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Property from a Distinguished Curator’s Collection

243

Bernd and Hilla Becher

Water Towers

1963-1980
Six gelatin silver prints, printed and assembled no later than 1980.
Each approximately 12 x 15 3/4 in. (30.5 x 40 cm)
Signed by both artists with a sequence map in pencil on the reverse of the mount of one print; sequentially numbered 'Q1 - Q6' in pencil on the reverse of each mount.
Titles include: Recklinghausen, D, 1966; Bochum, D, 1965; Temploux/Namur, B, 1974; Dippach, L, 1980; Göttelborn, Saarland, D, 1976; and Köln, Färbergasse, D, 1963

Bernd and Hilla Becher

German

Husband and wife Bernd and Hilla Becher began photographing buildings and relics of the Industrial Revolution, such as coal mines and cooling towers, in 1959. Like objective scientists removing a specimen from the field, the Bechers framed their subject in a manner that isolated it from its environment. Often, these stark, beautifully detailed prints were then displayed in grid-like structures, forming stunning 'Typologies'.

By the time Bernd Becher became a professor at the Düsseldorf Art Academy in 1976 (policy would not allow Hilla to be a simultaneous appointment), the Bechers' photographs, with their seemingly neutral point of view and serial display, were already being applauded by the international art world as important works of Minimal and Conceptual Art.

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