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Machine Age / Maschinenzeit
 
Work in the Boiler, 1935 © Jakob Tuggener-Stiftung
 

Jakob Tuggener »

 

Machine Age

 
21 October 2017 – 11 February 2018
 
Opening: Friday, 20 October, 6pm
 
 

Fotostiftung Schweiz

Grüzenstr. 45
CH-8400 Winterthur (Zurich)
+41 52 234 10 30

www.fotostiftung.ch
Mon-Sun 11am-6pm, Wed 11am-8pm
Fotostiftung Schweiz
 
 
Machine Age / Maschinenzeit
 
Tornos Machine-tool Factory, Moutier, 1942 © Jakob Tuggener-Stiftung
 
 
Jakob Tuggener (1904–1988) is one of the exceptional figures in Swiss photography. His personal and highly expressive photographs of boisterous parties given by the upper social classes are legendary. His book Fabrik published in 1943 is regarded as a milestone in the history of the photobook. The exhibition “Machine Age” focuses mainly on his photographs and films of the world of labour and industry. These reflect not only the swift technical development from the textile industry in the Zurich highlands, or Oberland, up to and including the construction of power stations in the Alps. They also bear witness to Tuggener’s life-long fascination with all kinds of machines: from weaving looms to furnaces and turbines to locomotives, steamships and racing cars. He loved their noise, their dynamic movements and their bondless power, which he captured in images that oscillate between silent poetry and great expressiveness. At the same time he observed the men and women whose labours kept the engine of progress running – while also hinting that one day machines could dominate man.

Jakob Tuggener was more familiar with the world of factories than scarcely any other photographer in his day. He had completed training in mechanical drawing at Maag Zahnräder, a gearwheel company in Zurich, and worked there afterwards in their construction department. The company’s photographer Gustav Maag introduced him to the technique of photography. Due to the economic crisis in the late 1920s, Tuggener lost his job, whereupon he then fulfilled a dream he had harboured since childhood of becoming an artist, by studying at the Reimann School in Berlin. For about one year he engaged intensively with poster design, typography and film and, through the eye of his camera, became enthralled by the dynamism of the big city.
 
 
Machine Age / Maschinenzeit
 
Pressure Pipe, Vernayaz, 1938 © Jakob Tuggener-Stiftung
 
 
On his return to Switzerland in 1932 he began to work as a freelancer for the Oerlikon Machine Factory (MFO). Although the company already employed its own staff photographer, Tuggener was entrusted with the task of developing a kind of photo-graphic inside view of the enterprise, one of the aims being to bridge the gap between workers and office employees on the one hand, and management on the other. As of 1937, Tuggener also made a series of 16mm short films – always in black-and-white, silent and hovering between fiction and documentation. In 1943, in the middle of World War II, Tuggener published the book Fabrik (Factory). With this book, conceived in keeping with the rules of the silent film, Tuggener was well ahead of his time. Yet neither his uncompromisingly subjective photographs nor his critical approach were appropriate to the threatening situation in Switzerland, where a call was being made for unity and strength under the heading “Geistige Landesverteidigung” (Intellectual National Defence).

Although Fabrik was not a commercial success, Tuggener considered the book a great artistic success, and pursued his engagement with the themes of labour and industry. He produced two more book maquettes: Schwarzes Eisen (Black Iron, 1950) and Die Maschinenzeit (The Machine Age, 1952), which can be seen as a kind of continuation of the published book. The journalist Arnold Burgauer described that latter as a “brilliant and sparkling factual report on the world of the machine, its development, its potential and its limits”.

In Berlin in 1930 Tuggener had already begun to take photographs at the then famous balls held by the Reimann School. Although Tuggener’s photographs of balls were for a long time only taken note of by a small insider-group, many saw him as a “skilful depicter of our world of major opposites”, a world between brightly lit ballrooms and dismal factory halls. Tuggener too positioned himself between these two extremes by saying, “silk and machines, that’s Tuggener.” For he loved both, lavish luxury and dirty work, the bejewelled ladies and the sweating men. He regarded them as equivalent and refused to be categorised as a social critic. The critic Max Eichenberger wrote of his factory photographs: “Tuggener is capable of taking photographs that not only reveal a painter but also a poet, indeed a rare magician and strange alchemist who, albeit in modest quantities, turns lead into gold.”
 
 
Machine Age / Maschinenzeit
 
Worker at the Electric Furnace, 1943 © Jakob Tuggener-Stiftung
 
 
The exhibition “Jakob Tuggener – Machine Age” includes vintage and later prints from the early 1930s to the late 1950s, most of which are from the photographer’s estate. Also on show are various publications (including the portraits taken for different industrial companies such as Oerlikon Machine Factory or Rieter AG in Winterthur) and a large number of documents which shed light on the context of Tuggener’s activities in industry and his personal mode of working. In an adjoining room, a selection of his 16mm short films will be shown. These date from 1937 to 1970 and revolve to varying degrees around the theme of Man and Machine. The films have been specially digitized for the exhibition (in collaboration with Lichtspiel/Kinemathek Bern).

On the occasion of the exhibition, Steidl Verlag, Göttingen, is publishing for the first time 12 book maquettes as facsimile editions, as well as 14 short films on DVD, in a box together with an accompanying book containing essays by Martin Gasser and Severin Rüegg and an afterword by Maria E. Tuggener. This accompanying volume and the maquettes entitled Maschinenzeit (1952) and Uf em Land (1953) are available during the exhibition as individual publications.

In collaboration with the Jakob Tuggener Foundation, Uster.
 
 
Machine Age / Maschinenzeit
 
Errand-girl in the Oerlikon Machine Factory, 1934 © Jakob Tuggener-Stiftung
 
 
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