Triennial of Photography Hamburg BREAKING POINT. June – September 2018

[DELETE]

on selection and censorship in photojournalism

Curated by Esther Ruelfs & Sven Schumacher

This exhibition will be shown at the Museum für Kunst und Gewerbe Hamburg from 8 June to 25 November 2018.

Unruhen in Nordirland (Londonderry) | Unrest in Northern Ireland (Londonderry), 1969 Silbergelatineabzug | Gelatin Silver Print, 26,5 x 38,7 cm © Hanns-Jörg Anders – Red. Stern
Unruhen in Nordirland (Londonderry) | Unrest in Northern Ireland (Londonderry), 1969 Silbergelatineabzug | Gelatin Silver Print, 26,5 x 38,7 cm © Hanns-Jörg Anders – Red. Stern

The exhibition DELETE at the Museum für Kunst und Gewerbe Hamburg (MKG) explores the production conditions under which photojournalists work and the selection processes their photographs go through before journals and magazines print them. How do publishers, editors, authors, and graphic designers influence the photographers’ work and the expressive force of their pictures? What requirements do the commissioned reports have to fulfill? What mechanisms determine which photos are shown and which never see the light of day? What then ends up being remembered, and what is forgotten? Guided by these questions, the MKG takes a look at four reportages from 1968 to 1983. On view are some 60 reportage photographs, four photospreads from the magazines, SternPlayboyKristall, and Der Bote für die evangelische Frau, and four interview films which the photographers made for the exhibition. By comparing and contrasting the published photospreads with the original contact sheets as well as with the pictures selected by the photographers for the museum collection, and based on the photographers’ own accounts, viewers can discover the background behind the selection process, how journalists work, and what scope photographers are given to exercise their own creative judgement.

The historical works by Thomas HoepkerRyūichi HirokawaGünter Hildenhagen, and Hanns-Jörg Anders are supplemented by a contemporary art film by Sirah Foighel Brutmann and Eitan Efrat that illuminates the selectivity of memory from an artistic perspective.