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Last 7 Days Catalog Additions

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  • Berlin  (3)
  • 2005-2009  (3)
  • 1930-1934
  • Amsterdam  (2)
  • Paris  (1)
  • Yerushalayim : Hotsaʾat Ḳoren Yerushalayim
  • Fotograf  (3)
Region
  • Berlin  (3)
Material
Language
Years
Year
  • 1
    Language: Dutch
    Pages: [8] Blatt , Fotografien
    Year of publication: 2005
    Keywords: Kriegsberichterstattung ; Fotograf ; Ausstellung ; Provenienz: Voolen, Edward van Donator
    Note: Werbeprospekt für die Ausstellung und das Joods Historisch Museum als Ganzes
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  • 2
    Language: French
    Pages: 103 Seiten , überw. Ill.
    Year of publication: 2008
    Keywords: New Bauhaus ; Bauhaus ; Fotograf ; Ausstellung ; USA
    Abstract: The Musée d'art et d'histoire du Judaïsme is organising the first French retrospective of the photographer and designer Nathan Lerner, whose career was closely linked to the New Bauhaus school in Chicago. The son of Ukrainian Jewish immigrants, Lerner was born in Chicago in 1913 and while studying painting at the Art Institute began photographing the poor Maxwell Street district of the city from 1935. His photographs show us the America of the Depression years and the misery of the population of this immigrant district, many of whom were Jews from Eastern Europe. Lerner photographed these people with great empathy but not with the eye of a reporter. His concerns were primarily formal, particularly composition and framing. These social photographs are contemporary to those of Walker Evans, Helen Levitt and Dorothea Lange. On Archipenko̷s advice, Lerner enrolled at the New Bauhaus as soon as the school was opened by László Moholy-Nagy in 1937. He met Arthur Siegel and Harry Callahan there, and immediately began experimenting with abstract photography, using a light box to created compositions of everyday objects, ĺlight drawings̷ and photogrammes. He assisted György Kepes in the Light workshop from 1939 until he took over from him in 1941. In late 1945, Moholy-Nagy asked him to direct the teaching of technical drawing at the school (which had been renamed the School of Design). In 1946, he became the school̷s dean then director of studies. In 1949, he left the school, distanced himself from photography and set up a design studio, Lerner Design Associates, specialised in consumer items: packages and bottles, toys and ĺassemble-yourself̷ furniture. He also designed a modular house, which he built himself in 48 hours in 1951, and the familiar plastic ̮HoneybearŁ jar, one of American marketing̷s most emblematic objects. In 1968, he married the pianist Kiyoko Asai, who introduced him to Japan, and from 1973, there were several exhibitions of his work in the United States, Berlin and Japan. Nathan Lerner died in 1997. This exhibition was made possible by the generosity of his wife, Kiyoko Lerner, who donated a major collection of his photographs to the Musée d'art et d'histoire du Judaïsme. This event has also been an opportunity to recall that Nathan and Kiyoko Lerner protected and revealed the unique and unclassifiable work of Henry Darger, one of the major figures of American Art Brut.
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  • 3
    ISBN: 9789057305412
    Language: Dutch
    Pages: 95 Seiten , Fotografien
    Year of publication: 2008
    Keywords: Fotograf ; Ausstellung
    Abstract: The Jewish Historical Museum is organising an exhibition of photographs by Kurt Lubinski (1899-1969). Although this German émigré photographer is now relatively unknown, he gained a significant reputation as a successful photojournalist for his travel reportages in the 1920s and 1930s, initially in Germany and later in the Netherlands. Lubinski began his career at the end of the 1920s as a photographer at the Ullstein Verlag in Berlin. In 1933 he fled Nazi Germany and emigrated to the Netherlands. He received commissions from Dutch illustrated weeklies and was one of the first photojournalists to travel through the remote areas of the Soviet Union (Siberia and Central Asia), Africa and the American Deep South. He also travelled extensively in Europe, from Gibraltar to the Shetland Islands. In the 1930s Lubinski̷s photographs were among the first to acquaint the general public with images of strange cultures and exotic peoples. Lubinski̷s countless reportages, the texts for which he wrote himself, speak of his great empathy for the underprivileged such as poor Russian peasants, nomads in Kazakhstan, dispossessed Native Americans and black street sweepers in the USA. People are always central to his photography. He observed how, throughout the world, the authenticity of age-old cultures was threatened by modernisation, industrialisation, urbanisation and political developments. His photographs remain, in our age of globalisation, a silent witness to a world that has largely disappeared. Lubinski escaped to England before the outbreak of the Second World War and in 1943 he emigrated to the United States. There he abandoned photography, his archive was lost and his name fell into obscurity. The JHM hopes that this exhibition will restore him to his rightful place in the history of Dutch photography. It is the first time that his work will be exhibited. The majority of the photographs in the exhibition are vintage prints from the collection of Spaarnestad Photo.
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