Thomas Struth is one of the best-known photographers to come out of the school of Bernd and Hilla Becher.
In this celebrated volume, Struth presents a series of urban streetscapes from cities such as Edinburgh, Lima, Pyongyang, Naples, and New York City, all taken in similar conditions-devoid of human activity.
Struth refers to these mundane buildings, unpopulated streets and anonymous facades as unconscious places-environments that are imbued with meaning only by the viewer.
Captured with exquisite technical prowess and presented with powerful, restrained neutrality, Struths images allow us to fully appreciate a citys character-from its telephone wires above to the pavement below.
Renowned sociologist Richard Sennetts illuminating essay reveals how Struths sober, lucid photography leads the viewer to create their own conclusions, rather than forcing a perspective.
The resulting interplay among photographer, viewer, and landscape may hold the key to understanding how architecture affects our daily lives.
Museum fur Lackkunst Munster
258.00 Lei
Museum of Art Rhode Island School of Design
258.00 Lei
Sakuma Sasaki
71.00 Lei
Myojin Katou
77.00 Lei