Stefan Heyne Explained

Stefan Heyne (born 19 July 1965 in Brandenburg an der Havel) is a German photographer and stage designer. He lives and works in Berlin.

Education

Between 1987 and 1992, Heyne studied stage design under Volker Pfüller at the Kunsthochschule Berlin-Weißensee. He continued his studies there from 1992 to 1993 as "Meisterschüler" of Pfüller. Since 1995, he is working as a freelance stage designer. In 2004, he began to photograph.[1]

Photographic work

Heyne is a practitioner of a new approach to photographic abstraction in Germany. With his usually large-format works, Heyne departs from traditional photographic conventions. There exists neither an interpretable object nor a contour on which the in-focus or the out-of-focus can be fixed. Insofar as these parameters do not become the subject matter of the image, the motifs – evade our routines of perception. Heyne's works play with the bewildering aspect of the apparent and in this way they explore the conditions in which photography is perceived.[2] Therefore, they can also be seen as a powerful contribution to the current discussion of the philosophical concept of a new realism.[3]

Manifesto of Tabularism

In autumn 2014, Heyne and German art critic Ralf Hanselle wrote the Manifesto of Tabularism.[4] It advocates a radical renewal of the photographic medium in contemporary art.

The renewal of photography – seven theses:

  1. From today photography is dead. All pictures are rendered, all reproductions are made. And yet we did not get closer to the world. The last images are still due. Tabularism encompasses the last images of photography.
  2. Tabularism is a sign and not a signifier. It does not show what the world is made of; it is itself the world. It is the image itself and never a picture of it. With Tabularism photography comes back to itself.
  3. Tabularism is a destroyer. It shakes the shell of space und subverts what contains all visible things. It breaks perspective distortion. It is at war with every line.
  4. Tabularism is a creator. It takes its light from the edges of the visible, its shadows from the residue of perception. Light and darkness are its true motives.
  5. Tabularism is a game. It is dance and dissipation; approach and disengagement. It does not search for the truth, for truth is always deception. Tabularism is only genuine in relation to itself.
  6. Tabularism is art. And as art it is freedom. It bursts the corpus of apparatuses; it breaks the will of the camera boxes. Every hard shell is a block in the way to freedom.
  7. Tabularism is the future. And yet it is embedded in a story. It follows traditions; it has mothers and fathers. In the darkness of Enlightenment they are waiting for a return of the light

Exhibitions

Heyne has participated in various solo and group exhibitions including the 2nd photofestival Mannheim-Ludwigshafen-Heidelberg Reality Crossings[5] (2007).

Solo exhibitions (selection)

Group exhibitions (selection)

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. Biographic information about Stefan Heyne, accessed 13 September 2015.
  2. Gisbert Porstmann: Foreword, in: Stefan Heyne. Naked Light. Die Belichtung des Unendlichen / Exposing Infinity, ed. by Gisbert Porstmann, Hatje Cantz, Ostfildern 2014, p. 8.
  3. See Markus Gabriel (ed.): Der Neue Realismus, Suhrkamp Verlag (suhrkamp taschenbuch wissenschaft 2099), Berlin 2014, .
  4. Ralf Hanselle: Manifest des Tabularismus. Sieben Thesen für die Erneuerung der Fotografie, Hatje Cantz Fotoblog, 30 November 2014, accessed 13 September 2015.
  5. Lea Besier: Abbilder der Realität,, 21 September 2007, accessed 9 October 2015.
  6. Information about the solo exhibition Naked Light. Die Belichtung des Unendlichen at the Städtische Galerie Dresden – Kunstsammlung 2014, accessed 13 September 2015.
  7. http://www.kunstmuseumbochum.de/ausstellung-veranstaltung/details/skeptische-fotografie/ Kunstmuseum Bochum
  8. Ralf Hanselle: Nichts ist abstrakter als die Realität,, 27 March 2015, accessed 13 September 2015.