This field is required This field contains invalid characters Please enter a valid postal code Please enter a valid email address Please enter a valid phone number (min. 6 digits) Please include a street number in the address Please include a street name in the address This field is too short Invalid format Please accept our terms and conditions and the privacy policy for the order Private customers from Austria please order by email or phone

Andreas Trogisch

Eight Days A Week. Seven And One Iteration

Titel_flach_WEB.jpg
1303-epsn4060_WEB.jpg
1509-epsn0010_WEB.jpg
1509-epsn0040_WEB.jpg
1708-epsn2661_WEB.jpg
1807-epsn3279_WEB.jpg
2004-epsn2668_WEB.jpg
2005-epsn2748_WEB.jpg

Photography creates worlds—or at least first of all mountains of pictures. Eight Days A Week tries to make the world emerge from these mountains by putting the motifs in a sort of sequence of natural history. Seven attempts at this are undertaken—starting from the suspicion that the divine creation also perhaps does not succeed on the first try. More precisely, there are seven plus one attempts, and in each of them, the world is no longer created in seven days, but instead along with one additional day. After the original creation is completed each time punctually for the Sabbath, the Anthropocene dawns on Day 7+.

Karen Irmer – State of Change

was added to cart