Winding Towers, 2 Views, Fosse Lens No 7, Wingles, Nord et Pas-de-Calais, France

Bernd and Hilla Becher German
Bernd Becher German
Hilla Becher German

Not on view

Both as artists and teachers, Bernhard and Hilla Becher are among the most important figures in postwar German photography. For the last thirty years, the artists have examined the dilapidated industrial architecture of Europe and North America, from water towers and blast furnaces to the surrounding workers’ houses. The Bechers treat their subjects (in this instance the mineheads that deliver raw materials to the surface), as the exotic specimens of a long-dead species. Photographing against a blank sky and without any pictorial tricks or effects, they allow a perverse beauty to emerge from their subjects’ crazy plethora of forms. Like freakish second cousins to Tatlin’s Monument to the Third International, these sad industrial behemoths lampoon the Modernist fetishization of technological progress, unwittingly becoming monuments—both pathetic and noble—to an era racing towards its close.

Winding Towers, 2 Views, Fosse Lens No 7, Wingles, Nord et Pas-de-Calais, France, Bernd and Hilla Becher (German, active 1959–2007), Gelatin silver prints

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