Wim Wenders’ dreamy Polaroid collection is coming to London
- Text by Dominique Sisley
A new exhibition on Wim Wenders – the cult director behind Paris, Texas, Wings of Desire and Alice In The Cities – is coming to London’s Photographers Gallery this October.
The show, titled Instant Stories, will focus on the filmmaker’s previously unseen Polaroid work – with over 200 of his personal photographs set to go on display. According to the gallery, this will include candid shots of cast and crew, friends and family, still-lives, street-photography and landscapes. All of the images selected were taken between the early 1970s and mid ’80s.
Over his 50-year career, Wenders has become just as famed for his photography as his filmmaking, with the director using the medium as a way of testing out frames and ideas. He ended up taking thousands – using them as a visual diary to document his travels throughout Europe and the US.
Speaking about his love of Polaroids in an accompanying book for the exhibition, Wenders says: “The entire Polaroid process (and procedure) has nothing to do with our contemporary experience, when we look at virtual and vanishing apparitions on a screen that we can delete or swipe to the next one. Then, you produced and owned ‘an original’!”
“This was a true THING, a singular object of its own, not a copy, not a print, not multipliable, not repeatable. You couldn’t help feeling that you had stolen this image-object from the world. You had transferred a piece of the past into the present.”
Instant Stories: Wim Wenders’ Polaroids will run at London’s Photographer’s Gallery from October 20th to February 11th 2018.
Enjoyed this article? Like Huck on Facebook or follow us on Twitter.
Latest on Huck
In a city of rapid gentrification, one south London estate stands firm
A Portrait of Central Hill — Social housing is under threat across the British capital. But residents of the Central Hill estate in Crystal Palace are determined to save their homes, and their community.
Written by: Alex King
Analogue Appreciation: Maria Teriaeva’s five pieces that remind her of home
From Sayan to Savoie — In an ever more digital, online world, we ask our favourite artists about their most cherished pieces of physical culture. First up, the Siberian-born, Paris-based composer and synthesist.
Written by: Maria Teriaeva
Petition to save the Prince Charles Cinema signed by over 100,000 people in a day
PCC forever — The Soho institution has claimed its landlord, Zedwell LSQ Ltd, is demanding the insertion of a break clause that would leave it “under permanent threat of closure”.
Written by: Isaac Muk
Remembering Taboo, the party that reshaped ’80s London nightlife
Glitter on the floor — Curators Martin Green and NJ Stevenson revisit Leigh Bowery’s legendary night, a space for wild expression that reimagined partying and fashion.
Written by: Cyna Mirzai
A timeless, dynamic view of the Highland Games
Long Walk Home — Robbie Lawrence travelled to the historic sporting events across Scotland and the USA, hoping to learn about cultural nationalism. He ended up capturing a wholesome, analogue experience rarely found in the modern age.
Written by: Isaac Muk
The rave salvaging toilets for London’s queers
Happy Endings — Public bathrooms have long been contested spaces for LGBTQ+ communities, and rising transphobia is seeing them come under scrutiny. With the infamous rave-in-a-bog at an east London institution, its party-goers are claiming them for their own.
Written by: Ben Smoke