Joachim Koester (b. 1962) is a Danish contemporary artist who primarily works in installation, photography, and sound art.[1] His work can be found in major metropolitan museums including MoMA, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, Tate Modern, and the Centre Pompidou.
Joachim Koester was born in Copenhagen, Denmark in 1962, and lives between Copenhagen and Brooklyn.[2][1] He travels the world, using art as a tool to document lesser-known locations and draw attention to historical events. He combines elements of both reality and imagination to tell his stories.[2] Art critic Hal Foster has characterized his work as being "along the borders between documentary and fiction."[3]
Joachim Koester attended the Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts from 1987 to 1993 where he earned his art degree.[4] He is currently a professor of Fine Arts at Malmö Art Academy in Malmö, Sweden.[5][6]
Tarantism is a short film by Joachim Koester that aims to bring forgotten or suppressed events into collective memory. The film features Alexandra Bachzetsis, a choreographer, alongside six other performers. This film uses frantic dancing to explore the idea that shared histories can be rooted in our nervous and muscular systems and be awakened by erratic movements. Koester portrays these movements as a ritual performance by incorporating elements of post-modern dance.[7][8]
Day for Night, Christiania is a collection of 35 photos depicting Koester's attempt to document the transformation of Freetown Christiania. The photographs capture the values of mutual care and acceptance that were instilled in the community, which had previously served as a military base. Koester's focus lies on the disorder that remained as the people of Christiania were still in the early stages of establishing their settlement. At the time the photographs were taken, Christiania had only been established for 25 years. Koester Joachim and Catsou Roberts.[9][10]
From the Secret Garden of Sleep #6 is a portrait of a cannabis plant produced using a silver gelatin print. The work is one of six pieces from Koester's solo exhibition titled From the Secret Garden of Sleep. He utilizes his subjects to emphasize significant shifts in cultural perceptions by showcasing artworks that delve into topics like drug use and altered states. These photographs were presented in Mexico, a country heavily impacted by the War on Drugs.[11]
Maybe on must begin with some particular places. Barragan is a film directed by Joachim Koester, which examines the correlation between the intellect, physique, and essence through the utilization of Jerzy Grotowski's experimental theater performed by Jaime Soriano. The film takes place at the architect Luis Barragan's residence, constructing an imaginary encounter between these two prominent figures from Mexican cultural heritage.[12]
Joachim Koester's work can be found in prestigious collections such as the Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris, The Museum of Modern Art and the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, Moderna Museet in Stockholm, and Staten's Museum for Kunst in Copenhagen.[6] His piece titled My Frontier Is an Endless Wall of Points can be found at the Museo Nacional Centro De Arte Reina Sofia.[13] Koester's work titled Tarantism is also featured at the Tate Modern Museum in Bankside, London.[14][15]
Joachim Koester was awarded the 2013 Camera Austria Award for Contemporary Photography for his piece From the Secret Garden of Sleep #6 from 2008. With his exceptional skills in visual arts particularly in photography, Koester impressed the judges of the Camera Austria award by being able to seamlessly blending elements of reality and fiction.[16] In 2008 Koester was a finalist for the Hugo Boss Prize, but ultimately lost to Emily Jacir.
^Koester, Joachim (2015). Ortiz Monasterio, Rodrigo; Chateigné Tytelman, Yann (eds.). Maybe one must begin with some particular places. Ciudad de México: Guayaba Press. ISBN978-3-943514-48-3.
^Koester, Joachim; Vibolt Knudsen, Vibeke; Bogh, Mikkel; Høgsbro Østergaard, Cecilie (2018). Joachim Koester - patterns shimmers scenes. Copenhagen: SMK, Statens Museum for Kunst. ISBN978-87-7551-028-3.
^Koester, Joachim (2019). Lahn-Johannessen, Mai; Sekkingstad, Steinar (eds.). Joachim Koester - Bringing something back. Camden Arts Centre, Bergen Kunsthall. London: Koenig Books. ISBN978-3-96098-584-6.
^Bergholtz, Frèdèrique; Koester, Joachim; Kestner-Gesellschaft, eds. (2012). I myself am only a receiving apparatus. Köln: König. ISBN978-3-86335-086-4.
^Caron, Thomas (2014). Joachim Koester: of spirits and empty spaces [exhibition], Institut d'art contemporain, Villeurbanne... [December 10, 2011-February 19, 2012], MIT List visual arts center, Cambridge, [May 10, 2012-July 8, 2012], Kunsthal Charlottenborg, Copenhagen, [August 24, 2012-30 December, 2012], SMAK, Ghent, [November 30, 2012-March 10, 2013], Centre d'art contemporain, Genève, [May 23, 2014-August 17, 2014]. Milano Villeurbanne: Mousse publishing Institut d'art contemporain. ISBN978-88-6749-088-2.
^Koester, Joachim; Millar, Jeremy; Vollmann, William T. (2002). Joachim Koester: row housing ; [Beechey Island, Cornwallis Island, Devon Island and Resolute Bay ; 25 photographs]. Copenhagen: Galleri Nicolai Wallner. ISBN978-87-987060-3-8.
Caron, Thomas; Koester, Joachim; Institut d'art contemporain, eds. (2014). Joachim Koester: of spirits and empty spaces ; [on the occasion of the following exhibitions: Joachim Koester. Of Spirits and Empty Spaces, Institut d'Art Contemporain, Villeurbanne, December 10, 2011 - February 19, 2012 ... Joachim Koester: The Place of Dead Roads, Centre d'Art Contemporain Genève, May 23, 2014 - August 17, 2014]. Milano: Mousse Publishing. ISBN978-88-6749-088-2.
Grønstad, Asbjørn; Gustafsson, Henrik; Vågnes, Øyvind (2017). Gestures of seeing in film, video and drawing. Routledge advances in art and visual studies. New York: Routledge. ISBN978-1-138-67384-7.