Gauck neben Schwier

Joachim Gauck neben Marcus Schwier: Im Kreistagssaal Friedrichshafen hängen Photographien von Marcus Schwier aus der Sammlung des Bodenseekreises neben einem Photo von Joachim Gauck.

Mit seiner Bilderserie „Intérieurs“ variiert Marcus Schwier das Motiv der Innenräume von barocken Schlössern in Deutschland, Österreich und der Schweiz. Sein virtuoser Kamerablick zeigt historische Empfangssäle, Prunkzimmer und edle Privatgemächer: Atemberaubende Perspektiven formen Vorgefundenes zum Tableau und ermöglichen eine simultane Wahrnehmung der Raumdetails. Licht und Schatten sind die eigentlichen Akteure, die diese Bilder einer im Augenblick eingefrorenen Gegenwart beleben. Sie zeugen in ihrem Stillstand vom heimlich offenbarten Spiel des Werdens und Vergehens einer Vergangenheit, in die uns die Innenräume der Schlösser entführen.

Gauck neben Schwier
Gauck neben Schwier

Der Bildband zu dieser Serie ist im Kerber Verlag erschienen: ISBN 978-3-86678-601-1

Marcus Schwier, image architect. Born in 1964 in Düsseldorf, Germany, Marcus Schwier discovered his fascination for photography while in school. After earning his architecture degree in 1985, he worked in various architectural offices before returning to school in 1993 — this time to formally study photography at the Düsseldorf Art Academy. While at the Academy, Schwier experimented with camera obscuratechniques. Today, the freelancer works on both commercial and artistic projects, concentrating on landscape and architectural photography. Schwier has balanced the artistic work in his studio in Düsseldorf with his global career. On the one hand, he brings the highest standards to the images he shoots as a commercial photographer working on advertising concepts, brochures, and campaigns for such clients as Mercedes Benz, Audi, Thyssen-Krupp, and Deutsche Bank. On the other hand, he doesn’t lose sight of his artistic ambitions and is always looking for new and surprisingly compelling shots. His ground-breaking “Nightshots,” begun using film photography, builds on his Academy experience of shooting long exposures that emphasize the phenomenon of the night itself more than the subjects of the shots. Schwier explains that the nocturnal scene reduces an image to its barest meaning, since the most essential things are already lit; but almost as an afterthought, his long-exposure shots also succeed in bringing light into otherwise pitch-dark corners and niches, uncovering the strangeness of time and moment. Schwier is the recipient of major prizes and awards, including the DG Bank International Photography Award.