
Untitled, 2009 [from "Car Crash Studies"]
© Nicolai Howalt
Lay Flat contributor Nicolai Howalt just updated his website with a nice new body of work called Car Crash Studies. Photographs from the project are on view now through March 14th at Martin Asbæk Gallery in Denmark.

3 Comments
February 19, 2009 – 8:14 am
In his series “Finnish View” Jouko Lehtola has also photographed crashed cars beautifully.
http://joukolehtola.com/pages/finv.html
February 24, 2009 – 5:23 am
Car Crash Studies is a thought provoking photographic study of life’s fragility. The images that move between documentation and abstraction are based on cars from traffic accidents.
Nicolai Howalt addresses in his exhibition at Martin Asbæk Gallery a general fear of death, and the intolerable fact that life is not eternal.
Several of the images are almost abstract and look more like landscapes than what they actually are. Collided bodyworks, dents and cracks in varnish appear as highly enlarged details in the monumental works. Another series show more obvious signs of accidents in airbags that have been released.
In this way Howalt approaches and step back from a terrible sight, we find horrible but at the same time can not help but look at – maybe because it leads us to feel relieved to still be alive. This feeling of katharsis upon being confronted with the horror, per delegate, is not a new phenomenon, but central to the Greek tragedies.
The curious connection between the horrible and the beautiful has been a topic for artists, poets and philosophers at all times. For example, the English 18th century philosopher Edmund Burke in his inquiry into the ideas of the beautiful and the sublime, where the latter is interpreted as a sense of horror, that astonishes the mind and soul completely.
Although Car Crash Studies is based on cars that have been involved in accidents Howalt’s works rather attempts to portray an abstract, mental state, namely the duality we feel in relation to accidents or catastrophes when experienced from a distance – as spectators, through representations: as something we watch on TV, in the theatre or in a picture.
The exhibition at Martin Asbæk Gallery thus approaches classical themes, but in contemporary interpretation. Car Crash Studies consists of an installation of light boxes on the floor as well as two series of works hanging on the walls.
February 26, 2009 – 10:30 pm
Australian Photographer , Jeff Busby also did a similar project which was published as a book , Amplified . http://www.ballardian.com/busby.html