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Taco Anema: Dutch Households
March
7 – May 24, 2009
Two
new exhibitions dealing with the theme of family in photography will open at
Huis Marseille this spring. Along with the unusual and extensive collection of
daguerreotypes from the EnschedŽ family, which includes the oldest known
photograph in the Netherlands, contemporary family portraits by the Amsterdam
photographer Taco Anema will also be on display. A new portrait of the EnschedŽ
family has been done by him as well. With his series Hollandse Huishoudens (Dutch Households) Anema shows just how
removed today's family portrait is from the stately, occasionally rather
forced-looking group portrait of the past, which has been handed down to us on
small and intimate silver-plated copper plates. Anema's group portraits are
scenes, or tableaux vivants.
An informal, socially and sociologically inspired outlook lies at the heart of
these. Furthermore, these large-scale color photographs are curiously
reminiscent of the idiom in family portraits painted in the early part of the
previous century. Taco Anema's households are indeed more 'tidy' and certainly
less caricatural than what the Dutch refer to as 'Jan Steen households'. But
they are also warmer and of a more casual atmosphere—more convivial and
Dutch—than, for instance, the highly formalized family portraits by
German photographer Thomas Struth. They convey less tension than the masterly
but complex group portraits of Rineke Dijkstra. Not only does Anema's work show
a strong stylistic development of the family portrait; his photographs reveal
the extent to which the Dutch family is changing—and has changed.
Taco Anema (1950) has his origins in the tradition of
documentary photography, which has become highly developed in the Netherlands.
The development of Anema's work, from the 1970s up to now, runs parallel to
this tradition. Following his study of sociology at the Vrije Universiteit in
Amsterdam, Anema decides to become a photographer in 1975. He buys the book Sweet
Life, an
absolute masterpiece by Ed van der Elsken, and a Nikon Nikkormat camera with a
50-millimeter lens. In those days a good photographer was a leftist
photographer, and photography was an instrument for activism.
Anema's first published series of photographs deals with
the squatters' movement, particularly with the squatters' riot in Amsterdam's
Vondelstraat. His black-and-white photographs appeared in the popular magazine Nieuwe
Revu (now
called Revu),
then the second-best periodical (after the progressive Vrij Nederland) for publishing photographic
essays.
Around 1980 Taco Anema photographs and publishes
regularly with the well-known documentary photographers of that time: Willem
Diepraam, Bert Nienhuis, Hans van den Bogaard, Han Singels, Hans Aarsman, Theo
Baart, Lex van der Slot and Hannes Wallrafen. On his own initiative he makes a
number of trips to Poland in order to chronicle the strikes and protests taking
place there, as well as the rise of the free labor union Solidarnosz. These photographs were
published in the newspapers De Volkskrant and Trouw, and in the weekly De Groene Amsterdammer. To Anema himself, they
signified the start of his career as a documentary photographer.
Times change, though, even for the successful genre of
documentary photography. The personal commitment of both photographers and
newspaper/magazine publishers gradually takes on a more commercial slant, and
assignments begin to dwindle. Various photographers devote themselves to
producing photography books, others to new narrative structures, such as
sequences or conceptual forms of photography. As photography begins to be
regarded as an art form during the 1980s and 90s, the documentary photographers
also shift their focus to new, spatial forms of presentation. The number of
photo exhibitions then increases significantly.
Portrait Photography and Group Portraits
Taco Anema is becoming increasingly specialized in
portrait photography. From 1980 to 1995 most of his portraits were done for
newspapers and magazines: (Nieuwe) Revu, De Groene Amsterdammer, Volkskrant, Trouw and NRC-Handelsblad. His strength seems to lie more
and more clearly with the group portrait. In staging these he manages to
orchestrate the arrangement of diverse groups in a lively and meaningful way.
The ultimate composition should, in his view, also reflect some aspect of the
group's identity and its social role.
In addition to this, he experiments with visual formulas that are
sometimes taken directly from the history of painting. Anema's first series of
group portraits to be displayed in a museum was made with different groups of
inhabitants from the town of Enkhuizen. His success as a photographer of group
portraits became established when the Holland Festival granted him the
assignment of producing a series of portraits of the participating groups.
Just as in his earlier photographic reporting, Anema
wants not only to show but also to convey a 'story' about the infinite
differences among groups of people. In his new work he uses mainly the
composition and only existing light in order to shape his point of view. He
translates his idea about their mutual relationships into a spatial structure.
