Duotone photographs, Documents imperiled industrial structures.
Bernd Becher Books






Typological, repetitive, and at times oddly humorous, Bernd and Hilla Becher's photographs of industrial structures create a profoundly moving cumulative effect. Their cool, objective, and obsessive images of water towers, gas tanks, grain elevators, blast furnaces, and mine heads span nearly thirty years and are captured under overcast skies with a view camera that highlights the details and textures of wood, concrete, brick, and steel. This collection serves as both a continuation and counterpoint to their earlier work, focusing on the purely functional and exposed architecture of blast furnaces, which symbolize the steel industry. These structures, akin to giant cone-shaped stoves, dominate the landscapes of cities like Pittsburgh and Birmingham, reminiscent of how religious buildings once defined medieval cityscapes. The photographs, taken between 1961 and 1989, reveal the unique characteristics and eerie presence of blast furnaces across Great Britain, Belgium, France, Austria, Germany, and the United States. The Bechers, who began their collaborative work in 1957 studying workers' houses in Germany, are part of a lineage of German photographers who shaped "objective" photography. Their work will be featured at the Dia Art Foundation galleries in New York and represent Germany at the 1990 Venice Biennale.
Framework houses of the Siegen industrial region
- 350 pages
- 13 hours of reading
A photographic collection, falling somewhere between topographical documentation and conceptual art, catalogs a village of houses built between 1870 and 1914 in the Siegen region of Germany, one of the oldest iron-producing areas of Europe.
An encyclopedic collection of all known Becher industrial studies, arranged by building type.
Grain elevators
- 255 pages
- 9 hours of reading
Cooling towers
- 237 pages
- 9 hours of reading
Bernd & Hilla Becher's photography can be considered conceptual art, typological study & topological documentation. They have been photographing cooling towers since the 1960s. This volume contains photographs of cooling towers - in their different shapes and structural forms - from Belgium, England, France, Germany, Holland & the US
Bernd & Hilla Becher, Coal mines and steel mills
- 174 pages
- 7 hours of reading
Das Kernthema, um das sich das große Werk von Bernd und Hilla Becher zentriert hat, sind die Kohlebergwerke und Eisenhütten des Ruhrgebiets und der anderen eisenverhüttenden Regionen der Welt von Lothringen bis Pittsburgh. Für eine Ausstellung im Zusammenhang mit den Feierlichkeiten der Stadt Essen als europäische Kulturhauptstadt 2010 bereitet das in Bottrop beheimatete Josef Albers Museum eine umfassende Ausstellung mit Photographien von Bernd und Hilla Becher zu diesem Themenkreis vor. Unsere Publikation wird die Ausstellung mit insgesamt 140 Duotone-Tafeln von Bergwerken und Hütten aus aller Herren Länder begleiten. Nachdem die Eisenverhüttung als Industrie das Ruhrgebiet fast gänzlich verlassen hat und auch der Kohlebergbau in Europa vor dem Aus steht, stellt diese Sammlung eindrucksvoller Bilder einen inzwischen schon nostalgischen Rückblick auf eine vergangene Epoche der Industriegeschichte dar. Heinz Liesbrock, Kunsthistoriker und Leiter des Josef Albers Museums, hat den einleitenden Text zu diesem Band geschrieben, der neben berühmten Becher-Ikonen auch viele bisher unveröffentlichte Bilder enthält.

