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Conceptual photography
January 1, 2004

Conceptual photography

Conceptual photography is explained by the great masters in this series from the Contacts collection.

01. Alain Fleischer

Alain Fleischer expresses his taste for duplication and multiple experiments in his photographic work with very elaborate devices.

13min
January 1, 2004

02. Christian Boltanski

"What will be the image that will remain?" is the leitmotif of Christian Boltanski's photographic work.

11min
January 1, 2004

03. Hilla Et Bernd Becher

A journey through post-war industrial landscapes and new objective photography.

14min
January 1, 2004

04. John Baldessari

A student at San Diego State College from 1949 to 1957, John Baldessari produced paintings attempting to establish a relationship between painting and language.

13min
January 1, 2004

05. Georges Rousse

Georges Rousse or a different investigation of space, tracing hieroglyphic writing on the walls and floors.

13min
January 1, 2004

06. Martin Parr

Born in Great Britain in 1952. Focusing on the blemishes of Western society, Martin Parr's lens takes aim at hyper-consumerism, packaged leisure and boredom in a derisive slant on our ways of life. His work deciphers social codes using a particularly subversive rule: lucidity is inseparable from humour.

14min
January 1, 2004

07. Roni Horn

Born in the United States in 1955. Roni Horn's journey in photography is that of a highly unusual initiation. It takes its source in graphic design, explores sculpture, questions writing, then returns to the essential: the subtle grammar of signs and images, Iceland is his subject of predilection, the entry point into his relationship with the world as well as the metaphor of her work: life is made of cycles in which time, nature, death, the visible and invisible call and answer each other.

14min
January 1, 2004

08. Thomas Struth

Born in Germany in 1954. Struth strips bare the structures of our cities, lives and dreams. His photographs reveal the relationship between urban space, social group and the representation of the sub-conscious.

13min
January 1, 2004

09. Wolfgang Tillmans

Born in Germany in 1968. Abstracts, portraits, landscapes or still lives, Wolfgang Tillmans engages every traditional photographic form in order to revolutionize approach and perception. Beyond its documentary value, his work reveals the true nature of viewpoint: an invisible line linking the artist's inner landscape to his or her subject without failing to impact the viewer.

12min
January 1, 2004

10. John Hilliard

Born in Great Britain in 1945. John Hilliard has adopted a conceptual approach to modern photography that questions the norms of photographic language and practices. His work constantly probes the proces of making images: what is light ? Can the film freeze time ? Is the subject what we see ? Can our vision of reality do without fiction ?

13min
January 1, 2004