Le Gazomètre Abandonné 06 by Jan Stel
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Le Gazomètre Abandonné 06 2016

Jan Stel

Impresión fotográfica
135 ⨯ 100 cm
Actualmente no disponible a través de Gallerease

  • Sobre la obra de arte
    Jan Stel [1970, Purmerend, the Netherlands] is a self-taught photographer. As a creative person, Jan was a pioneering artist in his youth. He sprayed graffiti murals in the suburbs of Amsterdam and at home he made detailed drawings and realistic illustrations. The analogue photo gear from his father prompted his interest in photography, and inspired him to develop his own creative style.

    Jan Stel’s photography is made in pure natural light, no flashlights or studio lamps are used. This authentic working process takes time, sensitivity and the right timing for action. Jan explains his photographic style in this way: “The human eye is far more sensitive than a camera lens and picks up minor as well as major differences in a scene. Because the photo camera is limited in its ability, I capture the image in multiple exposures. The scene my eye has seen in contrast with the part that the camera is unable to pick up is what fascinates me. I want to reassert this sensitivity. I do this by brushing the photographed brackets into a sort of light painting, similar to what the dark room masters and painters of past times used to do”.

    LE GAZOMÈTRE ABANDONNÉ
    “You should have absolutely no fear of heights or claustrophobia to enter a gasometer. It is an unnatural weird place without any kind of nature in it, a purely technical construction to hold gas and to distribute.”

    A gas holder, sometimes called a gasometer, is a large container in which coal gas is stored near atmospheric pressure at ambient temperatures. Inside this forgotten gasometer the oxygen is horrible and low. Certainly when the weather is hot and when there is almost no wind. It is a giant closed tube with just a few openings for breathing. These openings are in fact for control and constructions works. The volume of the container follows the quantity of stored gas, with pressure coming from the weight of a telescopic movable cap. Heavyweight pulleys mounted on the cap are connected with steel cables.

    Once the gas holder and attached power station where prosperous with a steel and heavy industry but now it has fallen silent in decline. Due to active protests in 2006 from Greenpeace about the coal fired power station it gained negative exposure and became subsequently closed in 2007. The area and suburbs are described as the most depressing in Europe, compared with Detroit in the USA.

    Sometimes these tanks are reconverted into diving facilities but, a sauna with swimming pool would also work. This one is located in a heavy industrial area and is abandoned since 2007.
  • Sobre el artista
    Jan Stel es un fotógrafo autodidacta que nació en Purmerend en 1970. Jan ya ha sido un artista pionero durante su infancia cuando pintaba graffiti en Ámsterdam. También realizó dibujos detallados e ilustraciones realistas. Se interesó por la fotografía gracias al equipo fotográfico analógico de su padre, que lo inspiró a desarrollar su propio estilo. Jan Stel toma sus fotografías con luz natural, omitiendo linternas y lámparas de estudio. Fotografía la arquitectura abandonada por el hombre. Ha realizado varias exposiciones en los Países Bajos y en el extranjero, entre ellas Museum aan het Vrijthof, Maastricht; RAW Artfair, World Trace Centre, Rotterdam; PAN, RAI Amsterdam; Rotterdam Contemporary; KunstRAI, Amsterdam; Somerset House, Londres, Inglaterra; FotoFestival Naarden, Adquisición de Naarden. Stel recibió varios premios, como los Sony World Photography Awards, los International Color Awards y los Epson Pano Awards. Su trabajo se puede encontrar en muchas colecciones públicas y privadas.