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German landscape photographer From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Elger Esser (born 11 May 1967)[1] is a German landscape photographer. He is associated with the Düsseldorf School of Photography. He lives and works in Düsseldorf. [2] "He is primarily associated with large-format images of European lowlands with his characteristic low horizon lines, pale luminous colours and vast skies".[3]
Elger Esser | |
---|---|
Born | 11 May 1967 |
Education | Bernd Becher |
Known for | photography |
Movement | Düsseldorf School of Photography |
Website | Official website |
Esser's work is held in many public collections such as the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam and the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, Metropolitan Museum of Art and Museum of Modern Art in New York.[4] He has won the Rheinischer Kunstpreis[2] and the Oskar Schlemmer Prize.[5]
Esser was born in Stuttgart, Germany and grew up in Rome. He is the son of the German writer Manfred Esser and the French photographer Régine Esser. He spent his childhood and youth in Rome, since the age of two. His father received a scholarship from the Villa Massimo in 1969 and his mother worked as a press photographer and Rome correspondent. He completed his high school diploma at the German School in Rome.
In 1986, he traveled with his father to Sicily to film the Friedrich Hölderlin's adaptation The Death of Empedocles by Jean-Marie Straub and Danièle Huillet.[6]
In 1988, the sociologist Peter Kammerer, published the anthology Italien. Menschen Landschaften (Italy. Human Landscapes), in a book series, with texts from several authors, and photographs by Régine Esser, and the young Elger Esser.
In 1986, he moved to Düsseldorf, where he worked as a commercial photographer until 1991.[7] He attended the Kunstakademie Düsseldorf between 1991 and 1997, where he studied under Bernd Becher. From 1996 he was a master student and received the Academy Certificate from the Art Academy in 1997.[8]
In 1998, Esser received a DAAD travel grant for Italy. He traveled to Calabria and recorded his impressions in a travel diary and in documentary photographs. The photographs created cross-connections between his own text and his father's text from 1986. The travel descriptions of father and son, together with the photographs by Elger Esser, were published by Kehrer Verlag under the title Nach Italien.
From 2006 to 2009 Esser was professor of photography at Karlsruhe University of Arts and Design.[5]
The central theme in Elger Esser's work is historical landscape photography. He finds his motifs on his travels through France, Scotland, Italy and the Netherlands. His imagery distances him from the documentary and objective working style of his academy teacher Bernd Becher.
He is influenced by the Romantic paintings of the 19th century[9] and 19th-century photography, and also inspired by writers such as Gustave Flaubert, Marcel Proust and Guy de Maupassant.[4] He seeks out beauty.[4][9][10]
Esser's photographs of European rivers or river banks are large, quiet and deserted.[11] Most of the time the horizon is low, as in the Dutch landscape paintings of the 17th century.[12]
For his photography book Morgenland (2017), he travelled to Lebanon, Israel and Egypt (including along the Nile to Luxor and Aswan) between 2004 and 2015.[9][4][10] Using an 8×10 large format camera[9][10] His work depicts "luminous and unpeopled landscapes" with "glassy waters, still horizons[,] ancient ruins".[10] shorelines, traditional feluccas and dahabeah sailing boats that "show off the area's mysticism, away from headlines about war and violence."[4] 'Morgenland' is an old German term for the Middle East, meaning 'morning land'.[9][10][13]
Esser's work is held in the following public collections:
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