Since the end of the 1950s, Bernd and Hilla Becher have been traveling around Europe and North America. They photograph mines, winding towers, gas containers, blast furnaces, power stations, cooling towers, grain silos, warehouses. They have to this very day remained true to their project of an almost encyclopedic stocktaking of anonymous utility buildings from the age of industrialization. In doing so, they opt for a decidedly matter-of-fact and sober visual idiom that is appropriately expressed by black-and-white photography. This ensures that the steel edifices stand out particularly vividly. In the serial setting, the individual shots (which reveal basic shapes and deviations, similarities and differences) merge to form typologies. Some commentators have discerned a likeness between this photographic series and Minimal or Concept Art; the Bechers themselves first and foremost see their work as continuing the tradition of New Objectivity. In the early 20th century many artists (painters, writers, and directors) found their real issue in the depiction of social and economic realities. In the 1920s and 1930s photographers also devoted themselves increasingly to the everyday lives and working lives of people. The topics and aesthetic means of expression suppressed during the Third Reich are revitalized by the Bechers in their photographs of industrial and commercial premises. Many of the industrial plants they photographed no longer exist. The buildings were already under threat of closure or of being torn down when the Bechers set about photographing them. Their photographs therefore have a major significance for cultural history, if only for historical documentary reasons. What is even more important is perhaps the fact that Bernd and Hilla Becher have succeeded in imbuing ostensibly trivial engineered buildings with a value hitherto only accorded great architecture if not sculpture: by eliminating of the customary everyday way of seeing, these functional objects receive a quality that tends to be overlooked in everyday life. In June 2007, Bernd Becher died at the age of 75 in Rostock. Image: Ilseder Hütte, Ilsede/Hannover, 1984, 50 x 60 cm Biographical Information | | Bernd Becher | | 1931 | | born in Siegen | | | | 1953-56 | | studied at the Staatliche Kunstakademie Stuttgart | | | | 1957 | | first photographs of industrial buildings | | | | 1957-61 | | studied typography at the Staatliche Kunstakademie Düsseldorf | | | | 2007 | | Bernd Becher dies in Rostock | | | | | | Hilla Becher | | 1934 | | born as Hilla Wobeser in Potsdam | | | | | | apprenticeship in photography, then worked as a commercial photographer in Hamburg and Düsseldorf | | | | 1958-61 | | studied at the Staatliche Kunstakademie Düsseldorf and created the Department of Photography | | | | | | Bernd and Hilla Becher | | 1959 | | beginning of the collaboration | | | | 1959-63 | | photographs of industrial plants and houses, especially in the area of Siegen | | | | 1968 | | first photographs in the USA | | | | 1972/73 | | honorary professorship of Hilla Becher at the Hochschule für Bildende Künste, Hamburg | | | | 1976-96 | | Bernd Becher Professor of Photography at the Staatliche Kunstakademie Düsseldorf | | | | 1990 | | awarded the Golden Lion at the 44th Venice Biennial | | | | 2003 | | Infinity Award of the International Center of Photography, New York | | | | 2004 | | Hasselblad Foundation International Award in Photography | | | | | | Hilla Becher lives and works in Düsseldorf | | | | | | | | | | |