Olaf Otto Becker Siberian Summer (Vorzugsausgabe)
Pressedownload
Der Pressedownload darf nur im Zusammenhang mit einer Buchbesprechung verwendet werden. Für die Illustration einer Buchbesprechung können nur bis zu drei Bilder genutzt werden. Für andere Textformate und Nutzungszwecke (wissenschaftliche Vorträge, Werbung oder ähnliches) bitten wir Sie, vorab mit uns in Kontakt zu treten, um mögliche Fragen zu Honorarkosten, Nutzungsund Urheberrechten zu klären. Die bereitgestellten Bilddaten dürfen nicht manipuliert, beschnitten oder zweckentfremdet verwendet werden. Die Pressebilder dürfen nur mit dem vollständigen Bildtitel, dem Namen des Künstlers und/oder Urhebers sowie mit dem Hinweis auf den Hatje Cantz Verlag veröffentlicht werden. Bitte beachten Sie außerdem im Einzelfall die Reproduktionsbedingungen der VG Bild-Kunst Bonn bzw. der internationalen Verwertungsgesellschaften für Bildende Kunst.
Olaf Otto Becker
Summer in Siberia? What does that feel like? Is Siberia perhaps a new travel destination we didn’t know about? How is climate change making itself felt there? In several books of photographs Olaf Otto Becker has already documented the alterations in landscape caused by climate change, as well as the influence of human behavior on nature. He became world-famous for his pictures of icebergs, whose beauty is captivating, even in the face of their melting. Now, the photographer has turned to the permafrost zone and its gradual retreat northward. He captures the inhospitable formes of earth and ice that tower above wet beaches, looking like abstract sculptures; follows a group of researchers who were taking soil samples during the “warm summer” of 2019; and finally lands in the semi-decaying harbor town of Tiksi, where children also play. An unusual, new Becker!
OLAF OTTO BECKER (*1959, Travemünde, Germany) studied communications design in Augsburg, as well as philosophy and political science in Munich. His photographs can be found in exhibits and important collections worldwide. His books with Hatje Cantz include Broken Line (2017), Ilulissat (2017), Reading the Landscape (2014), Under the Nordic Light (2011), and Above Zero (2009). Also available as a special edition with an original print.
Summer in Siberia? What does that feel like? Is Siberia perhaps a new travel destination we didn’t know about? How is climate change making itself felt there? In several books of photographs Olaf Otto Becker has already documented the alterations in landscape caused by climate change, as well as the influence of human behavior on nature. He became world-famous for his pictures of icebergs, whose beauty is captivating, even in the face of their melting. Now, the photographer has turned to the permafrost zone and its gradual retreat northward. He captures the inhospitable formes of earth and ice that tower above wet beaches, looking like abstract sculptures; follows a group of researchers who were taking soil samples during the “warm summer” of 2019; and finally lands in the semi-decaying harbor town of Tiksi, where children also play. An unusual, new Becker!
OLAF OTTO BECKER (*1959, Travemünde, Germany) studied communications design in Augsburg, as well as philosophy and political science in Munich. His photographs can be found in exhibits and important collections worldwide. His books with Hatje Cantz include Broken Line (2017), Ilulissat (2017), Reading the Landscape (2014), Under the Nordic Light (2011), and Above Zero (2009). Also available as a special edition with an original print.