Candida Höfer is a truly distinctive and influential late 20th-century photographer.
As a student of and a member of the , Höfer established her signature style in the late 1970's/early 1980s in Germany with her technically precise images of vast and vacant public spaces.
Along with her contemporaries, including Thomas Struth and Andreas Gursky, she helped evolve the new genre of urban and institutional portraiture; realizing images that were void of sentimentality or nationalistic agenda.
This classic Höfer image expertly captures the São Paulo Art Biennial designed by the renowned architect, Oscar Niemeyer. Photographed in full color using a large format camera, Hofer frames the repetitive lines of the structure which ultimately lead to a pitch-black focal point in the center of the image.
Like much of her work the composition is dynamic and symmetrical to accurately illustrate the scope of the interior. However, this photograph is rare in its depiction of human subjects as Höfer is most recognized for depicting unoccupied locations.
The architectural elements of this grand industrial space fill the frame but among them are also traces of things left behind (hanging work jackets and discarded construction materials) representing its function and public use.
This is a rare opportunity to acquire an affordable and iconic work by one of the most internationally collected photographers of our era.
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"Niemeyer Brazil A"
Germany, 2005
C-print
Signed, dated and titled by the artist verso.
From an edition of 45.
10"H 13.25"W (photo)
11"H 14.25"W (sheet)
Very good condition.