Exhibition at Hall Art Foundation presents color photographs by Candida Höfer

Candida Höfer, Hermitage St. Petersburg VIII, 2014. C-print; Edition of 6; 70-3/4 x 89 in. (180 x 226 cm). Courtesy Ben Brown Fine Arts, London © the artist
HOLLE.- The Hall Art Foundation is presenting an exhibition of work by the internationally acclaimed German artist Candida Höfer being held at its Schloss Derneburg location. Assembled in response to Schloss Derneburg’s long history as a former monastery, private residence and now public museum, the exhibition includes 15 of Höfer’s monumental color photographs.
Candida Höfer is known for making carefully composed large-format color photographs that methodically document institutional spaces devoid of people. The locations she chooses are always rich in human history and have included cultural institutions (museums, libraries, national archives) and public buildings (places of worship, opera houses) that are typically filled with visitors. Her works are produced without digital enhancement or alteration, using long exposure and working solely with the existing light source.

Candida Höfer, Pamatnik Vitkov Praha I, 2004. C-print; Edition 5/6; 71 x 86-1/2 in. (180 x 220 cm), Hall Collection. © the artist.

Candida Höfer,Bayerische Staatsoper in München II, 2005. Dibond mounted c-print in artist's frame; Edition 5/6; 90-1/4 x 70-3/4 in. (229 x 180 cm), Hall Collection. © the artist.
Höfer has photographed museum spaces around the world. In the summer of 2014, she was invited to photograph a number of palaces, opera houses, libraries, museums and theaters in and around St. Petersburg, Russia, including the State Hermitage Museum and Catherine Palace. In works from her “Russia series”, such as Hermitage St. Petersburg VIII 2014, Höfer presents an idealized view of a gallery built to preserve and celebrate a rich cultural heritage, but also to impress in its splendor. In works from her “Louvre” series, such as Musée du Louvre Paris XXI 2005, Höfer presents the luxurious galleries of this world-famous museum, normally experienced by visitors filled with other members of the public, totally emptied

Candida Höfer, Hermitage St. Petersburg XIV, 2014. C-print; Edition of 6; 70-3/4 x 79-1/4 in. (180 x 201 cm). Courtesy Ben Brown Fine Arts, London © the artist.

Candida Höfer, Hermitage St. Petersburg XVI, 2014. C-print; Edition of 6; 70-3/4 x 82-1/4 in. (180 x 209 cm). Courtesy Ben Brown Fine Arts, London © the artist.

Candida Höfer, Catherine Palace Pushkin St. Petersburg III, 2014. C-print; Edition of 6; 70-3/4 x 82-3/4 in. (180 x 210 cm). Courtesy Ben Brown Fine Arts, London © the artist

Candida Höfer, Musée du Louvre Paris I, 2005. C-print; Edition of 6; 78-3/4 x 102-1/4 in. (200 x 260 cm). Courtesy Ben Brown Fine Arts, London © the artist

Candida Höfer, Musée du Louvre Paris XVIII, 2005. C-print; Edition of 6; 78-3/4 x 103-1/4 in. (200 x 262 cm). Courtesy Ben Brown Fine Arts, London © the artist

Candida Höfer, Musée du Louvre Paris XIX, 2005. C-print; Edition of 6; 78-3/4 x 98-1/2 in. (200 x 250 cm). Courtesy Ben Brown Fine Arts, London © the artist

Candida Höfer, Musée du Louvre Paris XXI, 2005. C-print; Edition of 6; 78-3/4 x 94 in. (200 x 239 cm). Courtesy Ben Brown Fine Arts, London © the artist.
In 2012, Höfer was commissioned to take a series of photographs of the Villa Borghese in Rome. Galleria Borghese houses the vast collection assembled by the Borghese family in the 17th century of old master paintings, Roman sculpture and classical antiquities. The statues raised on blue plinths, as can be seen in Villa Borghese Roma I 2012, form part of the Galleria's rich and complex history. First owned by the Borghese family, these sculptures were sold to the Louvre under duress in 1807, but lent back to the Galleria for an exhibition in 2012 where they were presented in their original setting and photographed by Höfer.

Candida Höfer, Villa Borghese Roma I, 2012. C-print; Edition of 6; 70-3/4 x 85-1/2 in. (180 x 217 cm). Courtesy Ben Brown Fine Arts, London © the artist.

Candida Höfer, Villa Borghese Roma X, 2012. C-print; Edition of 6; 70-3/4 x 74-3/4 in. (180 x 190 cm). Courtesy Ben Brown Fine Arts, London © the artist.
Finally, in response to Schloss Derneburg’s ecclesiastical history, photographs taken by Höfer of spaces of worship in Portugal also are on view. Basilica do Palàcio Nacional de Mafra III 2006 presents a view of the palace-monastery’s sumptuous Baroque basilica from the elevation of its barrel vault.

Candida Höfer, Basilica do Palàcio Nacional de Mafra III, 2006. C-print; Edition of 6; 98-1/2 x 78-3/4 in. (250 x 200 cm). Courtesy Ben Brown Fine Arts, London © the artist

Candida Höfer, Igreja de São Francisco Porto I , 2006. C-print; Edition of 6; 98-1/2 x 78-3/4 in. (250 x 200 cm). Courtesy Ben Brown Fine Arts, London © the artist
Candida Höfer was born near Berlin in Eberswalde, Germany in 1944. After completing her training at the SchmölzHuth Studio, Höfer began studying under the influential photographers Bernd and Hilla Becher in 1976. Höfer's internationally recognized work has been shown at the Kunsthalle Basel, Basel; Kunsthalle Bern, Bern; Musée du Louvre, Paris; Irish Museum of Modern Art, Dublin; and most recently at The State Hermitage Museum, St Petersburg. Höfer has represented Germany at the 50th Venice Biennale (2003), participated at Documenta 11 (2002), and her photographs are part of major museum collections across the globe, including Tate Modern, London; Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris; Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía, Madrid; Museum Folkwang, Essen; Kunsthalle Hamburg, Hamburg; and The State Hermitage Museum, St Petersburg. Höfer currently lives and works in Cologne.
Candida Höfer is represented by Ben Brown Fine Arts, London and Hong Kong.