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Hong Kong
Mikko Takkunen
"Hong Kong"
Essay by Geoff Dyer
Designed by Rumsey Taylor
Hardcover, 16,5 x 22 cm
96 pages, 68 color ills.
English
ISBN 978-3-96900 - 136-3
Euro 35 / US$ 45

Mikko Takkunen »

Hong Kong

Exhibition:

Kehrer Verlag

Mannheimer Str. 175
69123 Heidelberg

06221-6492010


www.kehrerverlag.com

Hong Kong
© Mikko Takkunen

Mikko Takkunen
"Hong Kong"

With his first photobook Hong Kong, The New York Times’ photo editor Mikko Takkunen captured one of the world’s greatest metropolises during a time of political uncertainty and the pandemic. As the city was still recovering from the aftermath of the anti-government protests of 2019, Takkunen began to concentrate on the purity of seeing and capturing the world anew. Inspired by the masters of the New York School, like Faurer, Stettner, and Leiter, the Finnish photographer sought to capture Hong Kong in a fresh and innovative way, revealing hidden perspectives and moods that many have yet to see. His photos are both documentary and subjective, creating a narrative of the city that‘s as captivating as it is beautiful. From the vibrant colors to the stunning tonalities, each photograph is carefully curated to take you on an offbeat journey through the magnificent city.

From the essay by Geoff Dyer:

"The pictures in this book are of Hong Kong, they were taken between February 2020 and June 2021 by Mikko Takkunen, and they are in colour. But it seems to me, to put it somewhat clumsily, that they ask us to ask a slightly different question to the one we began with, or a different version of it at least. Not just, ‘what are these colours of?’ but ‘where do they come from?’ (...)

From Hong Kong, necessarily, because these are the colours of the things in the pictures: the red of the red lanterns, the painted yellow stripes of cross-walks and so on. In the kitchen still-life a jug of orange juice, a red plastic crate and bucket serve, within the picture, as sources of light. To that extent it’s a self-contained or self-generating image, but it also simultaneously makes us conscious of and curious about sources. While the colours are of and from Hong Kong they also derive, if only by association, from photographic history: from William Eggleston inevitably; from the smeared and steamy palette of Saul Leiter’s condensation drenched New York windows; from the implacable black shadows and reflexively fractured geometries of Alex Webb’s world-wide web of street scenes. One of Takkunen’s self-captioning, Webblike image identifies itself only generically as ‘City’. Like all the others in the book it is undated and not of anything in particular. But it quietly insists on itself: not nowhere but now, here. For now at least."

Mikko Takkunen:

"When you grow up in a small town in eastern Finland, waking each morning in a bedroom facing a forest, it is hard not to wonder what the wider world might look like. Many might dream of living the life I had, but me, I dreamed of big cities.

What fascinates me about great metropolises is the ever-flowing streams of people and transport,and the urban theater created by their interplay in a completely constructed environment. It is this daily, everchanging spectacle that I want to chronicle.

I approach picture-making as a kind of visual jazz. There should be beautiful melodies but the rest should be less obvious,less straightforward. There needs to be variation and improvisation from an overarching theme that holds it all together."

Mikko Takkunen is a photo editor at The New York Times’ Foreign desk where he’s spent more than five years between 2016–2021 in Hong Kong as the desk’s Asia photo editor. He began taking these photographs in early 2020 at the onset of the Covid-19 pandemic and continued until the summer of 2021 when he left Hong Kong.

Geoff Dyer’s many books include three about photography: The Ongoing Moment, The Street Philosophy of Garry Winogrand and See/Saw. He is also the editor of Understanding a Photograph, a collection of John Berger’s writing about photography.

Hong Kong
© Mikko Takkunen
Hong Kong
© Mikko Takkunen
Hong Kong
© Mikko Takkunen