The street is like a
stage of everyday life, the public sphere of much of our existence, especially
in larger cities where the critical mass of the urban environment easily
provides artists with an array of rich visual materials and activities. It is
no wonder then that the genre of documentary street photography has evolved
into one of the most defining elements of the medium. The streets of New York,
Paris and London inspired some of the most iconic photographs created by the
medium’s foremost practitioners.
Canadian
cities were no less kind to photographers, if less famous than their European
or American counterparts. In the 1950s and 1960s, Toronto and Montreal, in
particular, experienced a surge of documentary photographic activity on their
streets. It was the golden age of street photography, when Sam Tata, John Max,
Michel Lambeth, Michael Semak and John Reeves—to name a few—walked the streets,
cameras in hand, and incessantly observed and recorded the grandeur of staged
spectacle like parades and celebrations, or the subtleties of quotidian life en
passant. In the post-war period the country was on a cultural and
economic upswing, and documentary photographers helped to solidify a new sense
of identity for Canadians. Mass circulation magazines like Star
Weekly and the
weekend inserts in large daily newspapers regularly published photo stories;
the first galleries dedicated exclusively to photography began to be
established; and photographic books began to appear.
It was into this ambience of positivism that
a young German photographer, Lutz Dille, stepped off the train in Hamilton in
1951, having sailed from Hamburg to Quebec City aboard a converted trooper ship
full of immigrants. He arrived with nothing but a few clothes, $30 in cash (a
loan from Canadian consular officials in Hanover, Germany, that had to be paid
back, together with the ship passage), his precious Leica III f
camera and his enlarger wrapped in two blankets in a wooden crate. He had no
knowledge of English, but the 29-year-old immigrant was endlessly resourceful.
According to his daughter Maya Dille, “[My father] was a survivor. He was very
good at keeping a pretty good lifestyle on almost zero money.” In time he would
become one of the leading documentary photographers in Canada.
Lutz
Dille was born in Leipzig into a well-to-do middle class family who prospered
in the fur-trade business (on his mother’s side), especially after Hitler’s
National Socialists took power in 1933 and the demand for leather for army
uniforms increased. His father, a bureaucrat in the postal system, was an
amateur photographer who owned a wooden view camera. In his unpublished memoir
written in 2002, Dille vividly describes a dramatic family photo session that
speaks as much to the complex state of taking photographs, and the expertise
which that required, as to the advanced economic state that his bourgeois
family enjoyed.
“My father kept [the camera] in a leather-lined travel case, also a
wooden tripod, where the camera had to be mounted on… All the moving parts and
buttons were made of brass. The lens was an Anastigmatic—he was very proud of
it. All of it looked very impressive to me… The day came to have a family
photograph taken. There we were, all placed in front of the camera and tripod,
my father carefully arranging the magnesium powder on a metal stand next to the
camera, a long fuse hanging down at one side, to be lit at the right time, to
have the powder explode and light up the scene. My father took his place under
a large black cloth behind the camera, focusing on us three, my mother, sister
and myself on the matte glass, all in order. The wooden cassette holding the
glass plate was inserted, the lens was covered, then the cassette was slid
open, we received our very last instructions: ‘Don’t look at the magnesium
powder exploding. Do not close your eyes!’ My father looked for his matches…an
exciting scene was developing in front of me…he struck a match and lit it with
a hanging-down fuse. My father rushed to take his place among us… I was
watching the sparkling little flame creeping up to the powder…the little flame
turned sideways towards the magnesium…the powder exploded…a bright flash, a
slight bang, our family was exposed to the emulsion on the glass plate. Father
rushed back, put the lens cover back over the lens and closed the cassette. He
developed the exposed plate under a red light in the bathroom. All was fine,
only my mother had her eyes closed!”
But
these wonderful experiences in his home belied the uneasiness that he
increasingly felt after Hitler came to power. He wrote, “All changed. Even the
air must have felt different…‘disagreeable’ books were openly burned….Hell
started in Leipzig.” The young Dille was horrified when in 1938 Jewish stores
had their windows broken en masse, and the government “gave that night of
horror a nice name, Kristallnacht [Night of the Crystals].” Worse, he
became aware that “the Lewinsons and the Zollfreis were not in their apartments
anymore. Did they move away? My parents did not know, and did never talk about
them at all…” And what happened to the young painter across the street from the
photography atelier where Dille worked? His boss told him, “The Jew doing his
degenerate paintings was finally picked up!”
