stefanroloff

STEFAN ROLOFF

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2010 - PRESENT PHOTOGRAPHY

THE STREETS DON'T CHANGE

Grid of ink jet prints, 2020

THE HERE AND BEYOND

Digital composite, 1980 / 2019, ink jet, 110x1017cm / 43″x400″
Panorama created from 1980 photographs with Julia at the Berlin wall’s Bernauer Strasse stretch.

LINDENHOTEL

Interiors of the former Stasi-prison in Potsdam, 2012
The prison was called Lindenhotel in Potsdam’s vernacular. It was located on Linden Street and in a prison like in a hotel people are mostly housed temporarily.

2000 - 2010 PHOTOGRAPHY

NEW YORK

1990 - 2000 PHOTOGRAPHY

FAVELA STA. MARTA

I photographed Sta. Marta as it was the most rudimentarily built of Rio’s Favelas. In this extensive photo-series I was interested in its architecture. The people in these pictures appear accidentally. I was not looking for them.

WEST VIRGINIA

PENCE SPRINGS RESORT

The Pence Springs Resort Hotel in West Virginia once housed a women’s prison

FIRE

While shooting my documentary I got a chance to set an old farm-house on fire and film it. As soon as the flames emerged a cable on our 16 mm camera broke. So, I photographed the fire with my 35mm photographic camera creating a grid. This image is compiled from individual 11×14 Cibachromes.

WHEN 6 IS 9

This project was created on my first computer from 1995 on. I composited photographic portraits I took of friends with a Fuji 6×7 camera at two different times, once inside their homes and the again in the same position outside in a public place. My aim was to expand the time-related limitation of photography (where every picture can only be taken within the split part of a second) to hours and sometimes weeks. Through the process they received qualities of paintings which are created over extended periods of time. Below the following selection of close-ups is a link leading to the full-body portraits.

NEW YORK

Some miscellaneous photos taken during the 90s

1980 - 1990 PHOTOGRAPHY

TEMPORARY INSTALLATIONS IN BERLIN

BABY BOTTLE IN NEW YORK

All I seem to have photographed in the 80s in New York were friends spontaneously reacting to a giant baby bottle. Here’s a selection from the series:

1975 - 1980 PHOTOGRAPHY

JULIA IN BERLIN

ENGELBERT CLIMBS A MONUMENT

Photo animation of full series:

MEXICO CITY

CARCEL SALINA CRUZ

A prison during the era of Operation Condor

TEHUANAS

The Tehuanas, a matriarchal culture are descendants of the Zapotecs. Once a year they elect their queen and dance. Men aren’t allowed inside their space. Since I had lived in Salina Cruz for a while and owned a camera I was one of five men for who an exception was made.

JULIA IN MEXICO

LACANDONES

A group of Lacandons I visted at Nahá in the Lacandon jungle were the only tribe in Mexico that was not converted to Catholicism

For a documentary about the Lacandons  I planned in 2006 I wrote the following description:
Normally, cultures peak and decay during the course of centuries. The Lacandon Indians in the Mexican rain forest have experienced this process in fast motion. The last 40 years have catapulted them from a rudimentary society into the modern media age of overpopulation.
In 1979, I spent two weeks with them. They cut their fields from the dense jungle. Despite the great effort involved in that, they let them rest and replenish during the following year, cutting new ones instead in different places. They seemed to live in a different time. But the outside world was moving in on them.
In 1971, President Echeverria had officially declared them the owners of the forest. With that he bypassed a law from the Mexican revolution, which allowed anybody to squat land that wasn’t privately owned. Subsequently, logging companies bought the woods from the Lacandons who didn’t understand the concept of money or ownership. Missionaries moved in, splitting the tribe into two, one kept living by their old laws, the other by the new ones.
Part of my project will be the conceptualizing and planning of an expedition into the Lacandon jungle, in which over 300,000 settlers are living. It disappears at a faster pace than the Amazon rainforest.
The Lacandons had lived in it for centuries. In their mythology, the earth was covered with woods. If the woods died, so would the earth. Like the modern Western world they lived an enchanted, isolated life, unaware of the outside world’s need of space. The destruction of their world carries essential catastrophic elements: Cultural and environmental destruction.

JULIA IN THE USA

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