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University Art Galleries (UMassD)
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exhibition_title:
Karl Blossfeldt
exhibition_title
Karl Blossfeldt
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exhibition_dates:
June 1 - September 18, 2005
exhibition_dates
June 1 - September 18, 2005
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exhibition_year:
2005
exhibition_year
2005
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exhibition_location:
University Art Gallery (UMass Dartmouth Galleries)
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University Art Gallery (UMass Dartmouth Galleries)
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exhibition_curator:
Lasse B. Antonsen
exhibition_curator
Lasse B. Antonsen
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exhibition_note:
KARL BLOSSFELDT June 1 - September 18, 2005 The German artist and professor at the Berlin College of Art, Karl Blossfeldt, became world famous overnight, when a selection of his photographs of close-ups of plants and plant sections, was published in 1928 under the title of Urformen der Kunst (Art Forms in Nature). Karl Blossfeldt had taken photographs for more than thirty years, but only used them in his teaching. He took photographs with the help of a wood box camera he had constructed himself, and glass plates with coatings that allowed for a high degree of details. He mostly turned the negatives into slides, and used the projected images as a teaching tool, making it possible for his students to experience Nature's inherent design vocabulary. Although Blossfeldt did not consider himself a photographer, the images are pure and expressive, as well as technically accomplished. As a photographer, Blossfeldt gives us access to a realm that is often too small for the naked eye, while carefully selecting plant parts, that when enlarged, seem to give access to an unknown and mysterious realm of beauty. Urformen der Kunst featured 120 photogravures. Most of the prints in this exhibition are from that book. Additional prints are from Wundergarten der Natur (Nature's Magical Garden), a collection published in 1932. Although it is believed that Blossfeldt took thousands of photographs, only a couple of hundred are known today, and his fame is not based on the original photographs, but on the photogravures published in the books. A copy of either book, with all the plates intact, is quite rare. The copy the University Art Gallery obtained, had plates already cut out and/or missing, and we felt justified in turning a selection of the prints into an exhibition. The exhibition is a project of The New Bedford Cabinet of Natural History, an institution that we began to plan more than five years ago when the College of Visual and Performing Arts moved into the renovated Star Store in downtown New Bedford. The New Bedford Cabinet of Natural History focuses on the relationship between art and nature within the context of cultural history. The first project by the Cabinet was the exhibition, Tabernacle, Temple, King, Adulteress: Depictions of Jewish Life and Religion in the 17th and 18th Century. Late in 2004 and early in 2005, we then featured much of the Cabinet collection in the University Art Gallery and the Crapo Gallery spaces. A selection of objects from the Cabinet is now on display in the Crapo Gallery, where we also, for the first time, are featuring two display cabinets donated by the Falmouth Historical Society, and refurbished by Chad Aldridge (MFA 2005).
exhibition_note_
KARL BLOSSFELDT June 1 - September 18, 2005 The German artist and professor at the Berlin College of Art, Karl Blossfeldt, became world famous overnight, when a selection of his photographs of close-ups of plants and plant sections, was published in 1928 under the title of Urformen der Kunst (Art Forms in Nature). Karl Blossfeldt had taken photographs for more than thirty years, but only used them in his teaching. He took photographs with the help of a wood box camera he had constructed himself, and glass plates with coatings that allowed for a high degree of details. He mostly turned the negatives into slides, and used the projected images as a teaching tool, making it possible for his students to experience Nature's inherent design vocabulary. Although Blossfeldt did not consider himself a photographer, the images are pure and expressive, as well as technically accomplished. As a photographer, Blossfeldt gives us access to a realm that is often too small for the naked eye, while carefully selecting plant parts, that when enlarged, seem to give access to an unknown and mysterious realm of beauty. Urformen der Kunst featured 120 photogravures. Most of the prints in this exhibition are from that book. Additional prints are from Wundergarten der Natur (Nature's Magical Garden), a collection published in 1932. Although it is believed that Blossfeldt took thousands of photographs, only a couple of hundred are known today, and his fame is not based on the original photographs, but on the photogravures published in the books. A copy of either book, with all the plates intact, is quite rare. The copy the University Art Gallery obtained, had plates already cut out and/or missing, and we felt justified in turning a selection of the prints into an exhibition. The exhibition is a project of The New Bedford Cabinet of Natural History, an institution that we began to plan more than five years ago when the College of Visual and Performing Arts moved into the renovated Star Store in downtown New Bedford. The New Bedford Cabinet of Natural History focuses on the relationship between art and nature within the context of cultural history. The first project by the Cabinet was the exhibition, Tabernacle, Temple, King, Adulteress: Depictions of Jewish Life and Religion in the 17th and 18th Century. Late in 2004 and early in 2005, we then featured much of the Cabinet collection in the University Art Gallery and the Crapo Gallery spaces. A selection of objects from the Cabinet is now on display in the Crapo Gallery, where we also, for the first time, are featuring two display cabinets donated by the Falmouth Historical Society, and refurbished by Chad Aldridge (MFA 2005).
