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Upcoming Workshops
- Marfa, Texas in 62 days
- Vevey, Switzerland in 114 days

“Wie weit weg ist ganz verschwunden?”
31 03 2012 – 24 06 2012
Single presentation of Peter Granser´s new work “Was einem Heimat war” in the cabinet gallery.
For this project, Peter Granser set out in search of traces of the village Gruorn on the Swabian Alp and, in doing so, tracked the diverse history of an area that was used as a military training area for over a century and declared a nature reserve in 2005.

“Zeigen. Eine Audiotour durch Baden-Württemberg”
by Karin Sander
10 02 2012 – 10 08 2012
A photograph from my upcoming new project ‘Heaven in Clouds’ shows the misty night sky over a Chinese metropolis, lit up by giant LED-advertisment boards. In collaboration with the programmer and experimental musician Jörg Koch, the digital information of the photograph was manipulated and combined with field recordings to create the sound, that you can listen to at the Kunsthalle Karlsruhe.
With work by Franz Ackermann, Susanne Ackermann, Silvia Bächli, John Bock, Böller und Brot, Nezaket Ekici, Filderbahnfreundemöhringen FFM, Ulrike Flaig, Rainer Ganahl, Peter Granser, Friederike Groß, Christian Jankowski, Isaac Julien, Astrid S. Klein, Corinne Wasmuht, Peter Weibel, …
The german Art Foundation “Helmut-Kraft-Stiftung zur Förderung der bildenden Kunst” awards the Talent Art Prize 2011 to Peter Granser. The Grand Prize goes to Karen Kneffel. Members of the Jury were Prof. Dr. Karin von Maur, Prof. Dr. Götz Adriani and Prof. Dr. Walter Grasskamp.
The Art Prize of the foundation is being given every 2 years since 1988. Awardees were amongst others Imi Knoebel, Max Bill, Rosemarie Trockel, Anselm Kiefer and Jochen Gerz. The Talent Award was given among others to Tobias Rehberger, Franz Ackermann, Astrid Klein and Matthias Weischer.

“Peter Granser 2000-2007″ published July 2011 by Super Labo
There will be a signing of my new book “2000-2007″ during Offprint Paris at the Superlabo booth on Friday, November 11th at 6 pm and Saturday November 12th at 3pm.
Offprint Paris 10-13 Nov. 2011, is offering a unique selection of artist (photo) books, magazines, prints and zines. It is a platform dedicated to Contemporary Photography and Image Making and a meeting place for Artists, Photographers, Graphic Designers, Curators e.a. Entrance is free.
The POC-Project will have a table at Offprint Paris. We will present all books published by POC members.
http://www.pocproject.com/
Salon et Ateliers :
Lycée Technologique d’Arts Appliqués Auguste Renoir
21/24 Rue Ganneron
75018 Paris
“A Picture for Home” is made up of works by photographers who are close to Schaden.com during the last 15 years. It will bring together 420 members of the Schaden.com family (210 photographers and 210 collectors/photobook fans) in a huge event during Paris Photo 2011.
Each invited photographer chooses a photograph they’d consider “A Picture for Home.” The prints are signed by the photographer for “Schaden.com Friends Collection”. An important supplement to the project will be a catalogue including reproductions of each print.
At “The Schaden-Night of the Year” on November 10th the lottery-draw and subsequent pairings (print with proud new owner) will take place at the David Lynch Night Club SILENCIO.
There are still some lots available for €299.
Please check the Website for more informations.
http://www.apictureforhome.com
With Photographs by: Alec Soth, Alex Webb, Anders Petersen, Andreas Gefeller, Antoine D´Agata, Archive of Modern Conflict, Beat Streuli, Bert Teunissen, Bertien van Manen, Boris Becker, Christian Patterson, Ed Templeton, Götz Diergarten, Hans van der Meer, Hans-Christian Schink, Hellen van Meene, Jacqueline Hassink, Jens Liebchen, Jessica Backhaus, JH Engström, Jim Goldberg, Jitka Hanzlová, Jo Ratcliffe, Joachim Brohm, John Gossage, Josef Schulz, Jules Spinatsch, Katja Stuke, Keizo Kitajima, Larry Fink, Lewis Baltz, Lili Almog, Mark Power, Mark Steinmetz, Martin Parr, Mitch Epstein, Morten Andersen, Nicolai Howalt, Niels Stomps, Nina Poppe, Olaf Unverzart, Oliver Sieber, Paolo Pellegrin, Peter Bialobrzeski, Peter Granser, Pieter Hugo, Richard Renaldi, Rinko Kawauchi, Rob Hornstra, Robert Voit, Roger Ballen, Sebastian Burger, Simon Norfolk, Simon Roberts, Stephen Gill, Stephen Shore, Takashi Homma, Taiyo Onorato, Thobias Fäldt, Todd Hido, Trine Sondergaard, Verena Loewenhaupt, Viviane Sassen, Wolfgang Zurborn and many others.

