An unforgettable road trip
An unforgettable road trip
Jo Fischer
February 15, 2018
© Jo Fischer
We’d been told over the phone that the car was rust-free and the engine purred like a young kitten. Let’s just say that this didn't exactly correspond with reality, and having seen the car, my friend decided to pass. Still, the seller kindly offered us food and a glass of wine, which we felt we should accept to be polite. Inside his house, he served us goose bones with something rather indeterminable — but the wine was amazing.
We really didn’t want this trip to end as a failed mission, so our friend managed to find another vintage car for sale in the same area — a white Plymouth built in 1966. We went there the next day, and he just decided to go for it.
So now we had a twenty-hour drive ahead of us. It was around 5 degrees Celsius outside, and as evening fell, the temperature inside the car suddenly plummeted. Because as it turned out, my friend’s new pride and joy had a slight issue: the heating didn’t work. We had originally expected this trip to be a two-day affair, so nobody had brought any proper spare clothes. In the boot, we found a completely filthy USA blanket, which we draped over ourselves on the back seat. When we stopped for a quick break and to fill up the tank, Helge started running round and round the car, completely overtired and still wrapped in the blanket. That’s how this shot came about.”
Jo Fischer+-
Born in Berlin in 1970, Fischer grew up in Venezuela and Kuwait. He spent 20 years as a musician before finding his way to photography in 2008. His first solo exhibition took place in Hamburg in 2010, and in 2012 he was invited to the Hamburger Deichtorhallen with his series Herr Fischer bittet zu Tisch (Herr Fischer invites you to take a seat at the table); in 2015 he was nominated for the Kolga Award. Fischer travels constantly, always on the look out for a good story. More
© Jo Fischer