Exhibition William Klein, C/o Berlin

29/04/17 to 02/07/17

William Klein’s most famous and at the same time most influential work is the photo book entitled “New York 1954–1955”, for which he returned to his hometown in the mid-1950s. He wanted to  radically re-capture the city—subjectively, intuitively and using unexpected perspectives. In the end, he portrayed the booming metropolis, the city of Coca Cola, of big cars and flashing bill-boards, as a dark, harsh and oppressive place. In that sense, the title of the New York book published in 1956 serves more as an ambivalent recommendation: “Life is Good and Good for You is New York: Trance Witness Revels.” Klein reinforced these impressions a few years later—this time using the medium of film: “Broadway by Light” (1958) resembles a dizzying collage of abstract shapes and figures, made of pulsating neon lights and dancing illuminated letters. 

Even as a fashion photographer, Klein always worked on the edge of formal and conventional predetermined restrictions. The self-taught artist tested new imageries and turned the relationships of the photographic process upside down. For Klein, the medium of photography was an experimental space in which he felt free. Like paintings on canvas, he designed photosensitive surfaces made of photo paper for use as photograms. He captured the light with the camera or simultaneously photographed the beam of a flashlight in long exposures and a fashion image.


After many years, C/O Berlin is dedicating a comprehensive retrospective as the sole location in Germany to the 88-year-old artist for the first time. The focus is on more than just the views of the cities of New York, Moscow, Rome or Tokyo but rather also on William Klein as a transformer between the mediums of photography and film. C/O Berlin is continuing the examination of these forms of media that the works of artists such as Martin Parr, Robert Frank or Gordon Parks have already illuminated. Interaction, media transformation and continuing development will be the focus. The exhibition comprises around 300 exhibits–large tableaux, vintage prints, contact sheets, books, magazines and movies. It correlates his photographic and film works that have been created in the past 60 years. With his unique style, Klein has long been a role model and a source of inspiration for many young photographers and filmmakers.