Kai Wiedenhöfer | |
---|---|
Born | |
Died | January 9, 2024 | (aged 57)
Alma mater | Folkwang University of the Arts |
Known for | Photography |
Awards |
W. Eugene Smith Grant 2002 Carl von Ossietzky Medal 2016 |
Website |
kaiwiedenhoefer |
Kai Wiedenhöfer (3 March 1966 – 9 January 2024) was a German photojournalist. [1] [2] Two major subjects of his work were Palestinian life and separation barriers. Wiedenhöfer received the W. Eugene Smith Grant, the Carmignac Photojournalism Award and the Carl von Ossietzky Medal. He had a solo exhibition at the Musée d'Art Moderne de Paris in 2010, documenting the consequences of Israel's war against Gaza.
Wiedenhöfer was born in Schwenningen, Schwarzwald-Baar district in southern Baden-Württemberg, Germany. [1] His mother was a pharmacist and his father a mechanic. He grew up in the countryside and after the death of his father in 1981, moved to a small town near Stuttgart. [3] He studied documentary photography and editorial design at Folkwang University of the Arts in Essen, graduating in 1995. [1]
Wiedenhöfer documented Palestinian life for almost two decades, publishing the books Perfect Peace (2002), Wall (2007), and The Book of Destruction (2010). The latter book:
"is unquestionably about violence, documenting in almost unbearable detail the damage left after Israel's assault on Gaza in 2009. Unpeopled images of ruined buildings, photographed with an architectural precision, are contrasted with portraits of equally ruined people with truncated limbs and scarred bodies. His human subjects look into the camera, seated in their own homes". [4]
He spent decades photographing all the major separation barriers, including the Berlin Wall, the Israeli West Bank barrier, the United Nations Buffer Zone in Cyprus, the Trump wall, the Baghdad Wall, and the peace lines in Belfast. He has said:
"One of the things that links all the walls and barriers is the insistence by those who build them that each wall is unique and that you cannot compare the different walls, [. . .] But the point I am trying to make is different. It's that what connects all these walls is a problem you cannot solve through negotiation, so you build a wall and make the problem worse."
The combination of the fall of one wall and construction of another inspired Wiedenhöfer to create Wall on Wall, a display of large images of the Israeli separation wall on the remnants of the Berlin Wall at the outdoor East Side Gallery; and later three dozen large images of barriers from around the world displayed on the peace lines in Belfast. [5] [6] [7] [8]
In 2024, he died after a heart attack while cycling in Swabia, age 57. [1]