German
photographer. After seven years as a miner and a period of national service, he
studied painting in Dresden from 1901 to 1902, which allowed him to approach
photography artistically. He had developed an interest in photography through
work in photographic firms in Berlin, Magdeburg, Halle and Dresden from 1898 to
1899. In 1901 he went to Linz, where he first worked in the Greif Studio, which
he ran from 1902 with his partner Franz Stukenberg as the Studio Sander &
Stukenberg, until he founded the Studio August Sander für Kunstphotographie und
Malerei in 1904. He sold the studio in 1909 and returned to Cologne, where he
ran the Studio Blumberg & Hermann, and in 1910 he founded his own studio in
Lindenthal.
At this point Sander started his major
project, Menschen des 20.
Jahrhunderts, with which he was involved until the 1950s. The theme for the
project grew out of the portraits he made of Westerwald farmers, in whom he saw
the archetypal contemporary man. Building on this, Sander developed a
philosophy that placed man within a cyclic model of society. In these terms,
the peasant class constituted the basis of society, hence his title for the
series of 12 peasant portraits, Stamm-Mappe (see G. Sander, 1980, nos 1–12). The
next group, of skilled workers, is the foundation of civic life, from lawyer to
member of parliament, from soldier to banker. These are followed by
intellectuals: artists, musicians and poets. The cycle closes with the Letzte Menschen, the insane,
gypsies and beggars.
Although this cyclic model of society
was anything but progressive, Sander came into conflict with the Nazis. The
political activities of his son Erich were also held against him, and he had to
interrupt work on this project between 1933 and 1939, when he devoted himself
mainly to the themes of the Rhine countryside and the city of Cologne. The
unusual quality of his portraiture is, above all, its systematic manner; this
made the work a well-designed unity, not only in a sociological and
philosophical sense, but also in photographic terms.
Sander’s portraits, whether half- or
full-length, are always set in a simple environment. He gave a controlled and
intentional hint at the origin and profession of the sitter through the
background or through clothes, hairstyle and gesture. There is no doubt of the
peasant origin of the Three
Young Farmers in Sunday Dress, Westerwald (1913;
Cologne, Mus. Ludwig) on their way to a dance, for example, despite their
clothing. They are given away by the landscape background, their physiognomy,
their clumsy shoes and the rough walking-sticks they are carrying. In contrast, Three Generations of a Farming
Family (1912; see G. Sander,
1980, no. 12) shows clearly that the group had sat on their chairs especially
for the photograph. In the same way, the Master
Cobbler (c.
1924; see G. Sander, 1980, no. 97) is sitting almost demonstratively at his
work table, looking into the camera. In the picture of the Publisher (c.
1923–4; see G. Sander, 1980, no. 280), posing nonchalantly with stick and
newspaper, it is apparent that the subject’s relationship with the countryside
behind him is not that of a farmer but of a walker.
Sander tried in all his works to
incorporate this relationship of sitter to setting up to the last detail, with
great confidence but at the same time with caution. Unfortunately he did not
manage to publish his cycle during his lifetime. Through publication of Antlitz der Zeit and Deutschenspiegel in 1929, he could at least exhibit
excerpts of his idea in book form. His son Gunther worked on Sander’s archive
of more than 540 portraits and published them under the title that August had
originally planned, Menschen
des 20. Jahrhunderts, in Munich in 1980.
After the demolition of his studio by
bombing in 1944, when 40,000 negatives were destroyed, Sander retired to
Kuchhausen in the Westerwald, where he carried on working under primitive
conditions. His name was almost forgotten in Cologne, when L. Fritz Gruber, the
organizer of the Photokina photographic exhibitions there,
brought his photographs back to public attention by showing them at Photokina in 1951. He also convinced the city of
Cologne to purchase for the Stadtmuseum the whole archive of views of the city,
taken between 1935 and 1945, including the negatives. A publication titled Das alte Köln was to commemorate this purchase but
was only completed posthumously in 1984. This part of Sander’s work also shows
a systematic approach, giving proof on the one hand of his closeness to his
home town and, on the other hand, of a very specific and unusual mode of
perception. His series of landscape photographs of the Rhine area, taken
between 1934 and 1939, is an analogous case, forgotten for a long time and only
published in book form in 1975.
