Installations, Still and Moving images
October 16-20, 2024

Victor Burgin
by Galerie Thomas Zander

The Artist

Since the late 1960s Victor Burgin’s work has established him as both a highly influential artist and a renowned theorist of the still and moving image. Burgin first came to prominence in the late 1960s as one of the originators of Conceptual Art. In the 1970s his work consisted mainly of large framed photographic sequences, involving printed texts either juxtaposed with or superimposed on the image. At the beginning of the 1990s he turned towards digital video, but video from the point-of-view of photography – for example, Burgin is particularly interested in the relation between stasis and movement. As the historian and critic Stephen Bann has written: ‘this progressive exploitation of new technologies is itself fairly uninteresting compared with the remarkable consistency of the underlying themes and propositions of his work’. (Stephen Bann: Victor Burgin’s Critical Topography, in Relocating, Bristol, Arnolfini, p. 50) The philosopher Henri Bergson notes: ‘Perception is never a simple contact of the mind with the object present; it is completely impregnated with memory-images which complete and interpret it.’ Throughout Burgin’s work there is a constant attention to this space ‘between’ the viewer and the object – to the ‘real’ world as seen through the prism of narrative, memory and fantasy.

His works are in the collections of renowned museums such as The Museum of Modern Art in New York and the Tate in London.

Victor Burgin’s “The Four Seasons” is one of the most important works from the 1990s. It refers to the pre-history or early history of photography. “The Four Seasons” cites the early history of photography by quoting figures from Eadweard Muybridge’s studies on human motion. Burgin also makes reference to a cycle of sepia drawings of the four seasons by Caspar David Friedrich from 1826, which is why the season’s names appear in German.

The Gallery

Galerie Thomas Zander, founded in 1996 in Cologne, is a renowned art gallery known for its focus on expanded photography, conceptual art, and diverse media. With six to nine exhibitions annually and participation in international art fairs, the gallery represents 20th and 21st-century artists. It emphasizes photography, drawing inspiration from iconic figures like Diane Arbus and Walker Evans. The gallery also explores the intersection of minimalism and conceptual art with artists like Lewis Baltz and Larry Sultan. Younger artists, including Andrea Geyer and Molly Springfield, continue this legacy. Beyond exhibitions, the gallery offers consulting for collections and publishes art monographs, contributing significantly to the contemporary art world.

Information

Schönhauser Str. 8,
50968 Köln, Allemagne