This series hangs heavy with mystery. In the apparent silence of the forest, rendered in delicate greys, great beasts hulk, meeting the gaze of the viewer with apparent lack of concern. The effect is magical realist in character: it evokes tranquility as much as it surprises with its subject matter. I provoke questions: are these beasts really present? And how? I seems to frame a private moment of magic, crystallising it and passing it forward for the viewer to see.
Having lived near Germany’s famous forest, Teutoburger Wald, for years, I had spent plenty of time photographing there in the mist. I was “fascinated by the silence and the peaceful atmosphere” and, whilst watching a deer there on one occasion, decided to recreate the splendour of the moment artificially, with more exotic species.
The images are composed of both analogue and digital matter: the forest itself is invariably shot on medium format or 35mm and processed traditionally, whilst the animals are shot digitally in zoos. The rest is the result of hard work and patience in Photoshop. I prefer to use black and white for my images, for its lack of distraction; I feel it is more direct.
Tierwald is relatively uniform given its formula: wild animal captured in forest setting. But a closer look at each image in turn reveals plenty of variation in the blacks and whites that dip back into fading undergrowth: while in one image an elephant stands near motionless in contemplation, in another the foreground is broken by the frenetic brush of the wings of birds in flight. At first seeking to create “restful” images, I began to incorporate more movement as the series progressed, feeling it to be more realistic, more immersive. The question of reality is pertinent for me: I describe
my intention to provoke a questioning or uncertainty about the nature of fiction in the viewer. At times, I see the series as “a future without human beings. The animals have reconquered their habitats like in some science fiction books or films.”
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This one's dead. Pretty sure that that is not supposed to be there.
this makes me soooo sad,knowinf those beautiful creatures have a sad live in a Zoo somewhere :(
Kangaroo? Check. Sky? No. Little amount of trees? No. Outback? No. This one's dead. Pretty sure that that is not supposed to be there.
very beautiful. It seems to foretell a time in the future when all our wild animals will all have to be photoshopped into natural landscapes.
Camels live in the desert for a good reason, this one's dead.
Umm... Half of these animals come from the African Savannah, not a misty forest, but great initiative! 😊
I want to replay by copy pasting Full Names comment: "I think the fact that most of these animals wouldn't live in a forest actually adds to the surreal look of these. Love it!"
Load More Replies...So you are going to zoos, the businesses that cage these animals for entertainment, and then 'freeing' them in your mind..
All of them except the flock of birds would be dead, learn your habitats.
Kill ecosystems by introducing species that weren't there before? That's already happened.
Load More Replies...Ummmm they're still locked in cages though. How about no longer patronizing zoos so that they stop taking animals out of their natural habitats to make spectacles of? Just a thought.
I got a guided tour of the insides of one and at least the one I went to was pretty awesome. Most of the animals were taken right after their parent(s) were killed in the wild so they'd have been predator food if left alone. The elephant I saw got the best of care. The zookeepers played soccer with it to keep it's joints limbered up and you could tell by the way it interacted with the head keeper that it liked her. Zoo's aren't ideal and there's a lot of work to do, but at least it lets these magnificent animals go from being a concept from somewhere far away to something real and tangible. That helps people to actually care about them. It's not like the 70's were it was all about the freakshow and just making money off of suffering. It's trending in a much better direction nowadays.
Load More Replies...OMGah Zoos are so sad. I know there are pros/cons -I've thought a lot about it-and IMHO they are desperately sad.
Umm... Half of these animals come from the African Savannah, not a misty forest, but great initiative! 😊
I want to replay by copy pasting Full Names comment: "I think the fact that most of these animals wouldn't live in a forest actually adds to the surreal look of these. Love it!"
Load More Replies...So you are going to zoos, the businesses that cage these animals for entertainment, and then 'freeing' them in your mind..
All of them except the flock of birds would be dead, learn your habitats.
Kill ecosystems by introducing species that weren't there before? That's already happened.
Load More Replies...Ummmm they're still locked in cages though. How about no longer patronizing zoos so that they stop taking animals out of their natural habitats to make spectacles of? Just a thought.
I got a guided tour of the insides of one and at least the one I went to was pretty awesome. Most of the animals were taken right after their parent(s) were killed in the wild so they'd have been predator food if left alone. The elephant I saw got the best of care. The zookeepers played soccer with it to keep it's joints limbered up and you could tell by the way it interacted with the head keeper that it liked her. Zoo's aren't ideal and there's a lot of work to do, but at least it lets these magnificent animals go from being a concept from somewhere far away to something real and tangible. That helps people to actually care about them. It's not like the 70's were it was all about the freakshow and just making money off of suffering. It's trending in a much better direction nowadays.
Load More Replies...OMGah Zoos are so sad. I know there are pros/cons -I've thought a lot about it-and IMHO they are desperately sad.