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Bernd Becher (1931–2007)

Author of Typologies of Industrial Buildings

37+ Works 782 Members 8 Reviews

About the Author

Includes the name: Bernd Becher

Disambiguation Notice:

(ger) Bernd und Hilla Becher veröffentlichten stets gemeinsam, daher wurden die über die Einzelnamen und viele gemeinsamen Namenformen verstreuten Einträge zusammengefasst.

Works by Bernd Becher

Typologies of Industrial Buildings (1990) — Photographer — 145 copies
Water Towers (1988) — Photographer — 78 copies
Basic Forms of Industrial Buildings (2004) — Photographer — 57 copies, 2 reviews
Bernd and Hilla Becher: Life and Work (2005) — Photographer — 55 copies, 1 review
Framework Houses (1977) — Photographer — 48 copies
Basic Forms (Masters of the Camera) (1998) — Photographer — 48 copies, 1 review
Blast Furnaces (1990) — Photographer — 47 copies, 1 review
Industrial Landscapes (2002) — Photographer — 45 copies
Gas Tanks (1993) — Photographer — 34 copies, 1 review
Industrial Facades (1994) — Photographer — 33 copies
Pennsylvania Coal Mine Tipples (1991) — Photographer — 27 copies
Cooling Towers (2005) — Photographer — 20 copies
Mineheads (1997) 19 copies
Grain Elevators (2006) — Photographer — 19 copies
Anonyme Skulpturen (1970) 13 copies, 1 review
Bernd und Hilla Becher : Häuser und Hallen (1992) — Photographer — 11 copies
Bernd and Hilla Becher: Festschrift: Erasmuspreis 2002 (2002) — Photographer — 9 copies
Serien (1998) — Photographer — 6 copies
Typologies anciennes (2006) — Photographer — 4 copies
New Room of Contemporary Art — Photographer — 1 copy

Associated Works

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1931
Date of death
2007
Gender
male
Occupations
Fotograf
Organizations
Düsseldorfer Photoschule
Awards and honors
Venice Biennale Golden Lion (1990)
Goslarer Kaiserring (1994)
Erasmus prize (2002)
Hasselblad award (2004)
Relationships
Becher, Hilla (spouse)
Nationality
Deutschland
Birthplace
Siegen, Nordrhein-Westfalen, Deutschland
Place of death
Rostock, Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, Deutschland
Disambiguation notice
Bernd und Hilla Becher veröffentlichten stets gemeinsam, daher wurden die über die Einzelnamen und viele gemeinsamen Namenformen verstreuten Einträge zusammengefasst.

Members

Reviews

10 reviews
For Hochöfen, the Bechers consolidated black and white photographs of the industrial-age blast furnace. Striking and severe, these large scale structures were photographed from multiple angles in an analytical approach borrowed from the natural sciences. In their 1990 book, the artists described their fascination with the subject matter: "With some large industrial structures aesthetic additions are possible to a certain extent, but with blast furnaces heat, pressure, and gas generation show more overrule aesthetics. The blast furnace is like a body without a skin. Its insides are visible from the outside, organs, arteries and skeleton create its form." show less
This time, two books from an artist couple also featured in my favorite art book list I posted back in 2017. The first is a monograph from 2006 I’ve had for ages, but never got around to actually reading. The second book was published last year, and it’s the first posthumous monograph about the Bechers to appear, published to accompany the exhibition in The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, an exhibition that traveled to San Fransisco, and is still on display until April 2, show more 2023.

Over the years, I’ve steadily collected all the thematic monographs Bernd and Hilla Becher published – my collection is pictured above. Their work resonates deeply with me, and as their work is among the most revered of 20th century photographers, I know I’m not the only one. For almost 50 years the Bechers documented mine winding towers, blast furnaces, gas tanks, grain elevators, water and cooling towers, processing plants, factory halls, lime kilns, timber framed houses and entire complexes of factory buildings. They did so in much of Western Europe, and the United States as well. In a way, the things they depict are more machines than buildings, as critic Armin Zweite wrote.

Bernd also taught photography at the Düsseldorf Academy from 1976 to 1996, and Hilla was intricately involved with that too. This resulted in the so-called Becher school of photography, with prominent German artists like Andreas Gursky, Candida Höfer, Axel Hütte, Thomas Ruff & Thomas Struth.

Both books at hand cover similar territory: they try to provide an overview of Bernd & Hilla Becher’s life and work, framed in an historical context. Is one markedly better than the other? And, more importantly, what did I learn from these books about the Bechers and their work? Why does it resonate so deeply with me?

(...)

Full review on Weighing A Pig Doesn't Fatten It
show less
During their 40-year career Bernd and Hilla Becher created an invaluable photographic encyclopedia of industrial structures. Pursuing the concept of typology, they kept focusing on the same subjects over and over again to reveal constants and variations. Basic Forms presents 61 photographs covering the entire range of Becher motifs--water towers, cooling towers, gas tanks and winding towers, blast furnaces, gravel plants, lime kilns, grain elevators and coal bunkers. Basic Forms serves as a show more kind of manual to Bernd and Hilla Becher's landmark art and aesthetics. First published in 2004, Basic Forms is now back in print. show less
After meeting as students in Düsseldorf, Bernd and Hilla Becher began systematically photographing the buildings of the waning mining industry in Hilla’s native Ruhr Valley. Captured in a neutral and ‘objective’ light at carefully chosen times of day, the industrial structures that are the Bechers’ subjects — many of them slated for demolition — reveal a stark grandeur that transcends their utilitarian origins. The cumulative effect of the images, often displayed in grids to show more emphasize repeated formal gestures, won the Bechers acclaim as both photographers and conceptual artists, and their visual aesthetic has proved lastingly influential.” — Warwick Books, on Abe Books

With an attentiveness to monumentality, neutrality, and typology, the high-resolution photographs in this perfect-bound, hardback publication project an authority and majesty that is further amplified by their grayscale subtlety. Subjects include: lime-kilns, cooling-towers, blast-furnaces, winding-towers, water-towers, gas-holders, and silos.
show less

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Statistics

Works
37
Also by
1
Members
782
Popularity
#32,554
Rating
½ 4.5
Reviews
8
ISBNs
63
Languages
4

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