»I grew up in an art-conscious parental home.
My grandfather was a sought-after landscape
artist of the Düsseldorf School. As a result, there
were beautiful paintings everywhere in the house,
including two large portraits of my great-grandparents
from the beginning of the nineteenth century,
which made a lasting impression on me as a
boy. So it's not surprising that, as a high-school
graduate, I photographed with my first 35 mm
camera on the first film a face, my own, a selfportrait.
That was in 1954.
After that, photography didn't let me go. So,
in the sixty-four years until this day, I have recorded,
among my other topics, over four hundred
human faces, above all those of family members
and friends. I had studied geology and had become
a geologist, which meant making endless
journeys all over the world and also inevitably
making countless human contacts. So I could
also photograph human faces over and over
again in all the visited countries. As a geologist,
I usually only met people living in the countryside
such as farmers, shepherds, fishermen or
innkeepers, but hardly a city dweller.
With the help of the camera, I have tried to
capture the many expressive possibilities of the
human face, understanding that every face is
unmistakable.
I have experimented with various camera models
and film types of analogue photography, but
I said goodbye to them in 2014 in order to get to
know and to use the almost inexhaustible possibilities
of digital photography, most recently using
a monochrome Leica. I have, however, remained
as faithful as possible to one classical tool of photography:
the tripod.«
Sprache
Verlagsort
Zielgruppe
Das Buch wendet sich an ein allgemeines Publikum, das sich für Photographie und hier besonders für die Porträtphoto-graphie interessiert.
Produkt-Hinweis
Fadenheftung
Gewebe-Einband
Illustrationen
Maße
Höhe: 185 cm
Breite: 185 cm
Dicke: 15 mm
Gewicht
ISBN-13
978-3-86905-019-5 (9783869050195)
Schweitzer Klassifikation
Autor*in
Hochschullehrer
Until his retirement, Hillert Ibbeken was professor
of geology at the Freie Universität Berlin. He
has been involved in architecture and landscape
photography throughout his life. His book Karl
Friedrich Schinkel. Das architektonische Werk
heute / The architectural work today, edited in cooperation
with Elke Blauert, was published by
Edition Axel Menges in 2001. Later there followed,
in the same format, this time with him as sole editor,
his monographs on Ludwig Persius (2005)
and Friedrich August Stüler (2006), and, among
others, Schlösser der Weserrenaissance / Castles
of the Weser Renaissance (2008), edited in cooperation
with Michael Bischoff, as well as Das
andere Italien / The other Italy. Geschichten und
Bilder aus Ligurien und Kalabrien / Stories and pictures
from Liguria and Calabria (2011). His last
work published by Edition Axel Menges was
Preußische Gärten / Prussian Gardens with his
photographs and a historical overview by Katja
Schoene (2013).
Fotograf*in
Hochschullehrer