Portraits of an Age: Photography in Germany and Austria 1900-1938 FROM THE PUBLISHER
The process of creating a portrait involves much more than the dialogue between the photographer and his model. The visual experience shared by portrait subjects, authors, and viewers casts self-presentation and photographic interpretation into pre-existing molds. Yet, individuality and spontaneity gained significant ground in the years following the fin de siècle, when efforts to escape from dictorial rule in the late 1930s led to even greater concern with individuality. The resulting portraits document the changing image of middle-class society in Germany and Austria, while demonstrating the rise of photography as an independent force. Gradually, the refined salon portraits of such artists as Nikola Perscheid and the Atelier d'Ora gave way to the crystalline elegance of heads and faces by Trude Fleischmann, Lotte Jacobi, and Hugo Erfurth. Umbo's extreme close-ups, Helmar Lerski's light-modeling, and Laszlo Moholy-Nagy's experiments radically altered the human image in entirely unexpected ways. Containing some 150 portraits by more than 35 photographers, this book offers a splendid survey of portrait photography in Germany and Austria from 1900 to 1938.Other featured artists include Josef Albers, Antios, Gertrude Arndt, Aenne Biermann, Steffi Brandl, Raoul Hausmann, Lotte Jacobi, Edmund Kesting, Heinrich Kühn, Lucia Moholy, August Sander, and Cami Stone. Edited by Monika Faber and Janos Frecot.
Essays by Monika Faber, Janos Frecot and Elisabeth Moortgat. Clothbound, 9.25 x 11.25 in./176 pgs / 128 color and 30 b&w.