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Win a Solo Exhibition in June 2026 + An Exclusive Interview!
Win a Solo Exhibition in June 2026 + An Exclusive Interview!

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By Claude Hofer

Publisher: Kehrer Verlag
Publication date: October 2025
Print length: 432 pages
Language: English
Price Range:
Swiss photographer Claude Hofer has spent more than a decade exploring one of the most expressive forms of human movement: dance.

His publication offers a rare and compelling visual journey into the worlds of Butoh and contemporary dance, bringing together artists from across the globe in an intimate photographic dialogue between performer and camera.

Over the course of ten years, Hofer traveled extensively, meeting and photographing more than one hundred dancers representing these powerful traditions.

Rather than documenting stage performances, he invited each artist to perform specifically for his lens.

This approach creates a unique space of collaboration where movement becomes both subject and language, revealing the deeply personal expressions of the dancers.

Working exclusively in black and white, Hofer strips away distraction and focuses on what matters most: the human presence.

Light, shadow, gesture, and stillness combine to form images that feel both raw and timeless.

The absence of color emphasizes the sculptural qualities of the body, allowing emotion, tension, and vulnerability to emerge with striking clarity.

Particularly significant is Hofer’s engagement with Butoh, the radical Japanese dance form born in the postwar era.

Known for its slow, often haunting movements and its exploration of the subconscious, Butoh offers a powerful visual language that translates remarkably well into photography.

Alongside contemporary dance artists, these performers bring an extraordinary range of physical and emotional expression to the project.

What makes Hofer’s work especially compelling is his ability to capture the fleeting moment when movement transforms into meaning.

Each photograph feels suspended between motion and stillness, revealing a profound connection between body and mind.

The resulting images are not simply portraits of dancers—they are studies of presence, intensity, and the human capacity for expression.

The publication ultimately becomes more than a photographic collection.

It is a visual archive of artists whose bodies speak in gestures, shadows, and silent narratives, offering viewers a rare glimpse into the emotional depth and creative spirit of contemporary dance.
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