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INDUSTRIAL ARCHITECTURE IN PHOTOGRAPHY: AN HOMAGE TO BERND AND HILLA BECHER

September 27 - November 4, 2022

INDUSTRIAL ARCHITECTURE IN PHOTOGRAPHY: AN HOMAGE TO BERND AND HILLA BECHER
INDUSTRIAL ARCHITECTURE IN PHOTOGRAPHY: AN HOMAGE TO BERND AND HILLA BECHER
INDUSTRIAL ARCHITECTURE IN PHOTOGRAPHY: AN HOMAGE TO BERND AND HILLA BECHER
INDUSTRIAL ARCHITECTURE IN PHOTOGRAPHY: AN HOMAGE TO BERND AND HILLA BECHER
INDUSTRIAL ARCHITECTURE IN PHOTOGRAPHY: AN HOMAGE TO BERND AND HILLA BECHER
INDUSTRIAL ARCHITECTURE IN PHOTOGRAPHY: AN HOMAGE TO BERND AND HILLA BECHER
INDUSTRIAL ARCHITECTURE IN PHOTOGRAPHY: AN HOMAGE TO BERND AND HILLA BECHER
INDUSTRIAL ARCHITECTURE IN PHOTOGRAPHY: AN HOMAGE TO BERND AND HILLA BECHER
INDUSTRIAL ARCHITECTURE IN PHOTOGRAPHY: AN HOMAGE TO BERND AND HILLA BECHER
INDUSTRIAL ARCHITECTURE IN PHOTOGRAPHY: AN HOMAGE TO BERND AND HILLA BECHER
INDUSTRIAL ARCHITECTURE IN PHOTOGRAPHY: AN HOMAGE TO BERND AND HILLA BECHER
INDUSTRIAL ARCHITECTURE IN PHOTOGRAPHY: AN HOMAGE TO BERND AND HILLA BECHER
INDUSTRIAL ARCHITECTURE IN PHOTOGRAPHY: AN HOMAGE TO BERND AND HILLA BECHER
INDUSTRIAL ARCHITECTURE IN PHOTOGRAPHY: AN HOMAGE TO BERND AND HILLA BECHER
INDUSTRIAL ARCHITECTURE IN PHOTOGRAPHY: AN HOMAGE TO BERND AND HILLA BECHER
INDUSTRIAL ARCHITECTURE IN PHOTOGRAPHY: AN HOMAGE TO BERND AND HILLA BECHER
INDUSTRIAL ARCHITECTURE IN PHOTOGRAPHY: AN HOMAGE TO BERND AND HILLA BECHER
INDUSTRIAL ARCHITECTURE IN PHOTOGRAPHY: AN HOMAGE TO BERND AND HILLA BECHER
INDUSTRIAL ARCHITECTURE IN PHOTOGRAPHY: AN HOMAGE TO BERND AND HILLA BECHER
INDUSTRIAL ARCHITECTURE IN PHOTOGRAPHY: AN HOMAGE TO BERND AND HILLA BECHER
INDUSTRIAL ARCHITECTURE IN PHOTOGRAPHY: AN HOMAGE TO BERND AND HILLA BECHER
INDUSTRIAL ARCHITECTURE IN PHOTOGRAPHY: AN HOMAGE TO BERND AND HILLA BECHER
INDUSTRIAL ARCHITECTURE IN PHOTOGRAPHY: AN HOMAGE TO BERND AND HILLA BECHER
INDUSTRIAL ARCHITECTURE IN PHOTOGRAPHY: AN HOMAGE TO BERND AND HILLA BECHER
INDUSTRIAL ARCHITECTURE IN PHOTOGRAPHY: AN HOMAGE TO BERND AND HILLA BECHER
INDUSTRIAL ARCHITECTURE IN PHOTOGRAPHY: AN HOMAGE TO BERND AND HILLA BECHER
INDUSTRIAL ARCHITECTURE IN PHOTOGRAPHY: AN HOMAGE TO BERND AND HILLA BECHER
1. Unknown, LZ 127 Graf Zepplin, c. 1930

