Herlinde Koelbl (born 31 October 1939) is a German photographic artist, author and documentary filmer.
Her comprehensive work is characterized above all by long-term photographic projects, often complemented by in-depth interviews. She is particularly interested in creating portraits of milieus and people. Herlinde Koelbl has received a number of awards for her photographic work, for example the Dr Erich Salomon Prize in 2001.[1] Since 2009, she has regularly worked as an author and photographer for ZEIT magazine,[2] in the column "What saved me".
Biography
Herlinde Koelbl was born in Lindau on Lake Constance, Germany, 1939, and grew up there. She studied fashion design in Munich and worked in the field, while becoming a mother of four. In 1975, she discovered her love for photography and taught herself all the necessary techniques.
Koelbl lives in Munich and Berlin. She is an honorary member of the DGPh, BFF hall of fame.
Career
In 1976 she started working as a freelance photographer, for newspapers like The New York Times,[3]Stern, Die Zeit and others. Already 1980 she published her first photobook The German Living Room. She created her typical working approach by photographing methodically a whole series of pictures, displaying a broad spectre of society. Her first internationally noticed success was the photographic book Jewish Portraits in 1989. She photographed and talked to 80 German-speaking Jews, who survived the Shoa.[4] With this book she established her personal style, which she kept in most of the books that followed. She not only took portraits, but also interviewed the portrayed and added large interviews in the book. Traces of Power may be her best-known work so far. She photographed, filmed and interviewed 15 personalities from politics and business from 1991 to 1998, among them Chancellor Angela Merkel, ex-Chancellor Gerhard Schröder and ex-Foreign Minister Joschka Fischer. The project was published in 1999, the documentary film with the same title was awarded the Deutscher Kritikerpreis[5] and was nominated for the Grimme Preis. The exhibition was shown at numerous museums, among them the Deutsches Historisches Museum in Berlin,[6] the Haus der Kunst in Munich and the Haus der Geschichte in Bonn,[7] as well as at Art Frankfurt 2002. Chancellor Angela Merkel gave the opening speech at the premiere of the show at the Haus der Kunst in Munich.
Herlinde Koelbl has published more than 20 books and several documentary films. She has been awarded numerous prizes. 2009 her first large retrospective was shown at the Martin Gropius Bau in Berlin.[8]
2000: Haus der Geschichte, Bonn: Spuren der Macht: Die Verwandlung des Menschen durch das Amt.
2007: Museum für Kunst und Gewerbe (Arts and Crafts Museum), Hamburg, Germany: Hair 2003: Haus der Geschichte, Bonn. Germany: The pack: Macht und Ohnmacht der Medien.
2015: Ludwiggalerie Schloss Oberhausen, Germany: HERLINDE KOELBL. The German Living Room, Traces of Power, Hair and other human things – photography from 1980 to today.[16]
^Germany, Süddeutsche de GmbH, Munich (14 March 2011). "Die Intimität des Anderen". Süddeutsche.de (in German). Retrieved 21 August 2019.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)