Lutter had the honor of receiving the Deutscher Akademischer Austausch Dienst (DAAD) Grant in 1993, the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation Fellowship in 2001, and the Pollock-Krasner Foundation Grant in 2002.JanuWeeks after the police shooting of a teenager in December 2008, gunmen linked to the Revolutionary Struggle seriously wound a 21-year-old policeman guarding the Culture Ministry in Athens. Guggenheim Museum, New York Museum of Fine Arts, Houston Los Angeles County Museum of Art, California and San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, California, among others. Lutter’s photographs are in the permanent collections of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York Museum of Modern Art, New York Whitney Museum of American Art, New York Solomon R. Recent solo shows include the Dia Center for the Arts, New York (1999–2000) Kunsthalle Basel, Switzerland (2001) Museum of Contemporary Photography, Chicago (2002) Kunsthaus Graz, Austria (2004) Dia Beacon, New York (2005) The Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth, Texas (2005) Foundation Beyeler, Switzerland (2008) Carré d’art Musée d’Art contemporain, Nimes (2012) Inverted Worlds, Museum of Fine Arts, Houston (2015, traveling to New Orleans Museum of Art, Louisiana, through 2016) This Is a Photograph, Penland Gallery and Visitors Center, North Carolina (2016) and Museum in the Camera, Los Angeles County Museum of Art (2021). Lutter’s images have been exhibited in several solo and group exhibitions. She graduated in 1991 from the Academy of Fine Arts, Munich, and received her MFA in 1995 from the School of Visual Arts, New York. Vera Lutter was born in 1960 in Kaiserslautern, Germany. Vera Lutter’s work has been recognized by many periodicals including Artforum, Artnews, Art in America, BOMB, and The New York Times as well as books including 100 Contemporary Artists (Taschen), The Photograph as Contemporary Art (Thames & Hudson), and Vitamin Ph: New Perspectives in Photography (Phaidon). New York is a returning subject in Lutter’s work, and through working internationally, she employed the technique of the camera obscura, or pinhole camera, in projects around the world where she photographically rendered architecture, shipyards, airports, and abandoned factories, focusing on industrial sites that pertain to transportation and fabrication. Maintaining her concept of directness and least possible alteration, Lutter decided to retain the negative image and refrain from multiplication or reproduction. Exposing directly onto wall–size sheets of photographic paper, the artist achieved large–scale black and white images. Through a simple pinhole instead of an optically carved lens, the outside world flooded the interior of the room and projected an inverted image onto the opposite wall. In order to capture an immediate and direct imprint of her experience, Lutter decided to turn the room in which she lived into a large pinhole camera-thereby transforming the space that contained her personal experience into the apparatus that would capture an image of it. Inspired by the city’s presence, light, and architecture, Vera Lutter began experimenting with photography.
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