Dille
decided that he didn’t want any part of the Nazi master plan, and escaped to
Denmark by riding his bicycle to the border. This marked the beginning of a
life spent escaping from one situation or another. It would be photography that
would provide him a sense of constancy and a life-long refuge. But the Danish
authorities handed him over to the German police and, quite rapidly, Dille was
arrested, conscripted into the army and sent to the eastern front. He worked as
a reconnaissance photographer and photographed Russian territory from a
zeppelin.
It
was at the front that he produced his first significant photographs and
documented Russian peasants fleeing the front near Smolensk. In a classic but
somewhat blurry image made in 1943 (that has not been previously published), he
brilliantly captured the essence of “refugees in flight.” It is a visual drama
of a peasant hurriedly setting off on foot under a menacing dark sky and
straining to pull a wagon loaded with the family’s belongings, trailed by a
young boy and older women with their prized investments of a cow and a goat
tethered to a partially visible wagon alongside. His sense of timing and
composition showed that the 21-year-old had a keen eye for the humanistic
photographic moment.
After the war Dille attended an art college in Hamburg, but as soon as he had
an opportunity, he emigrated to Canada, the New World where he had heard that
“a new life was possible.” At first he lived in seedy rooming houses and the
Fred Victor Mission. He was touched by the kindness of people who had few
material resources but a kind heart. One night, having been brought to the
mission by the police—he later recalled that his ride in the back seat of the
police vehicle was his “first ride in a big American car”—a fellow roommate, a
total stranger, realizing that the foreigner was hungry, immediately reached
underneath his pillow, grabbed “two soft slices of soft white bread,” cut a
large swath of onion, placed it in the bread and gave it to him to eat. Dille
wrote, “from his hands my dinner came into mine.”
Dille cherished these acts of spontaneous kindness, which would later
inform his approach when he photographed the more vulnerable members of society.
His 1957 photograph of a group of men in a bread line in front of the Scott
Mission is a testament to the inequality that exists in society. They are
dutifully waiting for the mission’s doors to open in the evening; they are
quiet and bent over, tired from wandering in the streets all day in winter,
worn out by life, yet accepting of the sad turn of fate that Lady Luck has
played on them. All the while, the imposing front end of a Chrysler, its
gleaming chrome bumper and grill in the shape of some aggressive fantasy
creature that seems to stand as a guard of these wretched, but dignified men…as
if to keep them in their place, in their proper station in life. It is a
photograph of an intimate world, impenetrable to most people, but not to Dille,
who had a unique talent of inviting himself into the worlds of others. His
approach was compassionate, always respecting the dignity of those whom society
hardly respected.
But
he also loved to document the spectacle of the people who might have owned that
Chrysler, the well-to-do of Toronto. His “Orangemen’s Parade, 1964” documents
two ladies at the Orange Lodge’s parade. It is respectful, yet humorous and
coy, and loaded with symbolism. To be sure, the two elderly matrons are
bedecked with the accoutrements of the ruling class that they represent: white
dresses with frilly summer hats, matching white gloves, pearl necklace and
earrings, ornate eyeglasses, and the chain of office of the Orange Lodge. At
first they appear as anything but ordinary women, powerful warriors for their
cause. But they are also both wearing Brownie cameras around their necks, which
one of them is in the act of using, and it is this through this subtle gesture
that Dille has masterfully captured the revelatory moment: behind the social façade,
they are rather ordinary humans enjoying their moment of staged history in the
sunshine. Dille has made their moment his moment, and by extension, our moment as viewers.
He tirelessly roamed the streets with his camera, working in black and
white. It was all about “being there,” as he put it in an article written in
2004 by Leslie Ference in theToronto
Star. “For the main part, I prefer to photograph on the street.
That’s where I think people are most themselves, where they are their most
honest…I mean honest in their behaviour, in their way of being.
“In my photography I like to emphasize the obvious, the expressions, the
gestures which I think typify the person or persons I am photographing.
“What
do I want of my work? I want the image to move the viewer. I want the viewer to
identify in some way with the image…because that’s what my photography is all
about. It’s about US.”
