“Contact sheets are mostly a waste of money. Because it is a waste of money, I love them.” Leonard Freed

The decisive moment – in photography this determines everything. It is a synthesis between knowledge, sensitivity, technology, form, coincidence and pure intuition. When all these elements come together, such strong, unique images are created that they transcend the everyday and reveal something of the essence of life. However, what is the crucial factor that turns particular photographs into icons, engraining them into our collective memory? What happened shortly before, what followed subsequently? The contact sheet documents much more than the decisive moment. It provides an intimate insight into the working process of the act of photographing. The artist’s sequences of images follow the traces of movement through the space and also testify to photography’s goal of presenting reality in a way that is transparent.

At the same time, showing this raw material means absolutely breaking a taboo. This medium is not usually intended for publication, remaining in the protected space of the studio or photo workshop as an intermediate product. The contact sheet is first and foremost the photographer’s logbook, a decision-making aid for the selection and indexing of subsequent negative archives. Yet at the same time it is more than an artistic sketchbook; it shows the failed steps taken en route to the end product with all its errors, blunders, blind alleys – and lucky coincidences. Here, each twist and turn and every decision has been recorded. With this complete transparency and exposure of his working methods, the photographer makes himself vulnerable. He risks breaking the aura of the single image and disenchanting the creative process. Hence when looking at the contact sheet, the viewers become fascinated. On the one hand because they can participate directly in the process, looking over the artist’s shoulder, and on the other hand because they are doing something forbidden – like looking at someone else’s diary or into their wardrobe.