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exhibition_genre:
photographs
exhibition_genre
photographs
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exhibition URL:
exhibition_url
http://www1.umassd.edu/cvpa/universityartgallery/past/2005/karl_blossfeldt.cfm
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copyright notice:
COPYRIGHT NOTIFICATION: Under the direction of the Visual Resource Center digital collections are made available to the UMass Dartmouth campus community for the sole purpose of classroom instruction and study in accordance U.S. Copyright Laws . All other uses are prohibited and are subject to copyright infringements.
copyright_notice
COPYRIGHT NOTIFICATION: Under the direction of the Visual Resource Center digital collections are made available to the UMass Dartmouth campus community for the sole purpose of classroom instruction and study in accordance U.S. Copyright Laws . All other uses are prohibited and are subject to copyright infringements.
copyright notice
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credit line:
UMass Dartmouth Art Galleries
credit_line
UMass Dartmouth Art Galleries
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false
artist name:
Blossfeldt, Karl
artist_name
Blossfeldt, Karl
artist name
false
artist_nationality:
German
artist_nationality
German
artist_nationality
false
artist_vital dates:
1865-1932
artist_vital_dates
1865-1932
artist_vital dates
false
artist_biographical note:
Karl Blossfeldt (1865-1932) was a German instructor of sculpture who used his remarkable photographs of plant studies to educate his students about design in nature. Self-taught in photography, his hobby soon grew into a life-encompassing passion. He devoted himself to the study of nature, photographing nothing but plants for thirty-five years. Blossfeldt was a student in Berlin at a time when the judgenstil movement was at its peak. This 'Young Style' was the German equivalent of Art Nouveau, and used organic designs often found in nature as its inspiration. In 1891 he received a scholarship which allowed him to travel to Italy, Greece, Egypt and North Africa. During this experience abroad he had an extraordinary opportunity to collect many rare and beautiful plant specimens.
artist_biographical_note
Karl Blossfeldt (1865-1932) was a German instructor of sculpture who used his remarkable photographs of plant studies to educate his students about design in nature. Self-taught in photography, his hobby soon grew into a life-encompassing passion. He devoted himself to the study of nature, photographing nothing but plants for thirty-five years. Blossfeldt was a student in Berlin at a time when the judgenstil movement was at its peak. This 'Young Style' was the German equivalent of Art Nouveau, and used organic designs often found in nature as its inspiration. In 1891 he received a scholarship which allowed him to travel to Italy, Greece, Egypt and North Africa. During this experience abroad he had an extraordinary opportunity to collect many rare and beautiful plant specimens.
artist_biographical note
false
artist_reference:
artist_reference
http://www.soulcatcherstudio.com/artists/blossfeldt.html
artist_reference
false
work_title:
[Photogravures from "Unformen der Kunst" (Art Forms in Nature) 1928 and "Wundergarten der Nature" (Nature's Magical Garden) 1932]
work_title
[Photogravures from "Unformen der Kunst" (Art Forms in Nature) 1928 and "Wundergarten der Nature" (Nature's Magical Garden) 1932]
work_title
false
work_medium:
photography
work_medium
photography
work_medium
false
work_technique:
photography
work_technique
photography
work_technique
false
work_date:
early 1900's
work_date
early 1900's
work_date
false
work_note:
After five years he returned to Berlin, where he constructed his own large-format camera and began making images of a wide variety of plants. Blossfeldt focused on flowers, stems, leaves, buds, tendrils, seeds and seed pods, meticulously arranging them to show the intricate, elegant architectural structure of their natural formations. His photographs were taken using either a vertical or horizontal perspective and could be magnified up to twenty-seven times their actual size, revealing extraordinary details within the natural structure of the plants. In the process he created some of the most innovative photographic work of his time, the simple yet expressive forms captured on film affirmed his boundless artistic and intellectual ability. In 1928 Blossfeldt published his masterwork, Urformen der Kunst (Art Forms in Nature). This was followed up with Wundergarten Der Natur (Magic Garden of Nature), published the year he died, 1932. These rarely seen subtly toned black and white photogravure images are now recognized as vital contributions to the history of photography and they remain as intriguing today as they are beautiful. Their affordability also makes them a wonderful item with which to begin a collection.
work_note
After five years he returned to Berlin, where he constructed his own large-format camera and began making images of a wide variety of plants. Blossfeldt focused on flowers, stems, leaves, buds, tendrils, seeds and seed pods, meticulously arranging them to show the intricate, elegant architectural structure of their natural formations. His photographs were taken using either a vertical or horizontal perspective and could be magnified up to twenty-seven times their actual size, revealing extraordinary details within the natural structure of the plants. In the process he created some of the most innovative photographic work of his time, the simple yet expressive forms captured on film affirmed his boundless artistic and intellectual ability. In 1928 Blossfeldt published his masterwork, Urformen der Kunst (Art Forms in Nature). This was followed up with Wundergarten Der Natur (Magic Garden of Nature), published the year he died, 1932. These rarely seen subtly toned black and white photogravure images are now recognized as vital contributions to the history of photography and they remain as intriguing today as they are beautiful. Their affordability also makes them a wonderful item with which to begin a collection.
work_note
false
work_topic:
Nature
work_topic
Nature
work_topic
false
work_reference:
work_reference
http://www.soulcatcherstudio.com/artists/blossfeldt.html
work_reference
false
date_of_ record:
2013
date_of__record
2013
date_of_ record
false
name_cataloger:
BC
name_cataloger
BC
name_cataloger
false