Munich-based artist Josef Dreisörner juxtaposes analog photographed portraits and still lifes with AI-generated and digitally reworked images. The exhibition encourages active perception beyond mere recognition, tells stories that are open to interpretation and inspires discussions on socially relevant topics.
With his unique analog close-up portraits, Josef Dreisörner creates unadorned, direct and truthful insights into human faces. The result is an aesthetic that is initially disconcerting, but which is exactly as intended in the consistency of its depiction. He took the photographs with a Klimsch Praktika repro camera from 1957 in a 50×60 cm analog format on black-and-white film or directly on black-and-white positive paper.
In his still lifes, the decorative aspect takes a back seat. Instead, the works are intended to draw attention to socially relevant topics without taking a stance themselves.
Since 2023, Josef Dreisörner has been creating images with the help of artificial intelligence. He does not regard AI software as a toy that can be used to create any number of images, but rather as another tool for realizing pictorial ideas. In contrast to photography, he can use this method to depict objects that do not actually exist.
The subject matter of Josef Dreisörner's works is immediately recognizable and understandable even without a deep understanding of art. The works do not dictate an opinion, but open up spaces for reflection that viewers can fill with their own thoughts.
This content has been machine translated.