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20 Years of Photography
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Dieses von vielen lang erwartete Buch zeigt auf 122 Tafeln einen Querschnitt aus William Ropps Lebenswerk. Ropp ist ein Magier der Fotografie. Obwohl wir uns beim Anblick seiner Bilder in eine surreale Welt versetzt fühlen, avanciert doch jedes Bild zu einen Abbild unserer selbst, oder vielmehr zu einem verschwommenen Spiegel der Welt um uns herum. Ob Alte, Kinder, Dicke, Nackte und auch wunderbar schöne Menschen: Ropps Demokratie ist echt und alles folgt seiner inneren Logik und seiner unstillbaren Faszination für das ganz Einfache im Leben in der von ihm erfundenen, einzigartigen französischen Ästhetik.
This long expected book on 122 tablets shows a representative summary of William Ropp’s work of a lifetime. Ropp is a magician of photography. Being completely captured in a surreal sphere while looking at his pictures, every image reveals a reflection of ourselves, rather a blurred mirror of the world around us. Whether old people or children, fat or incredibly beautiful individuals: Ropp’s democracy is honest and follows his inherent logic and insatiable fascination for the genuine simplicity in life in his unique French aesthetics.
William Ropp, geboren 1960 in Versailles (Frankreich), hat sich während der letzten Jahre zu einem der erfindungsreichsten und kreativsten Fotografen Europas entwickelt. Er ist bekannt für seine einzigartige Technik, mit der er die mysteriösen Aspekte der menschlichen Natur festhält.
Seine Arbeiten wurden in unzähligen Ausstellungen, Museen und Galerien auf der ganzen Welt ausgestellt und sind Bestandteil zahlreicher privater und öffentlicher Sammlungen. Seine Fotografien wurden in einschlägigen Magazinen, wie Zoom, International Photography, Eyemazing, Shots, P. Magazine, Black & White, International Photographer, Vision, Focus etc., veröffentlicht.
Er gewann den Schwarz & Weiß Preis sowie den Ersten Preis bei den Polaroid Final Art Awards 1997.
William Ropp, born in 1960 in Versailles (France), has emerged as one of Europe’s most ingenious and creative photographers in recent years. He is well-known for the unique style in which he captures the mysterious aspects of human nature.
His work has appeared in countless exhibitions, museums, and galleries throughout the world and is included in a broad range of private and public collections. His pictures were published in magazines such as Zoom, International Photography, Eyemazing, Shots, P. Magazine, Black & White, International Photographer, Vision, Focus etc.
In 1997 he won the Black & White Prize and the 1st prize at the 6th European Polaroid Final Art Awards.
„Die Menschen in Ropps frühen Werken wirken durch die einzigartige Verwendung des Lichtes - die Konturen oft seltsam verschwommen und durchscheinend - verletzlich und eindrucksvoll in sich gekehrt. Ropp porträtiert die enorme Ausstrahlung seiner Protagonisten, die den Betrachter magisch in seinen Bann zieht. Gleichzeitig zeigt er das vermeintlich Unabbildbare, die starke Kraft der Gedankenwelten. Das Zusammenführen des Abbildhaften und des Imaginären prägen den Charakter seiner wiedererkennbaren künstlerischen Handschrift.
In seinen zeitlos mystischen Kinderportraits weckt Ropp Emotionen des Betrachters aus seiner eigenen Kindheit und lässt längst vergessene Erinnerungen wach werden. William Ropp benutzt Photographie nicht um „Realität" abzubilden, sondern vielmehr ist er auf der Suche nach der Faszination des Imaginären. Seine Bilder werfen Fragen auf. Ob es Antworten darauf gibt, bleibt allein dem Betrachter überlassen.“
Deutsche Gesellschaft für Photographie e.V.
“... Ropp’s genius is that he brings the unexpected truth to every subject, and every subject he undertakes is a major one. We’ve known the figures in his photographs for millennia – in our collective unconscious, in dreams, in the face of gods, in fears, temptations, and lusts. They are fundamental and ageless, and they still dominate, torment, and occasionally delight our lives, but we seldom see them in contemporary art. Many of today’s artists have banished or trivialized these subjects and, in effect, turned their backs on us. Life is often beastly, and art can be solace. In giving us the unexpected truth, William Ropp also gives us a revivifying truth. We leave the experience of his work with no false comfort, but the knowledge that our fears are not unique but part of humanity’s ageless, repeating drama. And that has always been the gift of great art ...”
Prof. John Wood in the foreword
“In this impressive volume, William Ropp peels back the layers of man’s underlying preoccupations: sex, death and god. At times frightening, at others heart-rending, Ropp’s smoky black and white images envision a genealogy of imagery and figures familiar from dreams, longings and collective memory. His women recall deities – ancient fertility symbols, the sacred mother, the fallen angel. The Venus of Willendorf alternates with masks of a delicate effulgence; paper thin skin and dimpled doughy flesh criss-crossed with striae alternate with waxen ivory limbs. Ropp’s lens captures a sense of the ancient and archaic; human frailty, the fleeting smile of a Mona Lisa, a study of skeletal remains, the glimpse of a human death’s head. But the work here is not hackneyed or stereotypical. Ropp gives us images of who we are, reflecting our personal realities in a vaster, more penetrating looking-glass. As poet and photographic historian John Wood observes in his incisive introductory essay: “Life is often beastly, and art can be solace. In giving us the unexpected truth, William Ropp also gives us a revivifying truth. We leave the experience of his work with no false comfort, but the knowledge that our fears are not unique but part of humanity’s ageless, repeating drama.””
Eyemazing
“He is gifted with the ability to show things and express thoughts hidden, deep down in the darkest recesses of our souls. Oh – mysterious currents of subconscious! France, that beautiful country which gave not a few good things to the world! And Monsieur William Ropp and his work is one of them –without doubt.”
Jan Saudek
“(…) No doubt, the complex work of William Ropp allows for other interpretations. But nobody will deny that these images leave an indelible impression on the soul. The profundity of William Ropp’s work, though, should not have us overlook that we are dealing here with the art of photography in the first place. And there is no doubt: William Ropp’s photography is a photography of the highest rank!
(…) Such photography is the very opposite of what it is commonly held for: to be a mere reflection of the visible world. If anywhere, here Klee’s saying applies: that art does not render the visible, but makes visible.
Granted: few painters or sculptors of the twentieth century fathom the same depths, and equally few reach to the same heights.