Get a more detailed impression of the book here: http://granser.de/2000-2007.html
Publisher SUPER LABO from Japan and Peter Granser are proud to announce the publication of the new book “Peter Granser 2000 – 2007″.
In this new book selected photographs of the projects Sun City, Coney Island and Signs are combined with unpublished work from Austria, German Cowboys and Elvis Tribute Artists.
The book is limited to 500 copies. It includes an essay by Tobias Wall and is designed by Stapelberg&Fritz.
18.7 x 23.6 cm / 40 Pages / 31 Images / Softcover / Full color Offset / ISBN 978-4-905052-15-9
A Special Edition in an edition of 20 is available.
It includes a copy of the book and a 8 x 10″ pigment-print on Hahnemuehle Fine Art Pearl Paper of “Economy”, signed and numbered by the artist on verso in a special case.
You can order the book and the Special Edition at the SUPER LABO STORE http://store.superlabo.com/. Send your order by E-Mail to store@superlabo.com.

A journey through George W. Bush’s home country: Peter Granser photographs billboards featuring the slogans of conservative America.
The arrow indicates the direction—it unmistakably points to the right: in the middle of a prairie-like, outdoor setting on a billboard with large letters that spell out “Signs.” It is an image within an image of symbolic content, for Peter Granser has given his latest series of works, which were done in Texas in 2006–07, the title Signs. After Sun City and Coney Island, Signs tracks down points of reference that can be grasped visually as a means to reveal America’s current state of mind. On his quest for suitable signs and symbols, the photographer traveled more than nineteen thousand kilometers throughout Texas, working from a stance of distant observation and skepticism as he captured images of emptiness and stagnation in George W. Bush’s home country.
Hatje Cantz, 2007
German/English
2008

There are not many photo series about Alzheimer’s. The reason seems obvious. This is a disease that is first and foremost about language. That’s what makes it so frightening: Alzheimer’s attacks its victim’s cognitive and intellectual faculties, starting with the ability to communicate.
Granser’s portraits nonetheless manifest a breathtaking immediacy. It is almost impossible to escape the fascination of these faces, to resist getting caught up in contemplating the life stories they represent.
There are few portrait series by contemporary photographers in which the protagonists are granted so much dignity and so much authority. It is true that, at the moment the shutter closes, Granser knows much more about what is going on than his subjects. He does control a situation that they do not comprehend. But what is the alternative? When journalists and literary figures write about Alzheimer’s patients, they are operating on the basis of a much more blatant incongruity. The author exercises the full range of his language skills to express himself, to make his points – whereas the patient by contrast seems to be an inferior being, because he has veered away from the world of language.
Granser does not promise us a comprehensive panorama. His series does not claim to constitute a scientific study. Cautiously, soberly and optimistically, the pictures embark on a dialogue, directing our gaze toward faces and gestures that no one would have otherwise taken the time to observe. Overstatement is not Granser’s métier. Once again: this is only one story about the traces that Alzheimer’s leaves behind. It’s about loss. It’s about dignity. And about the radiant contradictions in the human face.
- Extract from the essay „Where I did lodge last night” by Christoph Ribbat.
German/English
2005
1st Edition SOLD OUT. 2nd Edition still available.

Once upon a time, in the first decades of the twentieth century, Coney Island was a democratic paradise where rich and poor alike doffed their clothes and immersed themselves in continuous pleasures of the flesh, the eyes, and the city-dweller’s lust for thrills.
By the time Peter Granser came to check out the place it had reached a peculiar juncture. Efforts were already under way to renew the island. Granser trained his camera on a Coney Island in transition.
Granser allows his subjects a modicum of dignity, though they may seem silly, undeservedly pretentious, sad, even outrageous to a casual observer. His photographs take people on their own terms-and on our own terms, we humans prefer to think we are worth presenting to the world. Standing at a middle distance, both physically and emotionally, he maintains a lingering degree of the kind of neutrality that Walker Evans thought he could accomplish by refusing to treat his subjects like objects. Granser is wholly aware that the pride and imagination of certain people are as tacky and incongruous as the perplexing culture they maneuver in, but his comments, sometimes made by way of wry pairs of pictures, are delivered with calm irony, like a remark made by someone with a subtle sense of humor who changes neither his tone nor his facial expression
– Extracts from the essay ‘The Democratic Paradise’ by Vicki Goldberg.
Hatje Cantz 2006
German/English
2006
SOLD OUT

Peter Granser´s project “Sun City” is a series about a retirement colony in the American southwest, where you are only allowed to live, if you are over 55 years of age. In this strange city of spunky senior citizens, he encountered countless whimsical details. He took wrinkles, cacti, hair dryer hoods and plastic flamingos and compiled them into a basically true and only slightly exaggerated story about the future of aging. In “Sun City” being a senior doesn’t mean sitting in a rocking chair on the porch, looking back at the past, gradually taking one’s leave of life. Quite the opposite: Granser’s picture story is peopled by men and women who without any compromises or sentimentality have radically reinvented themselves in their latter years. Granser approaches this strange world with a sense of wonder and not with cynicism.
Christoph Ribbat, from the book “Alzheimer”
Benteli, English
2006
SOLD OUT