Anna and Bernhard Blume
Anna Blume and Bernhard Johannes Blume were German art photographers. They created sequences of large black-and-white photos of staged scenes in which they appeared themselves, with objects taking on a "life" of their own. Their works have been shown internationally in exhibitions and museums, including New York's MoMA. They are regarded as "among the pioneers of staged photography".
Anna Blume
Born Anna Helming in Bork on 21 April 1936, she later described her childhood as happy. She studied art at the Staatliche Kunstakademie in Düsseldorf from 1960 to 1965, like her future husband. When they got married in 1966, she enjoyed having the same name as Kurt Schwitters' imaginary figure, Anna Blume. The couple lived and worked together in Cologne. She gave birth to twin girls in 1967. Until 1985 she worked as a crafts and arts teacher at a Gymnasium.Anna Blume spent the last months of her life in Bork, her birthplace, living with her daughter Hedwig. She died on 18 June 2020 after a long illness at age 84.
Bernhard Blume
Bernhard Johannes Blume was born in Dortmund in 1937. He studied art at the Staatliche Kunstakademie in Düsseldorf from 1960 to 1965, with Joseph Beuys among others. He studied philosophy at the University of Cologne from 1967 to 1970, and later worked as a teacher of art and philosophy. In 1984 he took part in the exhibition Von hier aus – Zwei Monate neue deutsche Kunst in Düsseldorf. Beginning in 1987 he was Professor für Freie Kunst und Visuelle Kommunikation at the Hochschule für bildende Künste Hamburg.He died in Cologne on 1 September 2011.
Works created together
Anna and Bernhard Blume together created installations, sequences of large photo scenes and, mostly in the 1990s, Polaroids. Both created drawings. They staged and photographed scenes in which they appeared themselves, with objects taking on a "life" of their own. According to the Deutsche Börse Group, their process was to create their picture sequences together and complete all related tasks without outside help. That included designing the sets and costumes, developing the negatives, and producing enlargements; at each stage the artwork was refined, polished and painted. Anna said: "Wir malen mit der Kamera, und diese malerische Arbeit findet auch noch im Labor statt." The images were produced without the aid of digital manipulation or post-production montages. Taking pictures of a "flying, crashing, and swirling world", the artists used safety features such as ropes, nets and mattresses.Their sequence Vasenekstasen was shown at the Museum für Moderne Kunst in Frankfurt. In 1989 MoMA in New York presented their works in a solo show, including Küchenkoller, Opposites D and Demonstrative Identification with the universe.
In 2004, their Polaroids taken from 1988 to 2000 were published as a book, Das Glück ist ohne Pardon / Joy knows no mercy. They treated the genre of the artist's self-portrait to a transformation, distorting their faces with trivial objects such as coat hangers and household utensils, in order to "put to rest the myth of the portrait and the autonomy of the subject it seeks to convey."
Several works have been exhibited at the Museum Ludwig in Cologne, which in 2005 showed Kreuzweg , a sequence from Transzendentaler Konstruktivismus, in connection with the World Youth Day 2005 in Cologne. In 2008 Reine Vernunft was presented at the Hamburger Bahnhof in Berlin. It was their first comprehensive appearance in the capital. According to the museum, the works provide "an overview of the ironical and philosophical strategy of this artistic team" and show "intensive dedication to a continuous process of self-experimentation", with the Blumes having "performed groundwork on the nature of German existence" by investigating "'home sweet home' for every conceivable form of misery" rather than entering the wider world.
In 2009, their work appeared in the Berlin Gropiusbau at the exhibition "Sixty years. Sixty works", commemorating the 60th anniversary of the creation of the Federal Republic of Germany. In 2010, several works were shown at the Kunstmuseum Bonn in "Der Westen leuchtet / Eine Standortbestimmung der Kunstlandschaft des Rheinlandes", presenting artists of the Rhineland.
In 2011, the first exhibition of their work after the death of Bernhard Blume, "Trans-Skulptur" in Berlin, was introduced by their friend Bazon Brock. He also spoke on 21 April 2016 at an exhibition Transcendental Constructivism of both artists at the Kolumba in Cologne, which showed their work in several rooms and ran from 2015 to 2016.
Works
This list of titles and translations is based on the listing for Anna and Bernhard Blume by the Museums of North Rhine-Westphalia.- 1977 Ödipale Komplikationen?
- 1977 Fliegender Teppich
- 1984 Wahnzimmer
- 1985 Küchenkoller
- 1985/86 Trautes Heim
- 1987 Vasenekstasen
- 1986 Mahlzeit
- 1982–90 Im Wald
- 1990 gegenseitig, Polaroids
- 1994/95 Transzendentaler Konstruktivismus
- 2003/04 Abstrakte Kunst
- 2004 Das Glück ist ohne Pardon / Joy knows no mercy
Exhibitions
- 1977 documenta 6, Kassel
- 1984 Von hier aus – Zwei Monate neue deutsche Kunst in Düsseldorf
- 1988 Shakespeare-House in Cologne, Wahnzimmer installation, Bernhard Johannes Blume und
- 1988 DuMont Kunsthalle, Cologne,
- 1989 Museum of Modern Art, New York
- 1991 Museum für Moderne Kunst, Frankfurt
- 1992 Deichtorhallen Hamburg, Anna und Bernhard Blume – Zu Hause im Wald
- 1993 Landesmuseum Münster
- 1995 Kunsthalle Bremen
- 1996 Milwaukee Art Museum
- 1997 kestnergesellschaft, Hannover
- 1997/1998 Centre national de la photographie, Paris
- 2000 Museum Küppersmühle, Duisburg
- 2002 Folkwang Museum Essen
- 2003
- 2005 Museum Ludwig, Cologne: Kreuzweg
- 2005 Galerie nationale du Jeu de Paume, Paris
- 2006 Museum am Ostwall, Dortmund: de-konstruktiv
- 2007 Haus Konstruktiv, Zürich: de-konstruktiv
- 2008 Hamburger Bahnhof, Museum für Gegenwart, Berlin: Reine Vernunft
- 2010 Kunstmuseum Bonn, several works in Der Westen leuchtet
- 2011 Galerie Buchmann, Berlin: Akionsmetaphern
- 2015 Kolumba, Cologne: Transcendental Constructivism
Awards
- 1990
- 1996 Edwin Scharff Prize of Hamburg
- 2000 Berliner Kunstpreis