Inside Minimalism: Hans Hiltermann

Minimalissimo talks to well-known and not-so-well-known minimalist designers, architects and artists about their ideas and motivations. As a result, we should be able to compare views – and you can form your own.

Today: photographer Hans Hiltermann.

Introduction

The Dutch Hans Hiltermann (1960) is a former advertising photographer. After many years of creating artificial scenes packed with interestingness, Hiltermann embarked on a new quest: to find out what is the minimum needed to tell a story.

In 2001, after seven years of experimenting, he finally found his form: hyperreal portraits of people looking right into the camera. He simply called it YOU.

Over nine years that have passed since, Hiltermann realized over 400 portraits – all exactly the same.

 

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Stripped to the very essence

No makeup, no jewelry, no hairdo, no visible clothing, no preference. No smile, no seduction. No reaction.

What’s left is a person without a facade. Someone who has completely left his guard down. There is nothing between you.

This is amplified by the amazingly detailed, hyper realistic photography. Every little detail is exposed – no hiding.

Top that with a 3D effect, and you almost immediately lose the sense of looking at a photo. And actually, you’ve probably never looked more directly into someone’s soul.

That’s the paradox of minimalism: by removing everything, you see everything.

 

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That look

Hiltermann has a rather unique way of working. Through a meditation exercise and visualization he helps his models to create a mental focus, key to the look he’s after.

He asks his models to visualize a person they love and trust. This helps to put them at ease for the shoot, but also to let their guard down.

Interestingly, as a viewer you are actually looking into the eyes of someone who is looking at a person they love and trust – you.

 

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Who is she?

Looking so directly at someone is a rather unique and strange experience. In daily life, staring at someone is regarded as inappropriate, even an act of violence.

The work of Hiltermann invites you to do the opposite. You get the chance to examine someone closely, without the fear of a negative response. The trust in the eyes of the model allows you to.

It gives you complete opportunity to think about the person you’re looking at. Is she beautiful? Is he kind? Is she smart?

You can judge the person without feeling guilty. But be aware: your judgment may say more about you than about the model…

 

All photos © Hans Hiltermann

 

To learn more about the work of Hans Hiltermann, please visit his website: http://documentyou.org/.

Please comment!

What do you think about the choices Hiltermann has made in his work? We’d love to hear!

  1. Fascinating.

  2. Intense.

  3. There is some factor of overillumination which gives a little distorted look, especially in some of the portraits. I don’t know, really, but some faces look like their shape and lightning is too unnatural-looking.

  4. I love them..

  5. I think these are amazing. His website is packed with endless portraits just like these. A real shame he lives/works so far away

  6. This photos are extraordinary
    Love the simplicity and the lightning

  7. Stunning portraits, beautiful people… GO Hans!

  8. I simply love his work.
    Hans has captured the soul of his subjects.

  9. lindo de se ver!!!

  10. The article does an excellent job of expressing the essence of Hans’s work. His lens was a window to my soul. He captured a feeling that I didn’t know anyone could see, not even myself. Well worth a trip to Amsterdam!

  11. Ik spreek geen buitenlands, maar de plaatjes zijn even betoverend als altijd.

  12. Good to see, that you still work on YOU:-)

  13. MORE!

  14. Both YOU Hans and your YOU project rock! Keep rocking sweetie!

  15. I’ve seen it so many times…….i find myself staring at the pictures.
    i love and hate it, its ugly and beautiful, its YOU, it;s amazing.
    Hans is een volhouder. Goede recensie.

  16. Intriguing, especially because of the tension between ‘What’s left is a person without a facade. Someone who has completely left his guard down. There is nothing between you’ and ‘But be aware: your judgment may say more about you than about the model.’
    And in addition also because it raises the question to what extent it is possible to be without guard. Don’t we all internalize our guard, our way of protecting ourselves?
    It remains to be seen, doesn’t it? Even in YOU. Or is that ME?

  17. “Simplify, simplify!”
    -Henry David Thoreau

    The essence (without the blah blah blah) is clear and beautiful.

  18. How thin can you make the line between ‘inside’ and ‘outside’, subject and object, between Me and You?!
    Love it!

  19. The photos are wonderful because they confront you with your own judgement, which is so well explained in the text. It was a very special experience to work with Hans, thank you Hans!

  20. Fascinating, I keep staring back. Lots to see.

  21. muito bom!

  22. Hans is an absolute genius. His art is an expressionof his soul. A master of self and an expressionof universal love. Simply fantastic!