats for his images carefully. For the series “Ecken” he choosed the square as the only format for all images. The square format has a long tradition in art, and in photographic art as well. The analogue 6×6 format was used by many famous photographers: Diane Arbus, Lee Friedlander, Vivian Mayer – just to name a few. As we generally see the world in a landscape format, a square-crop supports a surreal visual language. Peter does not use the square to produce a centered composition, but to support the unreal atmosphere of the images. With the right-angled windows, corner-lines and additional geometric elements in his square images, Peter produced strong frame-in-frame compositions, which seem perfectly balanced. Another aspect of “Ecken” is the special color and light ambience: Peter took these photographs on cold winter mornings with overcast skies. The absence of shadows and the smooth colors add an element of quietness and sobriety.
Lives near Frankfurt/Main, Germany
Music Studies in Los Angeles/USA
Theater-, Film- and TV Sciences in Frankfurt/GER
Design and Photography in Munich/GER and Frankfurt/GER
Professional artist since 1999
2010-2014
Curator at Abisag-Tüllmann-Foundation
Jury Member at Abisag-Tüllmann-Prize, Frankfurt/GER
Numerous publications, books
back to gallery
entry description
ECKEN(Corners)
An unrealness lies in the strange beauty of these images, which also arouses a melancholic atmosphere. “Ecken” is strongly related to Arthur Danto’s idea of art as “The Transfiguration of the Commonplace” (Harvard University Press, 1981). Peter chose common corner spaces as the motifs for his work and strongly focuses not on their material, but on their immaterial quality. Therefore his work serves as an example for Danto´s ideas that art makes obvious things odd, art defamiliarizes and artworks have immaterial as well as material constituents.
Peter creates different, unique styles for his photographs, depending on the nature of objects and spaces, and he also chooses the formats for his images carefully. For the series “Ecken” he choosed the square as the only format for all images. The square format has a long tradition in art, and in photographic art as well. The analogue 6×6 format was used by many famous photographers: Diane Arbus, Lee Friedlander, Vivian Mayer – just to name a few. As we generally see the world in a landscape format, a square-crop supports a surreal visual language. Peter does not use the square to produce a centered composition, but to support the unreal atmosphere of the images. With the right-angled windows, corner-lines and additional geometric elements in his square images, Peter produced strong frame-in-frame compositions, which seem perfectly balanced. Another aspect of “Ecken” is the special color and light ambience: Peter took these photographs on cold winter mornings with overcast skies. The absence of shadows and the smooth colors add an element of quietness and sobriety.
about the photographer
1963 born in Hannover, GermanyLives near Frankfurt/Main, Germany
Music Studies in Los Angeles/USA
Theater-, Film- and TV Sciences in Frankfurt/GER
Design and Photography in Munich/GER and Frankfurt/GER
Professional artist since 1999
2010-2014
Curator at Abisag-Tüllmann-Foundation
Jury Member at Abisag-Tüllmann-Prize, Frankfurt/GER
Numerous publications, books
back to gallery