View from Williamsburg, Brooklyn, on Manhattan, 9/11

View from Williamsburg, Brooklyn, on Manhattan, 9/11 is a
Hoepker initially refrained from publishing the photograph because the pictured people seemed too unaffected by the events. The photo was presented to the public for the first time in 2005 at the
Creation
On the morning of September 11, 2001, flights
Description
In the foreground of the photo, a group of five people sits on the bank of the East River, bathed in bright sunlight. Two women are in front on the left, one is sitting on a chair, and the other is squatting on the ground. In the center, a man sits on a bench with a red bicycle in front of him. Next to him, a woman and a man are sitting on a wooden parapet. The man on the parapet has obviously gotten the word, the others turn to him attentively. The poses of the five people seem relaxed. The posture of the woman on the parapet seems especially casual and gives the impression that she is sunbathing.
Publication and reactions
In the days following the attacks, Hoepker met with colleagues from his agency Magnum Photos to review their photographs of the events and to discuss how to deal with them. They decided to produce a photobook, and Hoepker was appointed editor in charge. The book was published in the same year. Hoepker contributed three photographs he had taken from the Manhattan Bridge.[5] The View from Williamsburg was missing from the book. In a later statements, Hoepker said the reason for this self-censorship was that the photograph "didn't live up to the drama of the other shots", seemed "too pretty",[6] and thus might "distort the reality as we had felt it on that historic day".[5]
The photograph was displayed publicly for the first time in 2005, as part of an exhibition of Thomas Hoepker's 50 years of work presented at the Munich City Museum between November 25 and May 28, 2006. The retrospective was also shown at the Museum für Kunst und Gewerbe Hamburg and the C/O Berlin in 2006 and 2007. In the accompanying exhibition catalog, the View from Williamsburg occupies a special position: it is both shown on the cover and it is the first photograph in the book.[7] In the extensive German press coverage of the exhibition, the photo also clearly stood out from the total of about 200 images shown. In particular, the apparent unconcern of the five pictured people became the target of media commentary. For example, for Freddy Langer of the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung Hoepker's photograph raised the question of "how dramatically a photograph must be constructed today if some viewer is unmoved even by the gruesome reality."[8] A similar opinion was expressed by Matthias Reichelt in Die Tageszeitung, for whom the picture "offers reason to reflect on distance and closeness, blunting and empathy for violence and catastrophes in the 21st century."[9]
In 2006, U.S. media also dealt with the photo. That year it appeared in the book Watching the World Change by David Friend, which illuminates the stories behind the images of 9/11. In the book, Hoepker expressed the view that the people in the photo had not been moved by the events. This was picked up by
Analysis
The art historian Michael Diers assigns the View from Williamsburg to the genre of conversation pieces, which was popular especially in 18th-century England as a form of family and social portrait and later was supplanted by photography. The focus of the paintings was often on a group of people in conversation in a landscape, as is the case with Hoepker's photograph.[13] In addition, the photograph resembles standard motifs of impressionist plein air painting in its subject and structure. As an example, Diers cites the painting Garden at Sainte-Adresse by the French painter Claude Monet. It shows two couples sitting in the foreground on a sunlit terrace separated from the sea by a fence. The background shows plumes of smoke from passing steamboats. As Diers says, Monet's painting radiates balance and tranquility through its construction, while Hoepker's photograph emanates a certain restlessness through the slight slant of the parapet. To Diers, the resulting irritation is supported by the large column of smoke.[14]
Hoepker himself also compared his photograph to a painting. In an interview published in the book Watching the World Change before the debate in the U.S. media, he sees similarities with the painting Landscape with the Fall of Icarus, attributed to the Flemish painter Pieter Bruegel the Elder. To him this painting shows an idyllic landscape with something terrible happening in the background, just like his photograph. Part of the painting are a farmer, a shepherd and a fishermen. The three do not pay attention to the fall of Icarus into the sea, which can be seen on the lower right, just as the people in the photo gave Hoepker the impression of not being interested in the catastrophe in the background.[15]
References
- ^ a b Diers 2016, pp. 129–130, 335 (footnote 22).
- ^ a b "It's Me in That 9/11 Photo". Slate. September 13, 2006. Retrieved December 28, 2019.
- ^ Diers 2016, p. 133.
- ^ Diers 2016, p. 132.
- ^ a b Hoepker, Thomas (September 14, 2006). "I Took That 9/11 Photo". Slate. Retrieved December 28, 2019.
- ISBN 978-0-374-29933-0. Cited in: Diers 2016, pp. 130–131
- ^ Diers 2016, pp. 123, 334 (footnote 2).
- ^ Langer, Freddy (January 14, 2006). "Das Unglück anderer ist das Unglück aller". Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung (in German). No. 12. p. 33.
Vielmehr stellt Höpker mit dem Bild die Frage, wie dramatisch ein Foto heute konstruiert sein muß, wenn manchen Betrachter selbst die grausige Wirklichkeit ungerührt läßt.
- ^ Reichelt, Matthias (March 3, 2006). "Der große Bilderfabrikant". Die Tageszeitung (in German). p. 16.
Auf diese Weise ist ihm ein Bild gelungen, das Anlass bietet, über Distanz und Nähe, Abstumpfung und Empathie für Gewalt und Katastrophen im 21. Jahrhundert zu reflektieren.
- ^ Rich, Frank (September 10, 2006). "Whatever Happened to the America of 9/12?". The New York Times. Retrieved December 28, 2019.
- ^ Plotz, David (September 12, 2006). "Frank Rich Is Wrong About That 9/11 Photograph". Slate. Retrieved December 28, 2019.
- ^ Denker, Thomas (September 9, 2011). "Raserei und Stillstand: Thomas Hoepkers 9/11-Foto und seine Geschichte". Der Tagesspiegel (in German). Retrieved October 29, 2022.
Als Fotojournalist setze ich alles daran, die Ereignisse, deren Zeuge ich bin, nicht zu beeinflussen. Würde man ein Gespräch beginnen oder um Erlaubnis bitten, dann würde man jede authentische Situation im Nu verändern.
- ^ Diers 2016, p. 135.
- ^ Diers 2016, p. 136–137.
- ISBN 978-0-374-29933-0. Cited in: Peeters 2009, pp. 209–210
Bibliography
- ISBN 978-3-77-05-6059-2.
- Fleming, Dan (2011). "The Talk of the Town: 9/11, the Lost Image, and the Machiavellian Moment". Global Media Journal – Canadian Edition. 4 (2): 63–77. S2CID 190275304.
- Peeters, Wim (2009). "9/11 und das Insistieren des Alltags. Pressefotografie und deutsche Gegenwartsliteratur" (PDF). In Poppe, Sandra; Schüller, Thorsten; Seiler, Sascha (eds.). 9/11 als kulturelle Zäsur. Repräsentationen des 11. Septembers 2001 in kulturellen Diskursen, Literatur und visuellen Medien (in German). Bielefeld: Transcript. pp. 157–165. ISBN 978-3-8376-1016-1.