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TABLE OF CONTENTS

PRINT DECEMBER 1972

A NOTE ON BERNHARD AND HILLA


BECHER
BERNHARD AND HILLA BECHER BEGAN their series of photographic typologies in 1957 with
a study of half-timbered workers’ houses in the old German industrial area of South
Westphalia. Within the limits of a definite vernacular style, the houses manifest a wide range
of variation in the mix of basic surface materials: slate, timber, and brick. The theme of
variations within limits determined by function is made apparent by the Bechers in their
grouping of similar views of different structures built to serve the same purpose. The Bechers
use the term “typology” to describe these ordered sets of photographs.

Bernhard Becher’s first studies of industrial structures were paintings and lithographs done
from 1953 through 1957. His main interest was in the iron-ore preparation plants of the Siegen
area in Germany. These buildings, huge conglomerations of machine and structure, proved
more fascinating to him than the act of painting. He began to collect old photographs of them
and later to photograph the plants himself. At this point he met Hilla who had left her job in
advertising to set up the photography department at the Düsseldorf Art Academy. She was
fascinated by his ideas and began to help him. They continue to employ photography because
it affords the possibility of a more objective record than painting does. Photography also
makes it easier to compare the proportions of similar structures of unequal size.

From 1961 through 1965, the Bechers worked mostly in the German Ruhr District and in
Holland making comparative photographs of the pithead towers and preparation plants of
coal and iron-ore mines, blast furnaces, coke ovens, and oil refineries. These structures and
others such as water towers, cooling towers, gas holders, high-tension electrical pylons, and
lime kilns are built to perform particular economic functions. When these structures no longer
serve their purposes efficiently they are abandoned. The photographs of the Bechers record the
transient existence of purely functional structures and reveal the degree to which form is
determined by the invariant requirements of function.

A partial catalogue of the typological subjects of Bernhard and Hilla Becher includes:
structures with the same function (all water towers); structures with the same function but
with different shapes (spherical, cylindrical, and conical water towers); structures with the
same function and shape but built with different materials (steel, cement, wood, brick, or some
combination such as wood and steel); structures with the same function, shape, and materials;
comparative perspective views of ore and coal preparation plants; comparative frontal views of
pithead towers; comparative frontal and perspective views of pithead towers, high tension
electrical pylons, blast furnaces, and factory buildings.

The Bechers have worked in the major industrial regions of Germany and Holland (1961–
1965); England, Scotland, and Wales (1965–1966); France and Luxembourg (1966–1967);
Pittsburgh, U.S.A. (1968); and Belgium (1970). As a part of their work, the Bechers also record
the dimensions, dates, and construction details of the structures they photograph. As Hilla
Becher has written: “The question if this is a work of art or not is not very interesting for us.
Probably it is situated in between the established categories. Anyway the audience which is
interested in art would be the most open-minded and willing to think about it.”

—Carl Andre
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