1. Unknown, LZ 127 Graf Zepplin, c. 1930

2. Germaine Krull (Dutch b. Germany, 1897-1985), Eiffel Tower Lift, c. 1928

2. Germaine Krull (Dutch b. Germany, 1897-1985), Eiffel Tower Lift, c. 1928

3. Unknown, LZ 127 Graf Zepplin, c. 1930

3. Unknown, LZ 127 Graf Zepplin, c. 1930

4. Unknown, A vertiginous abyss of connecting rods and kilometers of piping inside of a German ocean liner engine room, 1929

4. Unknown, A vertiginous abyss of connecting rods and kilometers of piping inside of a German ocean liner engine room, 1929

5. Unknown, LZ 127 Graf Zepplin, c. 1930

5. Unknown, LZ 127 Graf Zepplin, c. 1930

6. Germaine Krull (Dutch b. Germany, 1897-1985), Interior of the Eiffel Tower, c. 1928

6. Germaine Krull (Dutch b. Germany, 1897-1985), Interior of the Eiffel Tower, c. 1928

7. Holmes I. Mettee (American, 1881-1947), Industries, 1926

7. Holmes I. Mettee (American, 1881-1947), Industries, 1926

8. Holmes I. Mettee (American, 1881-1947), Untitled, c. 1926

8. Holmes I. Mettee (American, 1881-1947), Untitled, c. 1926

9. Holmes I. Mettee (American, 1881-1947), The Mirage, 1926

9. Holmes I. Mettee (American, 1881-1947), The Mirage, 1926

10. Gordon Coster (American, 1906-1988), Potential Power, 1927

10. Gordon Coster (American, 1906-1988), Potential Power, 1927

11. Edward Quigley (American, 1898-1977), Wilbur, Philadelphia, 1929

11. Edward Quigley (American, 1898-1977), Wilbur, Philadelphia, 1929

12. Harold Haliday Costain (American, 1897-1994), Smoke, Steam and Clouds - Detroit, Michigan, c. 1933

12. Harold Haliday Costain (American, 1897-1994), Smoke, Steam and Clouds - Detroit, Michigan, c. 1933

13. Gordon Coster (American, 1906-1988), Untitled, c. 1930

13. Gordon Coster (American, 1906-1988), Untitled, c. 1930

14. Edward Quigley (American, 1898-1977) Stack, Philadelphia, c. 1930

14. Edward Quigley (American, 1898-1977) Stack, Philadelphia, c. 1930

15. Paul J. Woolf (American b. Britain, 1899-1985), Baseball Game, New York, c. 1933

15. Paul J. Woolf (American b. Britain, 1899-1985), Baseball Game, New York, c. 1933

16. Paul J. Woolf (American b. Britain, 1899-1985), City Symphony, New York, c. 1935

16. Paul J. Woolf (American b. Britain, 1899-1985), City Symphony, New York, c. 1935

17. Harry Bowden (American, 1907-1965), Hutchinson Company Crushed Rock, Oakland, California, c. 1950

17. Harry Bowden (American, 1907-1965), Hutchinson Company Crushed Rock, Oakland, California, c. 1950

18. Frank Navara (American b. Czechoslovakia, 1898-1986) Silos, 1938

18. Frank Navara (American b. Czechoslovakia, 1898-1986) Silos, 1938

19. Harold Haliday Costain (American, 1897-1994), Water Tower, 1933

19. Harold Haliday Costain (American, 1897-1994), Water Tower, 1933

20. Harry Bowden (American, 1915-2007), Untitled, c. 1951

20. Harry Bowden (American, 1915-2007), Untitled, c. 1951

21. Alberto Galducci (Italian, 1915-2007) Florence, Italy, 1952

21. Alberto Galducci (Italian, 1915-2007) Florence, Italy, 1952

22. Alberto Galducci (Italian, 1915-2007), Florence, Italy, c. 1955

22. Alberto Galducci (Italian, 1915-2007), Florence, Italy, c. 1955

23. Ford Motor Company, Ford Industrial Complex built on the River Rouge in Dearborn, Michigan, c. 1940

23. Ford Motor Company, Ford Industrial Complex built on the River Rouge in Dearborn, Michigan, c. 1940

24. Giuseppe Goffis (Italian), Genoa, Italy, c. 1960

24. Giuseppe Goffis (Italian), Genoa, Italy, c. 1960

25. C.F. Ross (American), Blast Furnaces, Pittsburgh, 1933

25. C.F. Ross (American), Blast Furnaces, Pittsburgh, 1933

26. Margaret Bourke-White (American, 1904-1971), Rosenbaum Grain Elevators, Chicago, 1931

26. Margaret Bourke-White (American, 1904-1971), Rosenbaum Grain Elevators, Chicago, 1931

27. Gordon Coster (American, 1906-1988), TVA Hydroelectric Power Dam, 1945

27. Gordon Coster (American, 1906-1988), TVA Hydroelectric Power Dam, 1945

28. Gordon Coster (American, 1906-1988), Oil Industry - For LIFE Magazine, c. 1942

28. Gordon Coster (American, 1906-1988), Oil Industry - For LIFE Magazine, c. 1942

29. Gordon Coster (American, 1906-1988), TVA Hydroelectric Power Dam, c. 1942

29. Gordon Coster (American, 1906-1988), TVA Hydroelectric Power Dam, c. 1942

30. Harold Corsini (American, 1919-2008), Humble Oil and Refinery, Baytown, Texas, 1944

30. Harold Corsini (American, 1919-2008), Humble Oil and Refinery, Baytown, Texas, 1944

31. Harold Corsini (American, 1919-2008), Humble Oil and Refinery, Baytown, Texas, 1944

31. Harold Corsini (American, 1919-2008), Humble Oil and Refinery, Baytown, Texas, 1944

32. Paul Martial (French), Construction, Paris, c. 1930

32. Paul Martial (French), Construction, Paris, c. 1930

33. Paul Martial (French), Paris, c. 1930

33. Paul Martial (French), Paris, c. 1930

34. Eric Kastan (American, 1898-1954), Transmission Tower, New York, 1950

34. Eric Kastan (American, 1898-1954), Transmission Tower, New York, 1950

35. Paul Martial (French), Paris, c. 1930

35. Paul Martial (French), Paris, c. 1930

36. Ford Motor Company, Smoke Stacks at Ford Industrial Complex built on the River Rouge in Dearborn, Michigan, 1949

36. Ford Motor Company, Smoke Stacks at Ford Industrial Complex built on the River Rouge in Dearborn, Michigan, 1949

37. Charles E. Rotkin (American, 1916-2004), Republic Steel Corp. Blast furnace stoves on the Cuyahoga Canal. In the foreground are ore piles, Cleveland, Ohio, 1957

37. Charles E. Rotkin (American, 1916-2004), Republic Steel Corp. Blast furnace stoves on the Cuyahoga Canal. In the foreground are ore piles, Cleveland, Ohio, 1957

38. Alberto Galducci (Italian, 1915-2007), Florence, Italy, 1953

38. Alberto Galducci (Italian, 1915-2007), Florence, Italy, 1953

39. Gordon Coster (American, 1906-1988), Grain Elevators, 1940

39. Gordon Coster (American, 1906-1988), Grain Elevators, 1940

40. Harold Haliday Costain (American, 1897-1994), Grain Elevator, c. 1933

40. Harold Haliday Costain (American, 1897-1994), Grain Elevator, c. 1933

41. Andreas Feininger, (American b. France, 1906-1999), Grain Elevator in Iowa, 1952

41. Andreas Feininger, (American b. France, 1906-1999), Grain Elevator in Iowa, 1952

42. Russell Lee (American, 1903-1986), Humble Oil and Refinery, Baytown, Texas, 1949

42. Russell Lee (American, 1903-1986), Humble Oil and Refinery, Baytown, Texas, 1949

43. Russell Lee (American, 1903-1986), Humble Oil and Refinery, Baytown, Texas, 1949

43. Russell Lee (American, 1903-1986), Humble Oil and Refinery, Baytown, Texas, 1949

Press Release

Keith de Lellis Gallery is pleased to present a group exhibition on the subject of photographic images of industrial buildings and structures by American and European photographers in the twentieth century. Inspired by The Metropolitan Museum of Art’s Bernd & Hilla Becher exhibition now on view at the museum through November 6, Industrial Architecture in Photography pays homage to the renowned husband and wife team Bernd and Hilla Becher. The prolific contemporary German artist duo focused on photographing and preserving a visual record of the industrial architecture of Western Europe and North America by methodically recording blast furnaces, water towers, grain elevators and other buildings with meticulous precision.

