Your cart is empty

Shop now

Leon Kirchlechner »Nowhere«

Dive into this award winning, beautiful and mysterious photobook, photographed and edited by the Artistic Director Print of Der Greif

€29.00 
1

"With no horizon, one’s view into the distance is impeded. Scanning, searching, one’s gaze comes to a standstill in Leon Kirchlechner’s photographs. The eye may slow, but it doesn’t find repose. The peace is not contemplative: it is restless. The restricted field of view has a narrowing effect. It makes the room strangely dislocated, denies me the geographical coordinates that would give me a feeling of safety. And so, even as the onlooker, I remain dislocated in the usually centrically, often symmetrically composed images. I can’t make sense of this centrality. Nor is it reassuring. Although it gives me pause, it doesn’t offer anything for me to grasp. It’s not the enjoyable, thought-provoking stillness that many works of art inspire. Rather, it’s an oppressive, constricting stillness, one that causes alarm.

»I was immediately enthralled by what I saw,« explains Leon Kirchlechner. »An inky black hole opened up suddenly and incomprehensibly in the cold, bare ground. It appeared to swallow the light. The unstructured, almost two-dimensional black was deceptive; the thought of falling into it made me shudder. How deep was it? What was in it? Was there anything? Or nothing? I expected something. I suspected something. I knew that nothing would happen and yet I was as if hypnotised. Filled with an illusory fear I stood still – and looked at what I could not see.«

This experience has become encoded in his images. The unknown that prompts these seemingly so unremarkable existential tremors within us. That what one sees before oneself is not what one senses. Namely that what appears in the image is not even present. But that absence is exactly what arrests the gaze. The actual subject of the photograph, its raison d’être, is beyond the picture. “The absence of the imaged subject is nothing other than an intense presence, receding into itself, gathering itself together in its intensity,” wrote Jean-Luc Nancy. This is addressed fundamentally and unremittingly in Leon Kirchlechner’s images.

What is present in the image is, in fact, what is absent."

Text: Prof. Ulrich Fleischmann Translation: Fiona Cain

Measures: 200 x 300 mm

Type: Cloth-lined hardcover

Pages: 64 Limited edition of 800 copies (manually numbered)

Unlock Discounts on Any Product!

Get 5% off your entire order for every item added to your cart — applies to all products in our shop: Magazines, Books, Posters, Postcards, Apparel, and Vinyl. The more you add, the more you save! Discount does not apply to pre-defined bundles.

Start bundling and enjoy bigger savings!