- Coup de cœur
Faintly falling. Berlin years on the Wagenburg (Français/Anglais/Allemand)
Ralf Marsault
Sous-titré « Berlins Years on the Wagenburg », le livre de Ralf Marsault, Faintly Falling, s’intéresse au phénomène des campements de camions, de caravanes et de baraques de chantier dans les terrains vagues berlinois, et à la vie alternative subséquente. Bien loin de n’être que documentaire, le travail photographique de cet auteur trop peu connu en France – l’exposition Fin de siècle ayant eu lieu à la MEP date de 1996 – est une réflexion sur une communauté de rupture, mais aussi sur le temps abordé à la façon de Walter Benjamin, comme promesse du passé dans le présent, et potentialité d’avenir. Préface d'Elisabeth Lebovici et essai de Héléna Bastais.
(Fabien Ribery : https://lintervalle.blog/2020/12/12/les-wagenburgen-berlinoises-un-reve-densauvagement-par-ralf-maursault-photographe/)
No running water, no heat, but boundless freedom: in the 1990s, that is the lived reality in Berlin's trailer encampments. Established by free-spirited individuals who refused to fit in, few of these autonomous settlements have survived the ravages of gentrification. The residents of the remaining encampments do not like to be photographed, but they made an exception for Ralf Marsault (b. Angers, 1957; lives and works in Paris), who was part of the community. For over a decade, he recorded the routines, the highs and lows of life at the "Kreuzdorf Wagenburg" in Berlin. In this book, the artist shows what a life looked like that contrasted sharply with the usual dream of a nine-to-five job, homeownership, and material prosperity--and that helped make Berlin the magnet that it still is. Marsault, who has a PhD in cultural anthropology, thus also highlights a strand in the city's history that is not about money, power, or fame--an alternative vision that can surely be an important source of inspiration for today's aspiring rebels.
With an essay by Héléna Bastais and a foreword by Élisabeth Lebovici.
Distanz. 144p