The Deichtorhallen Hamburg are showing the largest solo exhibition of
the artist Katharina Sieverding to date on four floors of the
Falckenberg Collection. Around 120 works span all phases of the artist's
oeuvre. For more than five decades, Katharina Sieverding has been one of
the pioneers who recognized the diverse expressive possibilities of
photography early on and continually expanded the medium conceptually
and formally. Her subjects and artistic principle are "transformation
processes, questions about identity, gender, and race," as she states.
She became known for the unprecedented consistency with which she has
used her portrait, enlarging and manipulating it in a variety of ways,
in film and photography since the 1960s. Beginning in the 1970s she
worked on large-format montages on the state of the world, first shown
internationally at documenta 6 in 1977. The exhibition as well as the
book places a special focus on the unbroken high topicality of earlier
works and the artist's interest in creating installative approaches to
the medium of photography.