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Exhibitions

Fotograf Johan Töpel, Expo 2022

Expo 2022

Fotograf Johan Töpel, IBR 2015

IBR 2015

Single Works

The Artwork Sömn by the artist Johan Töpel
Sömn(2025)
70x93cm, 1/15. 50x67cm, 1/30.
The Artwork Banankompani by the artist Johan Töpel
Banankompani(2025)
70x93cm, 1/15. 50x67cm, 1/30.
The Artwork Strand by the artist Johan Töpel
Strand(2025)
70x93cm, 1/15. 50x67cm, 1/30.
The Artwork Sommarmorgon by the artist Johan Töpel
Sommarmorgon(2006)
70x93cm, 1/15. 50x66cm, 1/30.
The Artwork Hemtrevlig by the artist Johan Töpel
Hemtrevlig(2013)
70x87cm, 1/15. 50x62cm, 1/30.
The Artwork Tvättid by the artist Johan Töpel
Tvättid(2006)
70x104cm, 1/15. 50x74cm, 1/30.
The Artwork Skymning by the artist Johan Töpel
Skymning(2023)
70x105cm, 1/15. 50x75cm, 1/30.
The Artwork Roslag by the artist Johan Töpel
Roslag(2022)
70x105cm, 1/15. 50x75cm, 1/30.
The Artwork Nina by the artist Johan Töpel
Nina(2024)
70x93cm, 1/15. 50x67cm, 1/30.
The Artwork Centralstation by the artist Johan Töpel
Centralstation(2007)
70x88cm, 1/15. 50x63cm, 1/30.
The Artwork Atlas by the artist Johan Töpel
Atlas(2010)
70x89cm, 1/15. 50x64cm, 1/30.
The Artwork Landsting by the artist Johan Töpel
Landsting(2007)
70x94cm, 1/15. 50x67cm, 1/30.
The Artwork Svira by the artist Johan Töpel
Svira(2010)
70x89cm, 1/15. 50x64cm, 1/30.
The Artwork Malin by the artist Johan Töpel
Malin(2022)
70x105cm, 1/15. 50x75cm, 1/30.
The Artwork Gärdet 1 by the artist Johan Töpel
Gärdet 1(2016)
70x104cm, 1/15. 50x74cm, 1/30.
The Artwork Gärdet 2 by the artist Johan Töpel
Gärdet 2(2016)
70x104cm, 1/15. 50x74cm, 1/30.

Biography

Johan Töpel, who used to be an assistant to Johan Fowelin, often chooses a perspective which highlights a place in an unusual manner thereby giving it an air of intermediacy. In his work he is also inspired by Stephen Shore, Andreas Gursky and Candida Höfer. Their images often are dominated by a cool, stiff and diplomatic aesthetic that keeps the viewer at a distance. His own images, however, are comparatively characterised by a sympathetic closeness. In some of his works, the perspective he chooses gives a feeling of a cul-de-sac, as if there was no horizon. This often has the effect of making the viewer gain a more bodily sensation, rather than a mere visual experience.
With a strong sense for the interaction between materials, light and form, he creates intricate scenes that draw in the viewer, generating a resonate experience of scent, sound and movement in these places. The viewer is encouraged to engage with the seemingly dull, empty spaces in a more conscious way; to contemplate the traces of human presence and consumer society as well as the relationship between nature and cityscape. Instead of merely being a witness, the viewer is invited to partake, as both an observer and philosopher, to step between the depicted scene and the camera.