Where the World Is Melting: Ernst-Leitz-Museum, Wetzlar
The power of the elements, the raw beauty of ice landscapes, but also the threat of their disappearance: Icelandic photographer Ragnar Axelsson (born 1958) has been documenting the Arctic regions of Iceland, Greenland, Siberia and the Faroe Islands, for over four decades. His breathtakingly-beautiful, black and white motifs show glaciers and ice formations, but, above all, the unique everyday existence and extreme conditions for the people and animals living there. The photographer offers intimate insights into the elemental, human experience in nature at the edge of the inhabitable world. The Arctic, however, is threatened by unprecedented climate change and is undergoing a rapid and profound process of transformation. This is causing the disappearance of traditional ways of life, centuries-old cultures, and fascinating ice landscapes. The exhibition offers a moving glimpse into Axelsson's life's work and underscores the possibilities that photography offers in the - almost hopeless - fight against climate change.
Hunters and their sled dogs in Iceland, fishermen and farmers' wives, the Inuit of Greenland, reindeer herders in the Siberian tundra: Axelsson's portraits have such an immediate impact because his information comes first-hand, from the often extraordinary personalities on location, as well as from his own intense experiences. He avoids no risk and spares no effort to visit a wide variety of people in the most remote places and spend extended periods of time with them. He takes part in their arduous activities and enjoys their trust. They allow him to take snapshots of their lives and to write down their tales, making him an ambassador for their existence and their changing living conditions. In his pictures, Axelsson is telling the stories of people who are experiencing the global climate crisis first-hand. This constancy over decades, combined with a deep respect for his fellow human beings, has made Axelsson one of the most important witnesses and chroniclers of the growing change to the planet's climate that is now hitting the Arctic with great force.
The second major subject of Axelsson's work is the power of the elements and the experience of nature's majesty in the northern reaches. His impressive photographic portraits of landscapes are a testimony to this. With the eye of a researcher and an artist, he analyses the smallest of natural structures, which are reminiscent of drawings or abstract compositions.
Axelsson's childhood delight and fascination when flying over glaciers has never lost its hold on him: for over forty years, he has been consistently capturing his homeland and the far north in powerful and moving motifs. The photographer himself has an airplane pilot's licence and has accompanied scientists and other artists on their travels. He still has vivid memories of his first experiences with photography at the age of ten, using his father's Leica: "I was sitting with a Leica camera in my arms that my dad had lent me. I was tirelessly interested in taking pictures. It took a lot of trust to lend a child a camera that was as expensive as a car. I wasn't allowed to disappoint him. I had promised him to take good care of the camera. He had given me art books about famous painters and foreign magazines, such as Life and Stern. They contained the coolest pictures I'd ever seen. 'You have to take pictures and apply yourself' was the message I got from Dad. Those photographs were etched in my mind, no less than the paintings. But I couldn't paint, so I had to take pictures."
The exhibition is made up of a personal selection of groups of works Axelsson has photographed over four decades. It was set up in collaboration with Isabel Siben, Director and Curator of the Art Foyer of the Insurance Chamber Cultural Foundation in Munich, where the exhibition was originally on display in 2021.
Ernst Leitz Museum – Am Leitz-Park 6, Wetzlar
Open Monday to Sunday from 10 am to 6 pm