art book cologne GmbH & Co. KG
Deutzer Freiheit 107
50679 Köln
Germany
Opening hours (office and showroom):
Monday to Friday 8 – 17
info@artbookcologne.de
Phone: +49 221 800 80 80
Fax: +49 221 800 80 82
art book cologne, founded by Bernd Detsch in 1997, is a wholesale company and specializes in buying and selling high quality publications in art, art theory, architecture, design, photography, illustrated cultural history and all related subjects internationally. Our team includes specialists in art, culture, music, book trade and media but in spite of our diversity we have one common ground: the enthusiasm for unique art books.
We purchase remaining stocks from museums, publishers and art institutions. We sell these remainders to bookstores, museum shops, and art dealers all over the world.
Publisher | Steidl |
Year | 2019 |
Cover | Cloth with dust jacket |
Language | English, German |
ISBN | 978-3-95829-528-5 |
Pages | 76 |
Weight | 1640 g |
More | |
Article ID | art-28410 |
In 2007 Timm Rautert, then professor of photography at Leipzig’s Academy of Fine Arts, began photographing his students with their partners and young children among the designer furniture, second-hand treasures and kids’ toys of their apartments. So began a decade-long documentary experiment that shows German families in their revealing home environments and their beginnings as a family unit, with all its complex social connotations.
The book consists of 40 triptychs, one of each family. At the center is the mother/father/child group; to the left and right the living spaces seem to fold outwards, like a winged altarpiece. Rautert thus questions the idea of the “holy family” today though the prism of a specific generation’s middle class. His sitters gaze towards us (the children do their best), with varying degrees of formality. Rautert’s technical approach is appropriately pared back, creating a neutral stage on which his subjects pose and helping him to seize, in his words, “that selfsame moment to look at that which I perhaps did not immediately grasp.”