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| Britannica Concise Encyclopedia: Bill Brandt |
For more information on Bill Brandt, visit Britannica.com.
| Art Encyclopedia: Bill Brandt |
(b Hamburg, 3 May 1904; d London, 20 Dec 1983). English photographer of German birth. The son of a British father and a German mother, he suffered the traumas of World War I, followed by a long period of illness with tuberculosis. This affliction caused Brandt to spend much of his early youth in a sanitarium in Davos, Switzerland. Between the ages of 16 and 22 Brandt derived a lot of his knowledge of the world from illustrated books and magazines. His mother was an enthusiast for poster art and took Das Plakat, an up-to-date journal of graphic art that featured work of such contemporaries as Lucian Bernhard (1883-1972). As a boy Brandt became proficient in drawing and painting in watercolours.
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| Photography Encyclopedia: Bill Brandt |
Brandt, Bill (1904-83), the most admired British photographer of the 20th century. He was also, and remains, one of the most mysterious. He liked it to be thought that he had been born in south London but he was actually born in Hamburg, the son of an English father and German mother. The Brandts were international merchants and bankers. Bill Brandt chose a quite different career. His imagination was formed by a cosmopolitan background, including his native Germany (which he came to hate), a crucial period of two and a half years' treatment for tuberculosis in Switzerland in the mid-1920s, training in a Vienna portrait studio in 1928, followed by three months studying with Man Ray in Paris—in the heyday of Surrealism—in 1929. It was in England, where Brandt settled in 1931, that his varied apprenticeship came to fruition. His first book, The English at Home (1936), made full use of the upstairs/downstairs lives in the country houses and London mansions of his banker uncles. Brandt presented a series of piercingly vivid photographs but also powerful juxtapositions from plate to plate. The newly invented flash bulb had become available in 1931 and Brandt—a warm admirer of Brassaï—made good use of it in this and his next book, A Night in London (1938). Once more he explored all levels of society. In 1937, his concern aroused by the Jarrow Crusade (1936), Brandt photographed in the north of England, creating such stark classics as Coal Searcher Going Home, Heworth, Tyneside. Brandt was entranced by the blacked-out London of the ‘Phoney War’ period, which he captured in a series of long exposures. For the Ministry of Information he photographed the Underground stations, turned into ad hoc bomb shelters during the Blitz of 1940. He was constantly at work during the war, photographing all manner of subjects for leading magazines such as Lilliput and Picture Post. This period is summed up in his Camera in London (1948), which also contains his longest—if brief—writing on photography. Among his major subjects during the 1940s were portraiture and landscape. Literary Britain (1951) paired landscapes with the words of the writers associated with them. In 1945 Brandt acquired a Kodak police camera with a wide-angle lens and began another project—the prolonged photographic study which was eventually published as Perspective of Nudes (1961). He wanted, he said, to see like a mouse, a fish, or a fly. With this camera, and later a Hasselblad with a Superwide lens, Brandt reinvented the nude. He summed up his great career with the book Shadow of Light in 1966, followed in 1969 by a retrospective at MoMA, New York. It was shown at the Hayward Gallery, London, and other British centres and changed the climate of opinion about photography as an art.
— Mark Haworth-Booth
Bibliography
| Wikipedia: Bill Brandt |
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Bill Brandt (3 May 1904 – 20 December 1983) was an influential British photographer and photojournalist known for his high-contrast images of British society and his distorted nudes and landscapes.
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Born in Hamburg, Germany, son of a British father and German mother, Brandt grew up during World War I. Shortly after the war, he contracted tuberculosis and spent much of his youth in a sanatorium in Davos, Switzerland[1]. He traveled to Vienna to undertake a course of treatment for TB by psychoanalysis. He was in any case pronounced cured and was taken under the wing of socialite Eugenie Schwarzwald. When Ezra Pound visited the Schwarzwald residence, Brandt made his portrait. In appreciation, Pound allegedly offered Brandt an introduction to Man Ray, in whose Paris studio, Brandt would assist in 1930.[who?]
In 1933 Brandt moved to London and began documenting all levels of British society. This kind of documentary was uncommon at that time. Brandt published two books showcasing this work, The English at Home (1936) and A Night in London (1938). He was a regular contributor to magazines such as Lilliput, Picture Post, and Harper's Bazaar. He documented the Underground bomb shelters of London during The Blitz in 1940, commissioned by the Ministry of Information.
During World War II, Brandt focused every kind of subject - as can be seen in his "Camera in London" (1948) but excelled in portraiture and landscape.[original research?] To mark the arrival of peace in 1945 he began a celebrated series of nudes. His major books from the post-war period are Literary Britain (1951), and Perspective of Nudes (1961), followed by a compilation of the best of all areas of his work,Shadow of Light (1966). Brandt became Britain's most influential and internationally admired photographer of the 20th century. Many of his works have important social commentary but also poetic resonance. His landscapes and nudes are dynamic, intense and powerful, often using wide-angle lenses and distortion.[original research?]
Bill Brandt is widely considered to be one of the most important British photographers of the 20th century.[2]
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