Fundamentally, Frank Mädler is a doubter, and precisely for this reason he chose – well before the era of Photoshop – the camera as his medium. Whatever the camera documents must exist, it has objectivity. But behind the camera is a human being who determines how the camera works and what is photographed. So objectivity is already in doubt: it, too, is subjective, the camera gives the photographer enough leeway to lend the objects his subjective image. That is what characterises him: he interprets the world with the aid of the camera. So is man the creator of the objects? Does his eye determine how they appear?
These questions come to mind when we look at Frank Mädler’s photographs. They transform banal, familiar everyday things into independent pictures and give them a new meaning. Birds become blurs of light blue, water lilies are turned into dazzling monumental sculptures with many colours, and even the sea does not appear blue or gray, but rather beige, in a strange light that the photographer did not manipulate in any way.
Teile der Vernunft is on view throughout February 8, 2020 at Galerie Susanne Albrecht Bleibtreustr. 48, 10623 Berlin. photographs courtesy of the gallery