Norbert Schoerner – Photographer

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Norbert Schoerner is a German photographer and filmmaker.

Based in London since 1989, he spent the early 1990s experimenting with layered imaging and digital post production, primarily in The Face. His work has since been published in NY Times magazine, Vogue, and Another Magazine. His advertising campaigns have included Comme des Garçons, Swarovski, Shiseido, Prada, and Lacoste. Schoerner has also built up a reputation as an accomplished reportage photographer and artist, with a number of significant solo exhibitions.
 
AnOther Man magazine A/W 08-09
"Sons of Pioneers"
model: Oliver M

th_07289_216_122_345lo.jpg


source: exacteditions
 
magazine: i-D Pre-Spring 2010
editorial: @TEOTD. YRH! X
photographer: Norbert Schoerner
styling: Charlotte Stockdale
model: Bregje Heinen



scanned by skalty
 
Vogue Homme Japan issue5 FW2010 "The Decadence of Youth"
Photographer:
Norbert Schoerner
Styling: Shun Watanabe
Models: Mark Stanworth & Moritz Laufer





scans sobigsobig
 
Harper's Bazaar UK (November 2010)
"A World Away"
Photographer: Norbert Schoerner
Stylist: Vanessa Coyle
Model: Meghan Collison

ebook30.com
 
Miu Miu Fall/Winter 99.00 (Ad Campaign)
Models: Mia Hessner & unknown
Photographer: Norbert Schoerner



community.livejournal.com/styleregistry
 
Miu Miu Spring/Summer 1999 (Ad Campaign)
Models: May Andersen & unknown
Photographer: Norbert Schoerner



community.livejournal.com/styleregistry
 
The Face December 2002
Photographer: Norbert Schoerner
Styling: Nancy Rohde
Model: Julie Graz





avantgarde
 
His work is so powerful, absolutely breathtaking movements and expressions captured.
 


something's coming up with shu pei for 10 magazine's a/w issue, norbert posted on his tumblr (dayfornightlab)...
 
10 Magazine Summer 2010
Chanel: True Colours
Photographer: Norbert Schoerner
Hair: Raphael Salley
Makeup Artist: Sharon Dowsett
Model: Hannah Holman




glamcheck
 
Prada Menswear S/S 1999
Photographer: Norbert Schoerner
Stylist: David Bradshaw



stylebubble
 
Head Above Water magazine, 2009
Photography: Norbert Schoerner
Stylist: Charlotte Stockdale
Digital Artist: Rainer Usselmann at Happy Finish
Set Design: Glyn Owen
Model: Trish Goff
Hair: Alain Pichon at Streeters
Makeup: Shinobu at CLM





newindustryarts
 
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Third Life




In 1989, Norbert Schoerner walked into The Face with a black and white sketchbook of photographs. 23 years later, his sketchbook is full, saturated in colour and it’s time to share.

Since that one fine day at The Face, German-born photographer Norbert Schoerner has scored campaigns with Comme des Garçons, Prada and Lacoste among so many others. Most recently, he photographed i-D’s Lights, Camera, Action Issue‘s ‘Non-Olympic Sport’ story featuring conker fights and sack races, set in Tokyo and styled by his friend, i-D Fashion Director Charlotte Stockdale. When he’s not in demand for fast-paced fashion photography, Norbert has a knack of capturing those blink and it’s gone, sunset moments where the light is right and the colours are wrong, in the best possible way. It is these images, until now unpublished, that are chronicled in Third Life, a cinematic narrative collecting together the unplanned snaps from Norbert’s photographic diary of the past seven years. Documenting his travels across the world, Third Life explores the submergence of nature in today’s digi-era of mass culture.

Here, Norbert talks anti-Olympics, virtuals spheres and the www. generation with i-D online.

What does the title ‘Third Life’ mean? It is both autobiographical and inspired by the virtual sphere.

Which countries specifically did you travel to for these pictures? Did you have a favourite city or place? The pictures were taken all over the world but to me the actual location, the “sense of place”, is secondary. It’s more about the narrative context of the images and their juxtapositions.

I absolutely love this picture (featured top) could you tell me about it? Who is the figure? I also love this image very much. It’s by the sea side. I’d say that this figure is an amalgamation of various sitters.

In general, what makes you walk passed something and want to photograph it? You must see so much travelling around, what makes something stand out? I’m not always sure. That’s the reason why I keep taking images and sequencing them. I clearly remember being five years old in the back of my parent’s car, driving past something that sparked my interest. I didn’t have a camera or any idea about the photographic process of investigating a particular reality [I was 5, after all! :wink:] , but I would blink at the scene and take a mental picture of it, sort of simulating a photo being taken, in order to create a record of the place in case I ever came back there.

How do you feel about the mass availability of images? Is it a good thing or a bad thing? We are confronted by such a flood of images that the actual challenge is to apply various filters, to weed out what doesn’t matter, to not be overwhelmed by a complete dilution of meaning.

How do you feel people respond to images in books like this one, rather than on the internet? The tactile sensation of paper, of flicking back and forth through a book or a magazine can’t be replaced by an iPad.

What’s your favourite image-led book? Tokyo Compression by Michael Wolf. And National Gallery by Thomas Demand. Hmmm and the catalogue version of The Clock by Christian Marclay is pretty great too, hang on… that’s 3 already…

When was your first big break? Walking into The Face magazine in ’89 with a bunch of black and white landscapes… and Phil Bicker [art director] telling me that he loved them.

What’s your favourite camera to use now? My eyes.

You recently shot a non-Olympic sports shoot for i-D. Are you excited for the Olympics this year? The story with Charlotte was called non-Olympic. There’s a reason for that. Don’t get me started.

Find your copy here: violetteeditions.com

Text: Felicity Kinsella
Interview: Sarah Raphael

Images from top: ‘They offered me to move in’, Norbert-Schoerner, Third Life; ‘Her meta game’, Norbert Schoerner, Third Life; ‘Everything looks better with pink’, Norbert Schoerner, Third Life; ‘Resurfaced’, Norbert Schoerner; ‘Blueprint for a power spot’, Norbert Schoerner, Third Life; ‘Again, waiting is a challenge’, Norbert-Schoerner, Third Life; ‘Third horse in the wall’, Norbert-Schoerner, Third Life.

source: i-donline.com
 
Prada Fall/Winter 99.00
Model: Angela Lindvall
Photographer: Norbert Schoerner



archivio.vogue.it (Vogue Italia October 1999)
 

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