PHOTOGRAPHY
Arno Fischer
Hardbound,
10" x 11¼", 228
pages
184 duotone and 66 color illustrations
2010, Hatje Cantz
Text by Matthias Flügge and Thomas Martin
From the Publisher:
Arno Fischer (*1927 inBerlin) is one of
Germany’s most important photographers. After studying sculpture,
he turned to photography in the fifties. He worked in East Berlin
during this period, and, as a man who walked the line between
East and West, his photographs reflected the situation in the
divided city. There he produced seminal works, including fashion
photography for the legendary magazine Sibylle—Zeitschrift
für Mode und Kultur. In addition to his expressive portraits
of people such as Marlene Dietrich, his haunting travel photos,
taken in the German Democratic Republic, Poland, India, New York,
and Africa, reveal Fischer’s sharp gift for observation
and his talent as a sensitive narrator. “Germany’s
most famous unknown photographer” now lives a reclusive
life in the country, where he uses a Polaroid camera to take casual,
seemingly random close-ups of his garden.
This monograph, featuring texts by Matthias Flügge
and Thomas Martin, is being published in conjunction with a traveling
exhibition organized by the Institute for Foreign Relations. It
presents Fischer’s most important groups of works and provides
an impressive overview of the photographer’s oeuvre. |