In 2016, the Goethe-Institut London and the Victoria & Albert Museum set out to collaborate on a long-term residency programme: the Goethe V&A Residency. German artist Helmut Völter was selected to be the first resident artist. He works at the intersection of art and science.
Völter is a graphic designer and artist from Berlin. In his work, he combines research with the authorship and design of books and exhibitions. His interest lies on the role of photographic images within history, media, art and science. The double character of scientific images as rational evidence and aesthetic objects often formed the starting point of his work. This side-by-side existence of art and science played an important role during Völter's residency in London, where he explored the V&A photography collection.
„During the residency, I wanted to develop a series of displays about the diversity of ways to look at a photograph. The displays were centred around a photograph from the V&A collection, which was set into a „constellation“ – a combination with other images and objects that highlighted and commented different aspects of the photograph in the centre.“ Helmut Völter
Das Foto „Skeleton of Man and of the Male Gorilla“, 1855 von Roger Fenton im British Museum aufgenommen, bildete den Ausgangspunkt von Völters Residenz.
Fellow cultural practitioners and the public had a chance to engage with Völter’s work in open studio sessions. The residency culminated in the London Design Festival, where he staged his exhibitions The Cabinets and Reading Proposition. Learn more about Völter’s work in London in the following video interview:
Find more about the residency in our Magazine and the V&A Blog. Also see the documentation of the exhibitions: