In his LIGHT PAINTING series, Karl Martin Holzhäuser continues his exploration of temporality by using light as a central element. The images in this series are titled only with timestamps, evoking a documentary approach akin to archival registration. Here, he captures fleeting light to create works that move beyond mere depiction to embody an elemental presence. These compositions seek not to represent the world as it appears, but to exist visually in their own right, embodying time and light as central motifs in his pursuit of the fundamental nature of photography.
Karl Martin Holzhäuser, a member of the international group Concrete Photography (Konkrete Photographie), has developed a consistently remarkable body of work through his artistic practices since the late 1960s. His art is influenced by two cultures: the culture of Concrete and Constructive Art, to which he felt connected from a young age, and the culture of photography as a medium, particularly its inclination towards experimentation and design. Holzhäuser's oeuvre can be seen as an experiment that visually synthesizes the cultures of art and technology. It explores the interplay of colors, forms, space, and time within the medium, constantly challenging its inherent ambitions.
Holzhäuser continually seeks the latent image of time through photographs that do not aim to represent or reproduce the world as it appears. Instead, his photographs, such as 87.62.1987, aspire to be visual in themselves, intentionally returning to the essence of the medium and searching for the elemental in a world where fleeting moments have become a disconcerting reality. The previous associations between an artwork and its specific place, space, and time of creation have become irrelevant due to reproducibility and mass distribution. Globalization has already taken hold, and photography supports this process rather than halting it. However, it also offers an opportunity to play within this context and produce authentic contemporary images—signs that bolster individual and collective consciousness. Holzhäuser's works capture fleeting moments in their own unique manner. He may work in darkness, but his medium is light.