In 2007 Timm Rautert, then professor of photography at Leipzig’s Academy of Fine Arts, began photographing his students with their partners and young children among the designer furniture, second-hand treasures and kids’ toys of their apartments. So began a decade-long documentary experiment that shows German families in their revealing home environments and their beginnings as a family unit, with all its complex social connotations.
The book consists of 40 triptychs, one of each family. At the center is the mother/father/child group; to the left and right the living spaces seem to fold outwards, like a winged altarpiece. Rautert thus questions the idea of the “holy family” today though the prism of a specific generation’s middle class. His sitters gaze towards us (the children do their best), with varying degrees of formality. Rautert’s technical approach is appropriately pared back, creating a neutral stage on which his subjects pose and helping him to seize, in his words, “that selfsame moment to look at that which I perhaps did not immediately grasp.”
A photographer must take part, must understand; that’s the secret to a successful portrait, even if that understanding sometimes does not dawn till later. Timm Rauter
"synopsis" may belong to another edition of this title.
In 2007 Timm Rautert, then professor of photography at Leipzig’s Academy of Fine Arts, began photographing his students with their partners and young children among the designer furniture, second-hand treasures and kids’ toys of their apartments. So began a decade-long documentary experiment that shows German families in their revealing home environments and their beginnings as a family unit, with all its complex social connotations.
The book consists of 40 triptychs, one of each family. At the center is the mother/father/child group; to the left and right the living spaces seem to fold outwards, like a winged altarpiece. Rautert thus questions the idea of the “holy family” today though the prism of a specific generation’s middle class. His sitters gaze towards us (the children do their best), with varying degrees of formality. Rautert’s technical approach is appropriately pared back, creating a neutral stage on which his subjects pose and helping him to seize, in his words, “that selfsame moment to look at that which I perhaps did not immediately grasp.”
"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.
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Hardcover. Condition: new. Hardcover. In 2007 Timm Rautert, then professor of photography at Leipzig's Academy of Fine Arts, began photographing his students with their partners and young children among the designer furniture, second-hand treasures and kids' toys of their apartments. So began a decade-long documentary experiment that shows German families in their revealing home environments and their beginnings as a family unit, with all its complex social connotations. The book consists of 40 triptychs, one of each family. At the center is the mother/father/child group; to the left and right the living spaces seem to fold outwards, like a winged altarpiece. Rautert thus questions the idea of the "holy family" today though the prism of a specific generation's middle class. His sitters gaze towards us (the children do their best), with varying degrees of formality. Rautert's technical approach is appropriately pared back, creating a neutral stage on which his subjects pose and helping him to seize, in his words, "that selfsame moment to look at that which I perhaps did not immediately grasp." A photographer must take part, must understand; that's the secret to a successful portrait, even if that understanding sometimes does not dawn till later. Timm Rauter This volume presents a portrait series begun in 2007 by German photographer Rautert, in which he photographs his students with their partners and young children within their apartments. Exploring the concept of a modern-day holy family, each of these middle-class families is presented as a triptych. Shipping may be from multiple locations in the US or from the UK, depending on stock availability. Seller Inventory # 9783958295285
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Seller: Studio Bibliografico Marini, ROMA, RM, Italy
hardcover. Condition: As New. Prima edizione (First Edition). Testi di Oskar Negt, Timm Rautert, Brigit Kulmer, Stefan Koldehoff. 123 fotografie a colori, su tavole piegate più volte, di Timm Rautert. Edizione in inglese e tedesco . Cm 28x23,5. pp. 76. . Perfetto (Mint). . Prima edizione (First Edition). . Nel 2007 Timm Rautert, allora professore di fotografia all'Accademia di Belle Arti di Lipsia, ha iniziato a fotografare i suoi studenti con i loro partner e i loro figli piccoli tra i mobili di design, i tesori di seconda mano e i giocattoli per bambini dei loro appartamenti. È iniziato così un esperimento documentario decennale che mostra le famiglie tedesche nei loro ambienti domestici rivelatori e i loro inizi come unità familiare, con tutte le sue complesse connotazioni sociali. Il libro è composto da 40 trittici, uno per ogni famiglia. Al centro si trova il gruppo madre/padre/figlio; a sinistra e a destra gli spazi abitativi sembrano ripiegarsi verso l'esterno, come una pala d'altare alata.Rautert mette così in discussione l'idea di "sacra famiglia". . Book. Seller Inventory # bc_231278