Bruce Silverstein is pleased to present Michael Wolf: Facade, a special online exhibition featuring the abstracted images of one of the artist’s most recognizable subjects - skyscrapers. Wolf’s highly detailed large-scale photographs, shot from windows, rooftops, and terraces, depict the architecture of steel and glass and offer a dystopian view of the exteriors of the urban habitat while leaving traces of the lives within.
Michael Wolf investigated new perspectives on urban life and its structure in the digital age. He addressed the realities of 21st-century metropolitan existence, defined by constant access, vanishing privacy, and unlimited exposure. The artist explored the density of city life in a diverse array of mediums, from large format cameras capturing architectural landscapes to appropriating Google’s Street View imagery to isolate anonymous city dwellers. Wolf’s eye for detail allowed him to introduce visual language into his work and balance the private and the public, anonymity and individuality, the faraway to the up close. Wolf’s deliberate and engaging compositions highlight his innovative vision, reflecting a new approach to imagining our world’s most photographed cities.
Born in 1954 in Munich, Wolf grew up in the United States, Europe, and Canada and studied at the University of California Berkeley and the University of Essen in Germany. He moved to China in 1995 to study China’s cultural identity and the complexities of its urban architecture. The German American artist won first prize in the World Press Photo Award Competition in 2005 and 2010. In 2010, Wolf was shortlisted for the prestigious Prix Pictet. Michael Wolf passed away in 2019 at the age of 65.