The reason for Sander’s international
reputation as one of the most important German post-war photographers lies in
his strict documentation of his view of Man. Although his selection of people
was mainly influenced by personal meetings and was thus hardly representative
in a demographic sense, his portraits remain highly accurate reflections of
their time. His individual approach determined the nature of his work and
guaranteed him an outstanding position in international documentary
photography. In 1964 he received the culture prize of the Deutsche Gesellschaft
für Photographie, of which he had already been an honorary member since 1961.
The great breakthrough in his public reputation, attested to by the
retrospective mounted in 1969 by the Museum of Modern Art in New York, occurred
only after his death.
Reinhold Misselbeck
From Grove Art Online
© 2009 Oxford University Press
Sander era figlio di un carpentiere che
lavorava nell'industria mineraria. Mentre lavorava in una miniera locale,
Sander imparò i primi rudimenti della fotografia assistendo un fotografo che
stava lavorando per la compagnia mineraria. Col supporto finanziario di suo zio
comprò l'attrezzatura fotografica e allestì una sua camera oscura. Svolse il
servizio militare (1897 – 1899) come assistente di un fotografo, e gli anni
successivi viaggiò attraverso la Germania. Nel 1901 iniziò a lavorare per uno
studio fotografico a Linz, diventandone prima socio (1902) e poi unico
proprietario. Nel 1910 lasciò Graz e aprì un nuovo studio a Colonia.
Nei
primi anni venti Sander si unì al "Gruppo degli Artisti Progressivi"
di Colonia e cominciò a pianificare un catalogo della società contemporanea
attraverso una serie di ritratti. Nel 1927 Sander, insieme allo scrittore
Ludwig Mathar, viaggiò per la Sardegna per tre mesi, scattando circa 500
fotografie. Comunque, un diario dettagliato dei suoi viaggi non fu mai
completato.
Il primo
libro di Sander Face of our Time fu pubblicato nel 1929. Contiene una
selezione di 60 ritratti tratti dalla serie People of the Twentieth Century (Ritratti del Ventesimo Secolo). Sotto il regime nazista, il suo lavoro e la sua vita
personale furono pesantemente limitati. Suo figlio Erich, che era un membro del
partito di sinistra Socialist Workers' Party (SAP),
fu arrestato nel 1934 e condannato a 10 anni di prigione, dove morì nel 1944,
poco prima della fine della sua condanna. Il libro di Sander Face
of our Time fu sequestrato nel 1936 e le lastre furono
distrutte. Durante il decennio successivo il lavoro di Sander fu rivolto
primariamente alla natura e alla fotografia di paesaggio. Quando esplose la
seconda guerra mondiale lasciò Colonia e si trasferì in campagna, permettendo
così di salvare la maggior parte dei suoi negativi. Il suo studio fu distrutto
nel 1944 durante un bombardamento.
Il
lavoro di Sander comprende paesaggi, natura, foto di architettura e street
photography, ma è famoso soprattutto per i suoi ritratti, come esemplificati
dalla serie Uomini del Ventesimo Secolo. In questa serie egli cerca di offrire un catalogo della
società tedesca durante la Repubblica di Weimar. La serie è divisa in sette
sezioni: i Contadini, i Commercianti, le Donne, Classi e Professioni, gli
Artisti, le Città e gli Ultimi (homeless, veterani, ecc.).Fonte
©
Die Photographische Sammlung/SK Stiftung Kultur - August Sander Archiv,
Cologne; DACS, London
Nessun commento:
Posta un commento