ERCO and the photographer Iwan Baan have started to collaborate for the first time, documenting the Louvre-Lens. Baan’s documentary photography of architecture characterised by the portrayal of people made him an international shooting star of architectural photography. His style ties in with the consistent approach of the “Light Factory”. We look back on the development of this visual language – and its influence on our storytelling of tomorrow.
Outstanding architecture and great works of art become the backdrop for normal people who take over such spaces spontaneously. This is how architectural photographer Iwan Baan sees the new Louvre Lens – masterminded by SANAA Architects – in ERCO light. His narrative approach to photography disregards the paradigms of typical architectural photography that had become established in the latter half of the 20th century. Influenced by paragons such as Julius Shulman or Ezra Stoller, architectural photography generally delivered geometrical, often symmetrical, wide angled views with a rigid, carefully rectified perspective. It abstracted, stylised and, as a result, created distance between structure and observer. People were, at best, a decorative accessory, not an emancipated user or, better still, an interpreter of architecture. This dogma, from a technical aspect, was represented by the large format camera mounted on a heavy tripod.