franck bohbot captures vienna’s historic amusement park as gallery of sculptural forms

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Franck Bohbot Reveals the Sculptural Side of Vienna’s Prater

 

Franck Bohbot’s photographic series, Architecture of Joy, explores the built environment of amusement, revealing the hidden structural beauty of Vienna’s historic Prater. Opened to the public in 1766 by Emperor Joseph II, the Prater has served as the city’s primary pleasure ground for over two centuries, hosting attractions that range from the iconic Riesenrad to contemporary funfair machinery. The French photographer approaches these ephemeral constructions as significant architectural subjects, documenting their texture and design with a disciplined, front-on gaze. The series transforms a lively amusement park into a gallery of sculptural forms, where the patina of time and the inventiveness of designers stand alongside the human pursuit of escapism and joy.


all images by Franck Bohbot

 

 

Architecture of Joy Explores Temporary Structures

 

Since 2010, Bohbot has been interested in how architecture shapes public spaces and shared experiences. His work combines the precise, repeated approach of German photographers Bernd and Hilla Becher, who capture subjects from consistent angles, with the colorful, observational style of American photographers like William Eggleston and Stephen Shore. This duality, Bohbot explains, allows him to render ordinary structures monumental, creating images that feel cinematic yet remain rooted in the present reality.

 

In Architecture of Joy, Franck Bohbot focuses on the manège, the rides, and the machines of celebration. His photographs document the full spectrum of the Prater, including the gleaming, the garish, the worn, and the quietly intimate moments of workers maintaining the rides. He preserves the authenticity of available light and everyday life through centered compositions, strict frontality, and minimal post-production, inviting viewers to appreciate the structural and aesthetic ambition of these temporary architectures. 


Franck Bohbot’s Architecture of Joy explores the built environment of amusement


revealing the hidden structural beauty of Vienna’s historic Prater


the Prater has served as the city’s primary pleasure ground for over two centuries


the French photographer approaches these ephemeral constructions as serious architectural subjects

franck-bohbot-vienna-historic-amusement-park-gallery-sculptural-forms-designboom-large02

documenting the form, texture, and design of the structures


the photographer approaches the subject with a disciplined, front-on gaze


the series transforms a lively amusement park into a gallery of sculptural forms


the patina of time and the inventiveness of designers coexist with the human pursuit of escapism and joy

franck-bohbot-vienna-historic-amusement-park-gallery-sculptural-forms-designboom-large01

since 2010, Bohbot’s work has been guided by a fascination with how architecture shapes public spaces


rendering ordinary structures monumental


his work combines the approach of Bernd and Hilla Becher with the style of American photographers


creating images that feel cinematic yet remain rooted in the present reality


Franck Bohbot focuses on the manège, the rides, and the machines of celebration

franck-bohbot-vienna-historic-amusement-park-gallery-sculptural-forms-designboom-large03

documenting the full spectrum of the Prater

 

project info:

 

name: Architecture of Joy
photographer: Franck Bohbot | @franckbohbot
location: Prater, Vienna, Austria

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