
Family Life
29 November 2008 - 22 February 2009
Thomas Struth’s interest in family portraits was triggered by a psychoanalyst
friend, who as a means of finding out more about their biographical backgrounds
asked his patients to bring photographs of their family from their childhood. The
position of family members to one another, the closeness or distance to the
partner, to father and mother, brother or sister reveals much much more than is
immediately apparent.
Struth found this insight and the thought of what options photography offers in
this context so fascinating that he began a series of family portraits in 1985,
which today alongside other topics, forms a central component of his oeuvre.
Initially, the families portrayed came from Struth’s close family circle or are
friends and acquaintances; he later extended the scope to countries outside
Europe and other social classes. His only condition is that there is a connection
between him and the families in question – Struth never photographs people to
whom no such connection exists.
Generally speaking the artist first organizes several sessions with the portrait
subjects to get a sense of the families, the individual members and their
relationship to one another. The chosen backdrop is always in the family’s
domestic environment, and Thomas Struth lets his models decide on the setting so
as to produce as authentic a portrayal as possible.
The fascinating thing about Struth’s family portraits is their undeniably
representative character. Even in what are seemingly the most casual groupings
the need to present yourself as an individual within a hierarchical order remains –
and the strength of this need varies from culture to culture.
The exhibition is accompanied by a publication of Schirmer/Mosel Verlag, Munich
Thomas Struth
Familienleben
With an essay by Eric Konigsberg
and texts by Gabriele Conrath-Scholl and Thomas Struth
92 pages, 28 duotone and color plates
€ 49.80
With thanks to Die Photografische Sammlung/SK Stiftung Kultur, Cologne