Thomas Kellner – Black & White, September 7 – November 10 2019, Friedrich-Hundt-Gesellschaft, Münster, Germany

Thomas Kellner - Black & White
Friedrich-Hundt-Gesellschaft e.V. im Stadtmuseum Münster
7. September – 10. November 2019

Opening reception: Saturday September 7,  2019, 9pm

Friedrich-Hundt-Gesellschaft e.V.
c/o Stadtmuseum Münster
Salzstraße 28
48143 Münster
Germany
Telefon: +49 251 4924501
info@friedrich-hundt-gesellschaft.de

Opening hours
Tuesday – Friday  10am – 6pm
Saturdays, Sundays and holidays 11am – 6pm

“Who would have thought that so much wonder could still be created with straight photographs in a time given to digital manipulation?” Alan G. Artner, Chicago Tribune

Friedrich-Hundt-Gesellschaft presents Thomas Kellner’s exhibition “Black & White” Municipal Museum in Muenster. Silver gelatin tableaux made by Kellner between 1997 and 2005 will be on display. In this exhibition, Kellner recalls his beginnings as an artist and his roots in black-and-white photography using the analog gelatin silver process.

Black-and-white photography first became widespread in 1871 and developed into the first large-scale visual medium in cultural history. It was the dominant form of photography for almost 60 years before color photography was introduced. Those who have followed Kellner’s photography over the years know that most of his works have been published and exhibited in color. However, there was a time when Kellner worked in black and white.

In a time when many artists are returning to black-and-white photography, Thomas Kellner looks back on this period of his life. Even though most of his black-and-white works were never published, they do reflect his early career when he worked mostly in silver gelatin and experimented with cycles of various photographic images in the darkroom. Kellner ended up developing his unique visual language of multiple perspectives and the deconstructive approach whereby the composite image is either a multiple exposure on a negative or a sequence mounted on a contact sheet of 35-mm roll of film.

Starting with his first sketches of the Eiffel Tower as a homage to Robert Delaunay and Orphism (the French offshoot of cubism) in Paris in 1997, Kellner totally turned his attention from landscape to architecture and the growing complexity of his compositions. He creates ageless classic images in his newly invented visual language based on Cubism. In Kellner’s early black-and-white images, the observer can see how he focuses on the structure itself. The balance between the object and its visual form are at the center of his creations.

Kellner’s original concept was to create images with 36 exposures equaling one length of film. Later, he moved on to using two or more rolls. The exhibition will show iconic black-and-white images from San Francisco, New York City and Chicago for the first time. It also will have some larger scale works on show- for example, an impressive image of the Guggenheim Museum Bilbao.

On exhibit will be a selection of 50 of Kellner’s best black-and-white images to start on September 7, 2019 in Muenster.

Thank you to the Stadtmuseum Muenster for presenting my Black & White series and to Peter Bastian, Angelika Osthues and Katharina Tiemann.

Publications

Monographs

Galerie Vrais Rêves, ed. 2017. Thomas Kellner: Contacts N & B 1997-2005. With the assistance of R. Mathieu and R. Viallon: Galerie Vrais Rêves.

Gao Xiaohua Art Museum of the Southwest Minzu University, ed. 2018. Black and White: Thomas Kellner Photography Exhibition. With the assistance of Qu Bo. Chengdu.

Kellner, Thomas, ed. 2012. Wir Sind Von Idealbildern Umgeben: Dirk Josef Müller Interviewt Thomas Kellner. Siegen: Ars-Victoria-Verl.

———, ed. 2015. Thomas Kellner: Black & White 1997 - 2005. 500th ed. Lüdenscheid, Berlin: Seltmann+Söhne.

Verve Gallery, ed. 2016. Thomas Kellner.