Publisher Note
In astronomy the word "eclipse" describes the phenomenon of one brightly lit heavenly body covering another. It was an eclipse in 2006 that inspired photographer Andréas Lang to create his cycle of landscapes related to early Christianity and the Crusades in the Middle East, Turkey, Syria, Israel, and Palestine. His analogue works of art, most of them in black-and-white, are distinguished by a profound, almost metaphysical darkness. They track the fateful, tragic sites of European history, where the spirit of the past blends atmospherically with the present.
Influenced by Romanticism, especially the paintings of Caspar David Friedrich, Lang's photographs also pose humanity's great questions.
“In my work, I reveal the different layers of history, mythology and the present to create a narrative image: a form of visual archaeology, at times blending or colliding with immanent social, political and ecological realities. In this way, the picture also becomes a place for the imaginary and its projection. It appears at times like a stage- or film set, pending in limbo, somewhere between reality and imagination, past and present.”
- Andréas Lang
| Publisher | |
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| Release Place | Berlin, Germany |
| Edition | 1st edition |
| Release Date | 2019 |
| Credits |
Artist:
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| Identifiers |
ISBN-13:
978-3-7757-4548-2
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| Work | |
|---|---|
| Subform | Photobook |
| Topics | Eclipse |
| Methods | Photography |
| Language | English, German |
| Object | |
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| Format | Hardcover |
| Dimensions | 30.5 × 29.5 cm |
| Interior | |
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| Pages | 144 |