 

While the Industrial Revolution started in the eighteenth century, it was the 1920s and 1930s that would become an unprecedented period for industrial modernization as the demand for mechanical mass production grew. Several influential artists created iconic photographs of industrial architecture around this time including Edward Weston, Albert Renger-Patzsch and Charles Sheeler, along with the accomplished female photographers Germaine Krull and Margaret Bourke-White. At just 24 years old, Bourke-White made a name for herself as the preeminent image maker of industrial photographs and became the first staff photographer for Fortune magazine. This publication was created by Henry Luce in 1929 with the focus of “[catering] to the men who managed the nation’s business. It would be a magazine that would treat in a sophisticated way industrial civilization in all its aspects,” and “the camera would act as interpreter, recording what modern industrial civilization is, how it looks, how it meshes.” Germaine Krull’s artistic breakthrough happened in Paris in 1928 when she was hired by the nascent VU magazine, the first major French illustrated weekly. During this period she published her 1928 portfolio Metal (Métal), a collection of 64 pictures of modernist iron giants including cranes, railways, power generators, the Rotterdam transporter bridge and the Eiffel Tower, shot in muscular close-ups and from vertiginous angles (MoMA, 2016).

 

Many of the photographs on view in the exhibition capture powerful scenes of industrial structures such as Edward Quigley’s image of a towering smokestack that appears to reach into the heavens and Gordon Coster’s photograph of colossal grain elevators that loom above a passing train in the middle of the night. Other formidable photographs of architectural innovations on display include coal refineries, transmission towers, silos, blast furnaces and power plants. Eric Kastan’s geometrical abstraction captures the captivating symmetry of a radio tower from below while another abstract image by an unidentified artist documents a disorienting and complex composition of winding metal stairs inside of a German ocean liner.

Of all the icons of the modern industrial plant, the prototypical example would likely be the Ford Motor Company’s 600 acre industrial complex built on the River Rouge in Dearborn, Michigan in 1928. This ultimate symbol of American industry was designated in 1978 as a National Historic Landmark for its architecture and importance to the nation’s economy. On exhibit are Ford vintage publicity photographs from the 1940s which are reminiscent of the best work of the previous generation of art photographers, alternating between the romantic and precisionist ideal of image making.

 

Included in the show is a photograph taken by Margaret Bourke-White from her famous 1931 series of the monumental Rosenbaum Grain Elevators in Chicago before they would be destroyed by a catastrophic fire just eight years later. Along the same wall is an early 1920s pictorialist image by Baltimore artist and industrial photographer Holmes I. Mettee, whose soft focus painterly study depicts a nineteenth century horse-drawn wagon slowly passing in front of a modern industrial plant as a way to juxtapose the old methods against the new systems of mass production. Whether one looks towards industrialization with an eye of amazement or an air of enmity, it goes without question that large-scale manufacturing has continued to remain a vital innovation into the twenty-first century.

 

Industrial Architecture in Photography is an impressive show that presents the remarkable work of over fifteen artists who played a pivotal role in recording the significant advancements created by the expansion of industrialization throughout the twentieth century. Collectively this exhibition features the work of Margaret Bourke-White, Harry Bowden, Harold Corsini, Harold Haliday Costain, Gordon Coster, Andreas Feininger, Alberto Galducci, Goffis Giuseppe, Eric Kastan, Germaine Krull, Russell Lee, Paul Martial, Holmes I. Mettee, Frank Navara, Edward Quigley, C.F. Ross, Charles E. Rotkin and Paul J. Woolf. Industrial Architecture in Photography is on view at Keith de Lellis Gallery from September 27 to November 4, 2022.