12 May 2008

invited guest: Kristoffer Albrecht

Kallerudd, Ingå, Finland, 2005




Bredan, Ingå, Finland, 1999




Aluksne, Latvia, 2004




Kraków, Poland, 2005


Aranda de Duero, Spain, 2006




Nagyatád, Hungary, 2004

On my travels in Europe I have chosen the route more or less haphazardly. I have applied a kind of a methodology of contigencies. Narrow roads have taken me to odd sequestered places, wide main roads to places well-known to every traveller. The scenery has sometimes been overwhelmingly magnificent, sometimes very modest. My impressons have risen a need to share something of them.

I have wished to tell something of what I have come across in remote places, in villages and towns, that are off the main tracks. It's easy to see that the edges of Europe are at least as interesting as its centre. Particularly the Eastern parts of our continent have interested me. In a near future these regions will, no doubt, increasingly resemble the rest of Europe. This means a considerable loss of visual diversity. Photography can preserve something of the appearance of the past. Some of the preserved impressions will perhaps seem peculiar and interesting in the future. I have, nevertheless, not been guided by an explicit aim to document phenomena about to disappear. My photographs are above all the result of a general visual curiosity distinctive to photographers.



Lviv, Ukraine, 2007


Ksar, Bulgaria, 2003



Lviv, Ukraine, 2007

If you wish to communicate something of the circumstances that you run across it's important to retain your visual appetite. Eyes that are unaccustomed to the surrounding visual reality are hungrier. When you get used to circumstances of a location the craving of the eyes becomes numb and it becomes impossible to apprehend details and nuances with the same accuracy and sensitivity. Curiosity drives you further. The vistas change. On my way through the landscapes I've been fascinated by a specific light, by the way the elements in front of me organise themselves in the frame, by people, trees, buildings, animals, clouds, by those things that under lucky circumstances constitute a good picture.

In the autumn of 2008 I 'm publishing a phoobook called Zigzag in Europe, in which these photographs will be included. - Kristoffer Albrecht



Istanbul, Turkey, 1996

Kristoffer Albrecht (b. 1961), works as a researcher at the University of Art and Design in Helsinki. His work has been widely exhibited in Finland and all around the world. These are just a few selected:

2008 Galleri Kronan, Norrköping, Sweden
2007 Candace Dwan Gallery, Katonah, New York, USA
2006 4+ Palais des Académies, Bryssel, Belgium

2000 Galleri Mazarin, Söderhamn, Sweden
1999 Gallery Candace Perich, Katonah, New York, USA
1997 Gallery Kay Kaminski, Lancing, Michigan, USA
1996 Fotogravure - proces - eksperiment, Copenhagen, Denmark
1992 Decennium, Finnish Photographic Art of the 1980's,
Bukarest, Scotland, Istanbul, Ankara, Barcelona, Madrid

Among Albrecht´s published books you will find
2004 Memorabilia
2001 Creative Reproduction (Doctoral Thesis)
1998 Metropol
1994 Fünfundneunzig (group)
1992 Armor
1990 En Avril

His work can be seen in collections at:

Finnish Museum of Photography, Helsinki
Moderna museet, Stockholm
Pushkin Museum, Moscow
Bibliothèque Nationale, Paris
Metropolitain Museum of Art, New York
etc.

invited by ulf fågelhammar

pictures and text © Kristoffer Albrecht

"Don't you Robert Capa me, you son of a bitch!"

Firenze A/R - Paolo Saccheri

I took some snapshots during my travel. Not much care about meaningful subjects, just what attracted my eye. Can those picture be considered documentary? Would you call them a document of a travel to Florence? Probably not in common sense (I didn't shoot any picture of Florence!). Reportage photography can be done with the ability of telling a story with
several pictures, in some cases even with just one picture. The question is what can we consider a reportage or a documentary picture? Photojournalism (that I did for few years) have its own rules to be able to sell to newspapers or magazines. But talking only photographically, every story of any subject can be documentary, in my opinion, if that story tells something we know or we would like to know and if the story is taken with either intimate or shouting pictures that have the ability of giving us emotions and rational.






Photographer: Paolo Saccheri

Face to face (132)

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