Haunch of Venison

Wim Wenders

15 Apr - 14 May 2011

© Wim Wenders
Ferris Wheel (Reverse Angle), Armenia, 2008
C print
151.3 x 348 cm framed
59 5/8 x 137 1/8 inches framed
WIM WENDERS
Places, strange and quiet
15 April - 14 May, 2011

Haunch of Venison London is delighted to present an exhibition of photographs by the internationally renowned filmmaker and artist Wim Wenders (b.1945). Bringing together almost 40 images, taken from 1983 to 2011, this show is Wim Wenders' highly anticipated second exhibition at Haunch of Venison since 2003. Entitled 'Places,strange and quiet', it will feature many photographs not yet exhibited in this country including several recent works.

For 'Places, strange and quiet' Wenders has assembled a fascinating series of large-scale photographs taken in countries around the world from Salvador, Brazil; Palermo, Italy; Onomichi, Japan to Berlin, Germany; Brisbane, Australia, Armenia and the United States. From his iconic images of exteriors and buildings to his panoramic depictions of towns and landscapes, the exhibition will present the full range of Wenders' work, exploring how he created and honed remarkable images that continue to resonate powerfully. In his own words:

'When you travel a lot, and when you love to just wander around and get lost, you can end up in the strangest spots. I have a huge attraction to places. Already when I look at a map, the names of mountains, villages, rivers, lakes or landscape formations excite me, as long as I don't know them and have never been there ... I seem to have sharpened my sense of place for things that are out of place. Everybody turns right, because that's where it's interesting, I turn left where there is nothing! And sure enough, I soon stand in front of my sort of place. I don't know, it must be some sort of inbuilt radar that often directs me to places that are strangely quiet, or quietly strange".

Wim Wenders is a multi-faceted artist: a painter, actor, writer and one of the most successful contemporary film- makers. He first made his name as a leading director of the New German Cinema in the 1970s, and became a cult figure on the international film scene by the mid 1980s. It was in 1983, while scouting for locations for Paris, Texas (1984) that he began to use photography as an art medium in its own right.

Places, strange and quiet comes to London from the Sao Paulo Museum of Art in Brazil. A fully illustrated catalogue published by Hatje Cantz will accompany the exhibition.

Pina, a 3D documentary by Wim Wenders on the late German choreographer Pina Bausch premiered at the Berlin film festival in February 2011. The film will be released nationwide by Artificial Eye in the UK on 22 April 2011.
 

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