Robert Lebeck: 1968
By (Author) Robert Lebeck
Steidl Publishers
Steidl Verlag
1st October 2018
Germany
General
Non Fiction
779.092
Hardback
320
Width 228mm, Height 300mm
1920g
This book presents the diverse photo series Robert Lebeck made in 1968, which form an alternative view of the year when social conflict and personal rebellion against authoritarian traditions found their passionate and often violent expression. Upheaval, protest, persever - ance and failure-themes that are not always explored in retrospective mythicizing views of 1968-are clearly expressed in Lebeck's photos, taken in locations from New York to Bogot and Wolfsburg. Whether dealing with "Divorced Women," Rudi Dutschke in Prague, Robert Kennedy's funeral or Joseph Beuys at documenta, contemporary history encounters the integrity of photo reportage in Lebeck's work. "The year of the student protests took place without me," Lebeck recalls of 1968 in his autobiography. "When the barricades were burn - ing in Paris, I was working in Florida on a series about two murdered co-eds; when students began protesting in front of the Springer Building, I was photographing the christening of Hildegard Knef's baby; and when Russian troops marched into Prague, I was accompanying the pope's visit to Bogot." A closer examination of Lebeck's contact sheets, prints and reportages made during this epoch-making year on behalf of Stern , then one of Germany's highest-circulation magazines, and presented in this book, reveal how Lebeck's photos, despite his own assessment, capture the social changes of the time. '[Robert Lebeck is] a photographer who really wanted to be an ethnologist, but swapped books and university for a camera and lucrative commissions for the world's best magazines.' -Harald Willenbrock