"Dutch photographer MARTENS was a versatile street photographer. His way of working was inspired by the long American tradition of engaged and personal documentary photography, but he went one step further and developed into a radical photographer who took a stand for the disadvantaged and outcast. Tirelessly he captured world's injustice and bad luck millions of people suffer from, fixed in confrontational, grainy images.
In his photographs from the 70s and early 80s, Bogotá, Bangkok, Calcutta, Hong Kong and Ouagadougou were the worst places on earth. Closer to home, he showed the blind faith of believers seeking redemption and forgiveness.
When MARTENS explored America in the beginning of the seventies, it became his domain: the country where he found the subjects on a large scale that obsessed him as photo journalist. His matter was the everyday war in the street, the news that is no news but daily reality for countless people.
'Life in the States', MARTENS indicated, 'could be just as ruthless as living in dictatorships or developing countries.'
MARTENS left an oeuvre that is not easily approachable, because it touches upon the unspeakable. Until shortly before his death, he worked on the composition of two books featuring the best of his complete oeuvre. The dummies he assembled and over 400 prints he selected layered ever since in the archive of the Nederlands Fotomuseum.
Now these two books, 'Few Loving Voices' and 'American Testimony,' are finally being published posthumously.
MARTENS edited both publications in a sequence that leaves you dumbfounded and guessing for his reasons. His photography is a secret, not just this or that single image, but his entire body of work. It raises compelling questions about the world we live in." (publisher's note)
In Dutch:
"'Few Loving Voices' is door Peter MARTENS zelf samengesteld vlak voor zijn overlijden. Het is een overzichtsboek van zijn gehele ouvre, met uitzondering van zijn reizen en foto's van Amerika.
Het boek begint met de geboorte van zijn eerste dochter en volgt de vele reizen over heel de wereld die MARTENS gemaakt heeft.
Van Colombia, India, Nigeria tot Hong Kong heeft Peter MARTENS het onrecht en leed vastgelegd met een ongekende betrokkenheid. Het boek bevat een tekst van Els Barents en een door MARTENS geschreven lezing voor het ICP, die hij echter door zijn ziekte nooit gehouden heeft."
About the photographer, Peter MARTENS:
The work of Peter MARTENS occupies a unique position in Dutch photography. In 1969 he became the first photographer in the Netherlands admitted to the Visual Arts Program (BKR). This was not only recognition of his own work but also of photography as fine art.
As one of the few Dutch photographers Martens was nominee of Magnum and in 1977 and 1979 he won several prizes at World Press Photo. In 1984 he was awarded the Capi-Lux Alblas Award for lifetime achievement and in 1988 the Dutch foundation Zilveren Camera called him Photojournalist of the Year.
In his photographs from the 70s and early 80s, Bogotá, Bangkok, Calcutta, Hong Kong and Ouagadougou were the worst places on earth. Closer to home, he showed the blind faith of believers seeking redemption and forgiveness.
When MARTENS explored America in the beginning of the seventies, it became his domain: the country where he found the subjects on a large scale that obsessed him as photo journalist. His matter was the everyday war in the street, the news that is no news but daily reality for countless people.
'Life in the States', MARTENS indicated, 'could be just as ruthless as living in dictatorships or developing countries.'
MARTENS left an oeuvre that is not easily approachable, because it touches upon the unspeakable. Until shortly before his death, he worked on the composition of two books featuring the best of his complete oeuvre. The dummies he assembled and over 400 prints he selected layered ever since in the archive of the Nederlands Fotomuseum.
Now these two books, 'Few Loving Voices' and 'American Testimony,' are finally being published posthumously.
MARTENS edited both publications in a sequence that leaves you dumbfounded and guessing for his reasons. His photography is a secret, not just this or that single image, but his entire body of work. It raises compelling questions about the world we live in." (publisher's note)
In Dutch:
"'Few Loving Voices' is door Peter MARTENS zelf samengesteld vlak voor zijn overlijden. Het is een overzichtsboek van zijn gehele ouvre, met uitzondering van zijn reizen en foto's van Amerika.
Het boek begint met de geboorte van zijn eerste dochter en volgt de vele reizen over heel de wereld die MARTENS gemaakt heeft.
Van Colombia, India, Nigeria tot Hong Kong heeft Peter MARTENS het onrecht en leed vastgelegd met een ongekende betrokkenheid. Het boek bevat een tekst van Els Barents en een door MARTENS geschreven lezing voor het ICP, die hij echter door zijn ziekte nooit gehouden heeft."
About the photographer, Peter MARTENS:
The work of Peter MARTENS occupies a unique position in Dutch photography. In 1969 he became the first photographer in the Netherlands admitted to the Visual Arts Program (BKR). This was not only recognition of his own work but also of photography as fine art.
As one of the few Dutch photographers Martens was nominee of Magnum and in 1977 and 1979 he won several prizes at World Press Photo. In 1984 he was awarded the Capi-Lux Alblas Award for lifetime achievement and in 1988 the Dutch foundation Zilveren Camera called him Photojournalist of the Year.
- Book design
- John VAN LEEUWEN
- Format
- Pb. with dust jacket, 24 x 29 x 2,5 cm, 240 pp., b/w ills., text language: English