Coverbild Louisa Clement
Louisa Clement
Remote Control
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Edited by: Stefan Gronert, Dr. Andreas Beitin
Texts by: Stefan Gronert, Dr. Andreas Beitin, Dr. Daniel Birnbaum, Jana Baumann
Graphic Design: Saskia Höfler-Hohengarten, Nora Cristea
Institution: Ludwig Forum Aachen, Sprengel Museum Hannover
Artist: Louisa Clement
German, English
March 2019 , 160 Pages, 64 Ills.
Softcover
204mm x 304mm
ISBN: 978-3-7757-4531-4
Press download
| Photography from abstraction to figuration
The photographs, videos, installations, sculptures, and new VR works by Louisa Clement (*1987) deal with phenomena related to a sense of disturbance in times of political and social insecurity. Clement’s investigations prove to be as seductive as they are cryptic: What is a human being in a digital age in which the body’s integrity is increasingly questioned through vehement medical and technological interventions? In an almost surreal manner, Clement’s detailed photographs conjure up a new image of the body that also represents the ambivalent vision of a “new human being.” With the help of her photographs, taken with smartphone cameras, she examines not only the medium’s ability to reproduce images, but also the reality of the technologically modified human. This publication is a companion to Louisa Clement’s first museum exhibition. AUSSTELLUNGEN / EXHIBITIONS: Sprengel Museum Hannover30.1.–2.6.2019 Ludwig Forum Aachen27.9.2019–26.1.2020The photographs, videos, installations, sculptures, and new VR works by LOUISA CLEMENT (*1987) deal with phenomena related to a sense of disturbance in times of political and social insecurity. Clement’s investigations prove to be as seductive as they are cryptic: What is a human being in a digital age in which the body’s integrity is increasingly questioned through vehement medical and technological interventions? In an almost surreal manner, Clement’s detailed photographs conjure up a new image of the body that also represents the ambivalent vision of a “new human being.” With the help of her photographs, taken with smartphone cameras, she examines not only the medium’s ability to reproduce images, but also the reality of the technologically modified human. This publication is a companion to Louisa Clement’s first museum exhibition.
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