ANDREAS
FEININGER : THAT'S PHOTOGRAPHY
Andreas Feininger
Hardbound,
6.5" x 9", 320 pages
200 duotones
illustrations
2004, Hatje Cantz Publishers
Essays by Otto Letze and Thomas Buchsteiner.
"The camera is superior to
the eye, and the photograph can, and ideally should, portray the
world more graphic than reality itself." - Andreas Feininger
The basic principles underlying the
photographic art of Andreas Feininger are clarity, simplicity,
and organization. The eldest son of painter Lyonel Feininger,
he was born in Paris in 1906. Upon completion of training as a
cabinet-maker at the Bauhaus in Weimar in the early 20s, he went
on to study architecture in the state schools of Weimar and Zerbst.
It was while working as an architectural photographer in Stockholm
that he developed the sweeping vistas and fine balance for which
his pictures were famous. Emigrating to New York following the
outbreak of World War II, Feininger was hired as a photo-editor
by Life magazine. In his own work, he captured images
of urban canyons, skyscrapers, bridges, and elevated railways
in concentrated, atmospheric photographs that are regarded as
classical works today. He applied the same enthusiasm to nature
studies: his detail images of insects, flowers, shells, wood,
and stones imbue these forms with a sculptural character. That's
Photography presents the work of this classic photographer,
who died in 1999.
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