Cloppenburg. The Artistic Charm of the Unspectacular
”I sometimes wonder what has led us to spend so many hours studying such scenes. But of course we both know. What was it Godard said? … ’For us, the future is more real than the present.’”
Robert Adams in a letter to Laurenz Berges
I
Landscapes are cultural spaces. They are based on the perception, interpretation, and design of man. Irrespective of the occupation with geographical areas, whether original or cultivated nature, or urban environments infrastructurally characterised by architecture and transport networks, as cultural artefacts, landscapes represent a special aspect of our worldly experience. This aspect and the respective artistic and aesthetic peculiarities have made landscapes recurring themes in art and in this case also in photography. Since the development of this medium and its various visualisation methods, aspects of the “sublime” as a recurring theme of nature and landscape analysis emerge on the one hand, while in the history of 20th century photography, it is often rather the unspectacular and commonplace that shift into the artistic focus on the basis of a factual-documentary visual language.
The colour-photographic series Cloppenburg from the early work of Laurenz Berges, presented in this publication, can be considered an example of this. It was created in 1989/90 in the artist’s hometown of Lower Saxony, Germany following a one-year stay in New York. The artist has been living in Dusseldorf for more than 25 years now but is still has personal and family connections to Cloppenburg.
In the context of the international contemporary artistic photography, Laurenz Berges has predominantly gained renown for his muted colour picture stages of interior details of abandoned rooms and depopulated places, which oscillate between abstraction and reduced narrative moments. These include the series Kasernen, created in the 1990s, in which he turned his attention to abandoned Russian army barracks in East Germany following reunification as a pictorial theme, as well as the series Etzweiler showing interiors of abandoned villages in the lignite mining area around Duren, and later motifs created in Duisburg and the Ruhr valley. If one considers the fundamental aspects of transience and abstract image details in these later series of works, it is evident that these characteristics are already present in certain motifs of the Cloppenburg series.
II
Even before studying photography, first in Essen and later with under Bernd Becher in Dusseldorf, Laurenz Berges had already dealt with the development and tradition of 20th century landscape and documentary photography and its central representatives in the field of black and white photography, such as Walker Evans or Robert Frank in America, or Albert Renger-Patzsch and Heinrich Riebesehl in Germany, as well as the development and impact of American New Color Photography. During the 1970s, Stephen Shore, among others, pertained to the photographers who, orientating towards everyday American landscapes and sociologically referential themes, conceptually devoted himself to colour photography and who influenced developments also in German photography.
In addition to Bernd and Hilla Becher – who, just as many of the American photographers named above, participated in the legendary exhibition New Topographics. Photographs of a Man-altered Landscape in Rochester in 1975/76 and who maintained close contact with, say, Stephen Shore – it was first and foremost Michael Schmidt who invited Lewis Baltz, Stephen Shore or Robert Adams to lectures at his ‘Workshop for Photography’ in Berlin-Kreuzberg, Germany, thus enabling encounters for Laurenz Berges, among others. [1] Later, Laurenz Berges also cultivated a long-standing personal exchange with some of them, such as Robert Adams, in the context of and following a group exhibition curated by Thomas Weski and Heinz Liesbrock in 2002, in which both artists participated alongside Joachim Brohm, Bernhard Fuchs and Simone Nieweg. [1]
This exhibition also addressed landscapes changed by man in urban peripheral and settlement areas. Aspects that are individually applied to a typical German landscape in Laurenz Berges’ series Cloppenburg and henceforth become comprehensible..
III
Cloppenburg can be considered exemplary for many district towns and small towns, villages and localities in Lower Saxony. The district town, which has grown over several centuries in terms of cultural history, blends into a flat environment of former moorland and heathland characterised by fields, forests, agriculture, and livestock breeding. Reddish-brown, sometimes whitewashed brick buildings characterise its residential and functional architecture, and unlike the mostly Protestant towns in Lower Saxony, a Roman Catholic population is predominant in Cloppenburg. A peculiarity that can be ascertained as an aspect of socialisation in certain parts of the environment and thus also in a few pictures of the series by Laurenz Berges.
Concentrating on mostly unpopulated image details that nevertheless refer to the human being and the man-made environment, architecture, economic and traffic-related infrastructures, the 52 individual images in the series combine to form a reduced narrative landscape tableau with a muted colour scheme. The isolated persons appearing in some of the pictures seem almost humorous, somewhat reminiscent of film extras, and rather unusual for the rest of the series as well as the later works of Laurenz Berges. As a blurred figure in a car, taken anonymously from the back on a sidewalk or in a cemetery, they become representatives revealing a narrative reference by the artist to the inhabitants and their lives in Cloppenburg, observed from a distance. Tongues in cheek, even cars parked in isolated places refer to them, now and then.
The images, taken in the given light conditions by day or night in autumn and winter with a documentary visual language, do not focus on the cultural-historically noteworthy individual, which Cloppenburg could also offer, but rather on an approach to a landscape picture in which the unspectacular develops its own expressiveness and, with the photographic perspectives and details chosen by Laurenz Berges, a concentrated pictoriality. Recurrently, streets and paths divide the pictorial spaces with their details of fields, trees, and houses, directing the gaze into horizontal, vertical, and diagonal axes in order to open up perspectives onto pictorial horizons according to the classical composition of landscape images. In further images, they graduate and add rhythm to the pictorial space from a close-up view in interaction with architecture, “strips” of fields, adjoining meadows, or vertically oriented views through trees. In addition, rows of garages, reminiscent of colour field paintings, or warehouses whose different geometric forms span the pictorial space and stand out strikingly from their surroundings, appear as abstract aesthetic moments in the sequence of images. Different typographies of company letterings aesthetically situate their foundation in various time contexts, for which some pictures with shop window decorations, a stage-like graduated interior with graphically striking, floral-ornamental wallpaper from – so it seems – the 1970s or the motif with a decorative mural with fish, are exemplary.
In the context of the history of photography, the shop window pictures also recall, among other things, the famous photographs of Parisian shop windows by Eugène Atget from the early 20th century. With his conceptually perceived typological images, it was his intention to photographically capture a vanishing, aesthetically unique momentum in the increasingly urbanised Paris of the future.
To capture the present from an awareness of future changes, to document time and its narrative traces in images, is a factor typical of photography. In the case of the Cloppenburg series, this can be discerned in a variety of concentrated pictorial compositions; for Laurenz Berges, this is an essential motive for the creation of the series. [1]
Following different shooting principles and transferring the factual and temporal variables into images with individual details, the unspectacular motifs from Cloppenburg appear as a landscape tableau relating to one another, in which, with a premonition of the future, universal validity and recurring events develop a charm of their own.
[1] The pioneering exhibition New Topographics, curated by William Jenkins. Photographs of a Man-altered Landscape, shown in 1975/76 in Rochester, and the history of its reception still affect the current perception of a photographic landscape image and can also be related to the series Cloppenburg. Cf.: New Topographics – Texte und Rezeption, Landesgalerie Linz am Oberösterreichischen Landesmuseum/Die Photographische Sammlung/SK Stiftung Kultur, Salzburg 2010
[2] Photographs by Robert Adams, Joachim Brohm, Laurenz Berges, Bernhard Fuchs, and Simone Nieweg, touring exhibition of the Lower Saxony Sparkasse Foundation? 2002, curated by Heinz Liesbrock and Thomas Weski; Publication with texts by Robert Adams, Heinz Liesbrock and Thomas Weski, Steidl/Göttingen, 2002
[3] the short text by Laurenz Berges in this publication. P.?