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Light Blue Flower, Homage part II - Limited Edition of 1 Photograph

Matthias Leupold

Germany

Photography, Photo on Paper

Size: 40.6 W x 43.3 H x 0.1 D in

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$2,010

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"...Dark blue rocks with colourful veins rose at some distance, the daylight that surrounded him was brighter and milder than the ordinary, the sky was black-blue and completely pure. But what attracted him with full power was a light-blue flower that stood first at the spring, touching him with its broad shining leaves. All around it were countless flowers of all colours and the delicious smell filled the air. He saw nothing but the Blue Flower and looked at it for a long time with unnameable tenderness. At last he was about to approach it, when all at once it began to move and change; the leaves became shinier and nestled against the growing stem, the flower bent towards him and the petals showed a blue spreading collar in which a delicate face floated..." Novalis: Heinrich von Ofterdingen The chapel was built during the construction of a small dam as a memorial to injured construction workers. I had noticed this chapel during my trips through Lazio in 1997 and 98. There were many similar chapels in Italy. What fascinated me about this one on Lago dell Turano was that every time I drove past, there were always fresh flowers, even though the chapel was far from the nearest village. The chapel was at least 40 years old in 1997 (I could tell from a metal plate embedded in the wall to the upper right of the chapel) and someone must want to preserve the memory of one of the builders who may have perished. This corresponded to my feeling for ancestors and the deceased: homage. Fine Art Print, Collectors Edition (4,3 x 40,6" ; 110 x 103 cm) 1 + 1 Artist Proof, printed, signed and numbered by the artist on Paper John P. Jacob, Curator for Photography at the Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington: Matthias Leupold's photographs are in variably elegant, their simplicity is always deceptive. Leupold merges mythology with historical narrative, and fiction with reality. As much as they speak of the artist personal history and as admirably as they describe the culturewithin hin lives and works, Matthias Leupold's photographs illustrate the complexity of photography itself. Occasionally serious, often mocking but never scolding... (Introduction, M.L. Living Pictures, catalogue Künstlerdorf Schöppingen 1995/1996) Matthias Leupold himself refers to his pictures as scenic photographs. Admittedly, the term is unusual, but it describes the way in which Leupold works more precisely than the established notions of staged or staging photography. The word scenic refers to a particular place; skene was the arena or the stage in antique Greek theatre, while a scene in the modern sense is a short, self-contained part of a theatre play or film. Transferred to photography, therefore, it means a place where something is presented to us so that we may look at it. And it also means the arena for an event, for an action as part of a narrative or a story. With very few exceptions, Leupold produces this event - embedded into a story or evoking one - especially for the purpose of photographing and holding on to it – in his picture. Leupold took up a special, almost incommensurable position from the very beginning: his work is not characterised by rational calculation or explicit media reflection, and it demonstrates very few special photographic techniques. Instead its qualities are playfulness, poetry, dreaminess, a gentle melancholy, pictorial narratives, narrative series and irony. The developments and gains in Leupold’s work during the four short years in East Berlin may be summed up as three fields of opposing tension: between the static and the dynamic, between contemplation and narration, and between the joke and the symbol. In the pictures, however, these dimensions do not divide up, but – to some extent or even fully – they fall into one. T.O. Immisch, Leader of Photographic Collection Art Museum Halle, Saale: Matthias Leupold’s Fictive Images The fundamentals of Leupold's artistic photographics works
In his photographic series, Leupold investigates the manifestation and the social ties of various picture groups. "Appearance and being, realism and illusion become conceptually mixed up for the viewer. What should he believe? What is considered acceptable?" This quote by the german publicist Enno Kaufhold displays the diversity of Leupolds artistic creations, which are thematically tied to the german politcal system of the twentieth century. In particular, the differences between the social and art worlds of the GDR and the FRG. Leupold's photographic art does not require description; it is revealed by looking closely at each individual - a school of seeing that offers insights into contexts. Entire stories are focussed in the one all-bundling key image, from which a narrative can be read backwards and forwards - a game with our ability to associate - a test of our perceptive faculty. Leupold is author, director, set designer, documentarist - seemingly affirming and conserving, but in reality critically reflecting and challenging us to think further..." Prof. Dr. Ulrich Eckhardt, 1973-2001 artistic director of the Berliner Festspiele: (from the laudatory speech at the opening of the exhibition THE TIME HAS ONLY JUST BEGUN at the Art and Media Centre, in Berlin-Adlershof 2003) Artist Statement by Matthias Leupold Staged photography is a tool to realize my artistic intentions. The technical medium photography allows to either fixate or transform past, present or already enunciated situations. Concerning that, my photography envelops many different historical aspects: the reflection of present happenings and the re-staging of historical references. Actors and models are placed in various landscapes or urban ex- and interiors, which I interpret to be "playgrounds" or stages for my photography. My inspiration is fed by the "outrageous occurence", the genius loci and by the observation of human interaction. Subject matters such as loneliness, vulnerability, injury and dissipation are taken on in tableaus or single photographs. Matthias Leupold received his (Master Pupil+Diploma: MFA) in Communication Design at Universty of Art Berlin, Germany. His work has been shown at the New Nationalgalerie, Hamburger Bahnhof-Museum for Moder Art, Academie of Art, all in Berlin, Berlinische Galerie, Deichtorhallen Hamburg, Rosa Esman Gallry New York, M.I.T. Cambridge, PRC Boston University, Art-School, Portland/Main, Maison du Danemark, Paris, Center of Contemporary Art, Warzcawa, Center of Contemporary Art, Tallinn, Berlin, Photo+ Düsseldorf, Kunstmuseum Moritzburg Halle, NRW Forum Düsseldorf. He has a professorship at a Berlin university. Brilliant Museum Silver Gloss White, archivally proper — with an elegantly subtle punch, an acid-free, alpha-cellulose papers that emulate the classic, air-dried, glossy fibre-based traditional silver-halide papers used by the master black-and-white printers. 
300 gsm with a thickness between 18 and 19 mils-. Get in touch for other sizes or prints with margin.

Details & Dimensions

Photography:Photo on Paper

Original:One-of-a-kind Artwork

Size:40.6 W x 43.3 H x 0.1 D in

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Matthias Leupold was born in 1959 in Berlin and lives and works in Berlin. He is professor of Photography at the University of Applied Sciences Europe Berlin. Since 2012 he has realized several documentaries in Vietnam, Lebanon, Albania and Switzerland. Artist Statement Staged photography is a tool to realize my artistic intentions. The technical medium photography allows to either fixate or transform past, present or already enunciated situations. Concerning that, my photography envelops many different historical aspects: the reflection of present happenings and the re-staging of historical references. Actors and models are placed in various landscapes or urban ex- and interiors, which I interpret to be "playgrounds" or stages for my photography. My inspiration is fed by the "outrageous occurence", the genius loci and by the observation of human interaction. Subject matters such as loneliness, vulnerability, injury and dissipation are taken on in tableaus or single photographs. The fundamentals of Leupold's artistic photographics works In his photographic series, Leupold investigates the manifestation and the social ties of various picture groups. "Appearance and being, realism and illusion become conceptually mixed up for the viewer. What should he believe? What is considered acceptable?" This quote by the german publicist Enno Kaufhold displays the diversity of Leupolds artistic creations, which are thematically tied to the german politcal system of the twentieth century. In particular, the differences between the social and art worlds of the GDR and the FRG.

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