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From Back Home & Sketch of Paris
Werkstatt Fotografie, Hamburg
From Back Home and Sketch of Paris are two bodies of work that firmly represent the duality of place for Swedish photographer, JH Engström (b.1969), who has, from an early age lived in Paris and the countryside of Varmland, and has consistently documented his urban and rural existence and the people, landscape and things that make an intuitive reference to his emotional being.
From Back Home was a collaboration with Anders Petersen and was published in 2009. It was awarded the prestigious book prize by Les Recontres d?Arles. The work comprises a multifarious collection of coloured and black and white portraits, landscapes, still-lives, close-ups and aerial shots. The images are united by a sense of spontaneity, an ephemeral tone that lends them an air of tenderness. These are works of intimacy and loss, exploring questions of time, memory and the possibility of return.
Sketch of Paris is a collection of photographs. For more than 20 years, JH Engström has spent time living and working in Paris, a city that, like New York, has a long photographic pedigree; countless photographers have been inspired by its iconic architecture and busy streets. Sketch of Paris, however, is hardly a catalog of classic Parisian scenes, offering instead a raw yet lyrical portrayal of the artist's misadventures, loves and random encounters in its streets, bars and artist lofts - an entirely personal Paris. Drawing more from Nan Goldin and Anders Peters than Atget or Henri Cartier-Bresson, Engström brings us on a gritty, no-holds-barred guided tour of life in his adopted city. Sketch of Paris comprises of colour and black-and-white photographs - self-portraits, nudes, portraits of lovers, friends, strangers and the occasional street scene - all shot between 1991 and 2012, tracing a critical time during the development of the artist's own voice and vision. The book was published in 2013 by Aperture/Max Ström.
?Twenty years of photos taken in Paris and, thankfully, nary a glimpse of the Eiffel Tower. Engstrom's photos are more about the unseen Paris. Scary, tough, smoking-cigarettes-and-partying-hard Paris. This book is a sensory overload of full-bleed photos, mixing black and white with color effortlessly. It's a diary of a life lived very, very . . . interestingly?. (Amy Kellner, The New York Times Magazine).