With this he uses body language, poses, props and especially light as narrative
and visual
elements.
Dutch Households
Since 2002 Anema has been working on a series about a
hundred families in the Netherlands. Within the genre of the group portrait, he
is intrigued by the phenomenon 'family', partly because conservatism and
progressiveness contend for predominance here. The family as 'the cornerstone
of society' seems a conservative institution, yet it does reflect the very
changes in the make-up of the Dutch population, as well as its lifestyles and
forms of cohabitation. And today's multicultural society is, in his view, quite
apparent in the average living room.
Following a relative lack of interest for some time,
Dutch family life and the family are now regaining attention. In the
Netherlands there have been projects such as Kinderrijk (2002) by Annie van Gemert,
dealing with large families, and Familie in Beeld – Vriesendorp uit
Dordrecht
(2007), a large-scale commission project in which the Vriesendorp family had
themselves photographed by prominent photographers such as Koos Breukel and the
duo Blommers/Schumm.
A comparison with the portraits of Struth highlights the
expressive power of Anema's group photographs. The families in Struth's works
are positioned formally in relation to each other and in relation to the
camera. The Dutch Households of Anema are more stratified; the accent lies with
intimacy, togetherness, and the group complies with the dimensional aspect of
the living room. Another
difference is that, with Anema's work, a great deal can be discerned from the
poses and body language, while it is the face and the gaze that give direction
to the Struth portrait. Furthermore, Anema's family portraits are 'built'
around the household environment, their natural habitat. These portraits are quite
varied and colorful. All the discussion on contrasts between 'native' and
'non-native' families is put in perspective by his approach.
Huis Marseille's Collection
In April 1931 the photographer Dr. Erich Salomon gave a
lecture on his work titled Mit Frack und Linse durch Politik und
Gesellschaft
(With Tuxedo and Camera through Politics and Society) at Hotel Kaiserhof
(Berlin). Among the 400 guests were many high-level German political,
industrial and academic officials, who now saw themselves in life-size
projections. Those projections were accompanied by the incisive commentary of
the photographer himself, who explained how he had made their portraits without
being noticed. The lecture became the starting point for his book BerŸhmte
Zeitgenossen in unbewachte Augenblicken, published that same year.
Both the text of Salomon's lecture at Hotel Kaiserhof
and the majority of the glass slides that he used for this withstood the war
and are now in the Salomon Archive of the Berlinische Galerie. In 2001 Huis
Marseille commissioned the reconstruction of Salomon's historic lecture. This
was carried out by the photographers Hans Samsom and Ewan Baan, in
collaboration with Peter and Trudy Hunter, the Berlinische Galerie and Laura
Samsom-Rous. The Dutch text is read by writer and former diplomat F. Springer,
the English text by filmmaker Keith Washington. This projection will now be
shown again in connection with the daguerreotype portraits of the EnschedŽ
family and Taco Anema's Dutch Households.
Trudy Hunter recently donated a very beautiful series of
seven photographs by her father-in-law Dr. Erich Salomon to Huis Marseille.
Salomon had made the portraits of conductor Bruno Walter (1876 - 1962) around
1930, presumably during a concert at Covent Garden, London. This series of
photographs will also be on display with the projection.
Opening
The exhibition will be opened on Saturday 7 March 2009
(5 to 7 pm) by
Dr. F.A.J. EnschedŽ, former pediatrician.
Publication
This exhibition will be accompanied by a small publication,
Taco Anema, '100 Hollandse Huishoudens (2001 - 2008), containing an essay by Fred
Feddes. Publisher: De Verbeelding, 2009.
Press Preview / Information
On Thursday 5 and Friday 6 March, it will be possible to
view the exhibitions as they are being installed. In order to do so, please
contact Wannes Ketelaars: 020 531 8980, info@huismarseille.nl
For further information, please contact him or Iva
Gration.
Events
During Museumweekend (4-5 April 2009) Taco Anema
will carry out portraits of several families at Huis Marseille. See our website
for further information: www.huismarseille.nl
Guided Tours
Guided tours, perhaps suited to your own specific
wishes, can be provided by appointment with our guides Sjef van Duin and Lok
Chan: info@huismarseille.nl or tel. 020 531 8980.