Hugo Erfurth...

Hugo Erfurth, Lovis Corinth, Staatliche Landesbildstelle Hamburg, collection on the history of photography, silver gelatin paper, black and white positive process, image size: height: 22,1 cm; width: 16,4 cm, signed: recto u. right: in lead: Hugo Erfurth, stamp: verso cardboard o. l.: handwritten in blue ink added: B218/5, label: cardboard verso o. l.: in typescript: No. B218/5, Hugo Erfurth, Korinth Erich [with blue ballpoint pen and black felt-tip pen twice corrected to Lovis Corinth], handwritten in lead added: ca. 1920, portrait photography, portrait, self-portrait of an artist, portrait, artist, portrait, self-portrait of a painter, bust, three-quarter view, Lovis Corinth, At the beginning of the 20th century, Hugo Erfurth was one of the most famous professional photographers in Germany, alongside Rudolph Dührkoop and Nicola Perscheid. After completing an apprenticeship as a photographer, he opened his own studio in Dresden at the age of only 22. Soon Erfurth orientated himself towards the up-and-coming pictorialist photography, participated in numerous amateur photographic exhibitions from 1894 onwards and managed to make a name for himself both as an artistically ennobled amateur and successful professional photographer. Portraits are central to his work, which he began taking in 1906 in his new studio, a classicist palace, in a stylishly elegant ambience, appealing to the wealthy bourgeoisie. He also produced numerous portraits of famous personalities, including Käthe Kollwitz, Otto Dix and Joachim Ringelnatz. While his studies around 1905 still show full-length figures depicted in an atmospheric way, from the 1920s onward the focus is on the face, which is photographed against a simple monochrome background. Here, his pictorial approach corresponds to the portrait of classical modernism, whereby the technique of oil printing emphasizes the softness and materiality of the pigments and at the same time places the portraits in the art-photographic tradition
Hugo Erfurth, Lovis Corinth, Staatliche Landesbildstelle Hamburg, collection on the history of photography, silver gelatin paper, black and white positive process, image size: height: 22,1 cm; width: 16,4 cm, signed: recto u. right: in lead: Hugo Erfurth, stamp: verso cardboard o. l.: handwritten in blue ink added: B218/5, label: cardboard verso o. l.: in typescript: No. B218/5, Hugo Erfurth, Korinth Erich [with blue ballpoint pen and black felt-tip pen twice corrected to Lovis Corinth], handwritten in lead added: ca. 1920, portrait photography, portrait, self-portrait of an artist, portrait, artist, portrait, self-portrait of a painter, bust, three-quarter view, Lovis Corinth, At the beginning of the 20th century, Hugo Erfurth was one of the most famous professional photographers in Germany, alongside Rudolph Dührkoop and Nicola Perscheid. After completing an apprenticeship as a photographer, he opened his own studio in Dresden at the age of only 22. Soon Erfurth orientated himself towards the up-and-coming pictorialist photography, participated in numerous amateur photographic exhibitions from 1894 onwards and managed to make a name for himself both as an artistically ennobled amateur and successful professional photographer. Portraits are central to his work, which he began taking in 1906 in his new studio, a classicist palace, in a stylishly elegant ambience, appealing to the wealthy bourgeoisie. He also produced numerous portraits of famous personalities, including Käthe Kollwitz, Otto Dix and Joachim Ringelnatz. While his studies around 1905 still show full-length figures depicted in an atmospheric way, from the 1920s onward the focus is on the face, which is photographed against a simple monochrome background. Here, his pictorial approach corresponds to the portrait of classical modernism, whereby the technique of oil printing emphasizes the softness and materiality of the pigments and at the same time places the portraits in the art-photographic tradition
Hugo Erfurth...
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Bildnachweis:
Sepia Times / Kontributor
Redaktionell #:
1449484527
Kollektion:
Universal Images Group
Erstellt am:
2. Januar 1920
Lizenztyp:
Releaseangaben:
Kein Release verfügbar. Weitere Informationen
Quelle:
Universal Images Group Editorial
Objektname:
981_05_lcmh201205_03247
Max. Dateigröße:
3193 x 4320 px (27,03 x 36,58 cm) - 300 dpi - 4 MB