Nomadic and restless by nature, Dille
travelled widely. Unhappy with Hamilton, he soon moved to Toronto. But in the
1950s, Toronto the Good was not very hospitable to a European temperament (he
was once arrested for carrying two bottles of unopened beer in the pocket of
his coat as he walked home), and he soon moved to Montreal. He opened a
short-lived portrait studio on Stanley Street and met many people at the
National Film Board who would later give him freelance work as a
cinematographer. But, again, Dille was “a loner, always wanted to operate on
the edge of things,” according to his lifelong friend and filmmaker Terence
Macartney-Filgate. Needless to say, he moved back to Toronto, which, after an
enriching Montreal experience, Macartney-Filgate said, “was like moving back to
a penal colony.” He survived by working as a cinematographer for CBC programmes
like Man Alive and The
Nature of Things.
True to his character, he didn’t stay still very long, and travelled in
search of photographs. He produced memorable pictures in Nova Scotia, Mexico,
Sweden, Ireland, England, Italy and New York.
In
1961 Dille roamed through Naples, the city that most embodied the pathos of
post-war Italy. He immortalized a young teenage boy tethered by a thick rope to
a wagon that he pulled, harnessed like a beast of burden. Dille captured the
“worker-of-burden” during a momentary pause, as the boy inexplicably craned his
neck to look up toward the sky. The gaze in his eyes—brightly lit by the open
sky—is full of hope and despair at the same time. It is a face that we have
seen before, in the films of the Italian neorealist director Vittorio de Sica.
In Dille’s photograph the tension of the boy’s tired and smudged face is
juxtaposed against the well-dressed couple casually walking by in the
background. The middle class meets the working class in the theatre of the
street. Later, in the hamlet of Meat Cove, N.S., he photographed an elderly
woman sitting in a doorway, hands clasped on her lap, her fingers braided
together, looking intently at the camera with; her young grandson leans heavily
on her chair with his arms clasped tightly, and a penetrating look in his eyes.
From the soft light, we can tell that they standing just inside the doorway, on
the edge of the street, and they are starkly etched against the darkness of the
empty room around them. It’s as if they are framed by time and not by space,
connected with each other by the similarity of how she braided her fingers and
he entwined his arms. This is the work of a master portraitist, its formality
and composition echoing the work of Paul Strand in New England.
His career finally met with considerable
success when a monograph of his work was published in 1967 by the NFB , Lutz
Dille et son univers / The
Many Worlds of Lutz Dille. It was based on an exhibition curated by
the legendary Lorraine Monk, and it was the first volume in the ten-volume
Image series on Canadian photography. Until then, no other photographer in
Canada had ever had a catalogue of the complete exhibition published.
Dille also made a number of short
personal films in between his stints as cinematographer for the CBC and
the NFB . One of his best known is Johann Strauss Was Here Too,
a whimsical fast-sketch of the city of Vienna, composed mostly of people’s
faces in cafes, on the street, set to music.
By
his own admission, his lifestyle was difficult on his wife, Elizabeth Dille,
and their two daughters. In 1980 Lutz Dille left Canada for good and moved to
Wales with his second wife, Mary. He taught filmmaking in a college, one of the
fewer than four jobs he ever held in his life. In 1986 they moved to a small
village in the south of France, where they led a quiet life, gardening, teaching,
photographing. His last body of work was a photo essay on the small village of
St Pasteur. After his wife Mary died in 2006, he seemed to lose the vigour that
he always had, and died in France two years later.
What is his legacy? He created a unique body of documentary photographs
that have stood the test of time, and like all great works of art, they have a
deeper resonance with the passage of time. His unique talent lay in his ability
to produce photographs that mirror our own realities whenever we walk down the
street.
Lutz
Dille’s photographs are in the collection of the National Gallery of Canada,
the Museum of Modern Art, the Bibliothèque Nationale, and
Griffelkunst-Vereinigung, Hamburg, among other places. In 2004, On
the Street: Photographs of the 1950s and 1960s by Lutz Dille was published in conjunction with an exhibition
curated by Martin Eberle at Stadtisches Museum, Braunschweig, Germany. A
retrospective exhibition of his work was held by the Stephen Bulger Gallery in
1998.
He is hardly a household name in
Canadian culture, but that is changing. French filmmaker Lucas Vernier is
currently making a documentary on Dille called Behind
the Yellow Door, produced by L’Atelier documentaire. And
the University of Toronto Art Centre recently ran an exhibitionof 22 of his images of Toronto ,
curated by former director Niam O’Laoghaire and intern Parisa Radmanesh. Credit: povmagazine
Fotos: © Lutz Dille (Wodbine racetrack, 1956 /
Stephen Bulger Gallery e Londres, 1961/ Museum of London)
All images © Lutz
Dille
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