My first reaction to the article was very strong (but it was at 6:00 am...). I found it to be rather outrageous plagiarism and the fact that the original artwork was altered by removing the very thing that is the central theme seemed pathetic. Having calmed down and read the responses, however, I am beginning to think maybe that is the most interesting aspect of this work: to remove from the photographs what was the ultimate purpose of taking them. On the other hand I can't help thinking: what would August Sander have to say about this?
I am paging through my "Menschen des 20. Jahrhunderts" as I type and I would find it a lot more interesting to remove the sitters from their environments and have them float in white space or something of that sort. If I remove the people in my mind, the images seem fuzzy, empty and boring to me.
A note on the "lost families from Germany": Sander created a body of work that spanned nearly the entire population of Germany between ca. 1892-1952 (btw, this interval spans the old German Empire, the Weimar Republic, Nazi Germany and the early Federal Republic), including farmers, brick layers, coal miners, engineers, inventors, industials, bankers, politicians and artists. The majority of the images were made before 1933, so I do not see any connection in this regard, at least not from the perspective of Sander. The Nazis confiscated and destroyed any from of art that was considered contractory to their doctrines. I am not sure what the author implies by stating: "Maybe the subjects are absent because of the Nazi curse". The people that Sander photographed were not among those that were "lost" but a portion of the sitters may have been involved.
Anyway, thanks everyone for sharing your views.
Regards, Markus Albertz