untitled
Photograph
1958 (photographed)
1958 (photographed)
Artist/Maker | |
Place of origin |
Floris Neusüss has dedicated his career to extending the practice, study and teaching of experimental photography and the photogram. Alongside his practice as an artist, he is known as an influential writer and teacher, working as Professor in Experimental Photography, University of Kassel, Germany from 1971 until 2009. Since first exhibiting in the 1960s, he has consistently explored the photogram's numerous technical, conceptual and visual possibilities, resulting in works that range from the figurative to the abstract.
Object details
Category | |
Object type | |
Title | untitled (generic title) |
Materials and techniques | gelatin silver print
photo montage of two negatives |
Brief description | Black and white photograph, untitled, by Floris Neusüss, Germany, 1958. |
Physical description | A black and white photograph of a woman sitting in front of an uprooted tree, double negative montage, gelatin silver print by Floris Neusüss, 1958. |
Dimensions |
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Gallery label | Photo London: Beneath the Surface
Somerset House 20 May - 24 August, 2015
Floris Neusüss (born 1937)
Untitled, Munich, 1958
Neusüss made this image while still at art school. It is an early example of his experiments with photographic manipulation that have become his trademark. In this photograph, he uses double-exposures and montages of negatives to alter the depiction of reality and create a dream-like, multi-layered image.
Gelatin silver print
Given by the photographer
V&A Museum no. E.78–2011(20-5-2015) |
Credit line | Given by the photographer |
Object history | Given by the photographer |
Summary | Floris Neusüss has dedicated his career to extending the practice, study and teaching of experimental photography and the photogram. Alongside his practice as an artist, he is known as an influential writer and teacher, working as Professor in Experimental Photography, University of Kassel, Germany from 1971 until 2009. Since first exhibiting in the 1960s, he has consistently explored the photogram's numerous technical, conceptual and visual possibilities, resulting in works that range from the figurative to the abstract. |
Collection | |
Accession number | E.78-2011 |
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Record created | July 12, 2011 |
Record URL |
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