Black and white photograph of layered alpine ridges in the High Tauern Alps, emphasising tonal structure and depth, from the series High Tauern. The Zone Studies IV by Ziggy Kanczukowski

High Tauern. The Zone Studies IV, Ziggy Kańczukowski, 2016

Digital photograph

Pigment print on Hahnemühle

34 x 37 cm (framed); image size 20 x 25 cm (8 x 10")

20 + 1 AP

Certificate of authenticity with hologram

This photograph is part of the High Tauern. The Zone Studies series, whose title refers to the Zone System developed by Ansel Adams - understood by Ziggy Kańczukowski not as a set of technical instructions, but as a disciplined way of thinking about photography. Although experienced in advanced analog processes and long established as a power user of digital tools, the artist postponed a direct confrontation with this method, treating it as a demanding encounter with the tradition that shaped his understanding of photographic craft, responsibility, and visual ethics. The series was realised within the High Tauern National Park, a space long known and repeatedly photographed. This particular work records storm clouds forming above the ridges descending into the Dorfertal. The work does not reinterpret tradition, but marks a moment of readiness - a deliberate entry into dialogue with a method that allows neither shortcuts nor formal compromise.

Like all works in the series, this photograph exists exclusively in a single 8×10 inch format, historically associated with large-format photography and a slowed, disciplined approach to the image. It is produced on acid-free, 100% cellulose paper selected for long-term archival stability. Printing and framing are executed by WhiteWall in Berlin. The work is presented as a finished object, set in a black-painted oak frame with a 2 cm profile, combined with a 5 cm white passe-partout, and protected with museum glass that minimises reflections and provides UV protection. Format, material, and presentation are treated as fixed parameters, reinforcing the photograph as a resolved physical object rather than an image subject to variable reproduction or scaling.

€750

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