
Ludwig Schönherr
Directing
Ludwig Schönherr began making photographs and paintings in the late â50s. In the mid-â60s, his interest in the visual arts shifted to film. From 1967-1970, a period of intense productivity in European experimental film more generally, Schönherr made scores of short super 8 and 16mm films that explored specific technical, aesthetic, and representational aspects of the medium, namely, the zoom, the use of flickering color, and the depiction of the face. At approximately the same time, Schönherr acquired his first black and white television and produced a lengthy series of âelectronic filmsâ or single-frame films of television images, interrupted by flickering color. This beautiful and ever watchable series marked the start of the artistâs lifelong focus on the ubiquity of television and popular cultural images in modern life. Schönherr has also produced numerous single and multi-frame photographs of television images. Of his preoccupation with television, Schönherr quipped, âLife in television is much more interesting than real life outside.â In the mid- to late â70s, over the course of a number of visits to New York, Schönherr produced an astounding 107 hour, super 8 mm film, a âvisual diaryâ that consists of impressions of the city, its inhabitants, and its television culture. In the mid-80s, Schönherr made a similarly stunning portrait film of the city of Hamburg. The sixty minute film, âUnknown Hamburgâ (1983-8)âthe artistâs only work produced with public fundsâintersperses carefully framed shots of unfamiliar Hamburg cityscapes with silent, close-ups of ballerinas from the Hamburg Ballet, images reminiscent of Andy Warholâs âScreen Testsâ. Alongside television and urban landscapes, ballerinas surface again and again as the objects of Schönherrâs gaze, both in his films and photographs. (In the mid-â60s Schönherr even wrote two ballets himself). The artistâs diverse production has been accompanied by the development of ever changing, concisely articulated theories about film, television and photography. Most of these one to two page theories address questions about the formal structures governing the organization of images in the respective media. Schönherrâs interest in form and structure in both practice and theory avoids the dry academicism and self-important humorlessness that characterizes the thinking of many of his contemporaries in the realm of formal or structural film. In addition to pursuing his own projects, Schönherr frequently became involved with the work of other artists and friends, filming actions by Otto MĂŒhl, photographing performances by Nam June Paik and by the seminal American underground artist Jack Smith, and contributing a film to Dieter Rothâs 1979 âThe Hamburg Ballet.â That Schönherr has never presented his work publicly is due as much to the artistâs own humility and idiosyncrasy as to the fact that the work defies easy categorization. Neither stridently structural, nor purely pop, Schönherr has forged his own path between Fluxus and formal film.










