Photographs: Together & Alone by Karlheinz Weinberger

Photographs: Together & Alone by Karlheinz Weinberger

Regular price $29.95 Sale

Photographs: Together & Alone presents a landmark entry in the lifework of Zürich photographer Karlheinz Weinberger (1921-2006), containing over 200 never-before-published vintage photographic prints that were re-discovered in 2017. Edited by Ben Estes, this unique collection pairs images of Weinberger’s most famous subjects, the “Halbstarke,” a loosely organized group of Swiss “rebels” in the late 1950s and early 1960s, carousing at local carnivals and on a camping trip, with a much more private side of Weinberger’s oeuvre: solo portraits of men from the late 1950s through the mid-1970s whom he invited into his makeshift studio in the rooms of the apartment he shared with his mother.

The men in these portraits—construction workers, street vendors, bicycle messengers, outsiders—span a spectrum of fully clothed, arms-crossed poses to campy and flirtatious, fully nude and reclined, while others mimic art historical postures. All of these images, though, reveal a palpable sense of tenderness between photographer and subject, revealing an expansive and uncritical take on the male form in an era when being photographed wasn’t such a casual, ubiquitous record as it is today. Though not a professional photographer—he worked as a warehouse stock manager—Weinberger captured his subjects with a distinctly gay male gaze, both carnal and artistic, and this collection is certain to earn his work a larger following and appreciation.

 

Delicately planted between tenderness and artifice, Weinberger’s work revisits the pact between the viewer and the viewed—between the roving, lustful eyeball and the thing it tries to trap. What emerges are these intrepid pictures of male confidence, vanity, weakness, perplexity, helpless prettiness, and trembling self-assertion. This is a moving book. -Tobi Haslett

 At the dawn of youth culture, various Swiss teenagers make cargo-cult approximations of American outlaw style. Later they go and pull down their trousers. All of this is recorded by the most sincere kind of collector, the erotically-invested loner for whom no division exists between experience and memory. -Luc Sante

 Casual and formal, foreign and familiar, Together and Alone feels like a perfect walk through Karlheinz Weinberger’s incredibly rich archive. -Jordan Weitzman

 

For most of his adult life, Karlheinz Weinberger (1921-2006) worked in the warehouse department of the Siemens factory in Zurich, Switzerland. On the weekends, he escaped his job’s monotony by immersing himself in photography. Self-taught, Weinberger rarely exhibited his photographs until his “discovery” during the final years of his life. Since then, his work has been the focus of exhibitions in Europe and the United States.