Floris michael neusüss biography

Floris Michael Neusüss

Floris Michael Neusüss (n. 3 de marzo de 1937)[1]​ fue un fotógrafoalemán especialista en la técnica del fotograma.[2]

Biografía

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Estudió fotografía en la Escuela de Artes y Oficios de Wuppertal en Renania del Norte-Westfalia y los continúo en la Escuela de fotografía del Estado de Baviera en Múnich. Completó su formación con Heinz Hajek-Halke en 1960 en la Escuela de Arte de Berlín.[3]

Entre 1966 y 1971 fue profesor en la academia de Bellas Artes de Kassel. El fotograma ha sido el eje central de su obra ya que lo afrontó desde la triple perspectiva de autor, teórico e historiador, publicando en 1983 el libro Fotogramme. Entre sus trabajos destacan Nudogramm de 1968, que son fotogramas en las que la modelo se situaba sobre el material fotosensible y se le exponía a diferentes luces con el correspondiente procesado químico posterior, Sonnen de 1974 en las que trabajó con la luz solar, o sus obras denominadas imágenes nocturnas realizadas por la noche al aire libre y los paisajes artificiales realizados en

Selected Solo Exhibitions

Selected Group Exhibitions

Floris Michael‏ Neusüss was a German photographer who was born in 1937. Numerous key galleries and museums such as Von Lintel Gallery, Los Angeles have featured Floris Michael‏ Neusüss's work in the past.Floris Michael‏ Neusüss's work has been offered at auction multiple times, with realized prices ranging from 11 USD to 50,400 USD, depending on the size and medium of the artwork. Since 2005 the record price for this artist at auction is 50,400 USD for X Series, Triptych, sold at Christie's New York in 2005. Floris Michael‏ Neusüss has been featured in articles for Spectator, Creative Review and Evening Standard. The most recent article is 'Size matters: Scale in Photography' on view at Kunstpalast Dusseldorf written for ArtDaily in May 2024. The artist died in 2020.

Artist's alternative names: Floris M. Neusüss, Floris Michael Neusuess

  • Exposition

    Exhibition : « THE PSYCHIC LENS - Surrealism and the camera » at the Atlas Gallery

    Press Release - A new exhibition of nearly 50 works at Atlas Gallery will explore how photographers responded to Surrealism over the course of over 50 years. The Psychic Lens: Surrealism and the camera, will include vintage photographs by well-known figures such as Man Ray, Andre Kertesz, Florence Henri and Bill Brandt alongside rarely seen works by artists such as Vaclav Zykmund, Franz Roh and Raoul Hausmann to tell the story of Surrealism through photography. Surrealism was an avant-garde movement in art and literature beginning in the 1920s when artists began to experiment with ways of unleashing the subconscious imagination. Poet Andre Breton is credited with launching the movement in Paris in 1924. Over time the influence of the movement spread far and wide, as evidenced in the inclusion of collages by Japanese a...
  • Exposition

    Atlas Gallery presents « Ancient and Modern » by Floris Neusüss

      Following the hugely successful exhibition “Shadow Catchers” at the V

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