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Lennart Nilsson

 
Photography Encyclopedia: Lennart Nilsson

Nilsson, Lennart (b. 1922), Swedish photojournalist and celebrated medical photographer. Working with scientists and contributing directly to the development of photographic technology, Nilsson has continually expanded the limits of imaging the human body. Few photographs are better known than his of the growing foetus, and his book A Child Is Born (1965), depicting life from conception to birth, has been published in over twenty countries; the 1965 Life issue featuring Nilsson's photographs sold out its print run of 8 million copies in four days. Nilsson's career began with magazine photography, making an international breakthrough with a picture essay on a polar-bear hunt in 1947. He was under contract to Life 1965-72. With human biology as his special field, Nilsson's recent achievements have included images of the biochemistry of human love, and sensational photography of the HIV virus. He has received numerous awards for both still photography and TV productions. NASA's Voyager I and Voyager II probes both carried photographs from A Child Is Born on their journeys into space.

— Jan-Erik Lundström

Bibliography

  • Nilsson, L., Hans livs bilder (2002)
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Wikipedia: Lennart Nilsson
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Photojournalist Lennart Nilsson on airport Arlanda, Stockholm 1946.

Lennart Nilsson (born 1922) is a Swedish photographer and scientist. He is famous for his photographs of in vivo[citation needed] human embryos and other medical subjects once considered unphotographable, and more generally for his extreme macro photography. He is also considered to be among Sweden’s first modern photojournalists.

Contents

Biography

Lennart Nilsson was born on August 24, 1922 in Strängnäs, Sweden. His father and uncle were both photographers. His father gave him his first camera at age twelve. When he was approximately fifteen, he saw a documentary about Louis Pasteur that made him interested in microscopy. Within a few years, Nilsson had acquired a microscope and was making microphotographs of insects.

In his late teens and twenties, he began taking a series of environmental portraits with an Icoflex Zeiss camera, and had the opportunity to photograph many famous Swedes.

He began his professional career in the mid-1940s as a freelance photographer, working frequently for the publisher Åhlen & Åkerlund of Stockholm. One of his earliest assignments was covering the liberation of Norway in 1945 during World War II. Some of his early photo essays, notably A Midwife in Lapland (1945), Polar Bear Hunting in Spitzbergen (1947), and Fishermen at the Congo River (1948), brought him international attention after publication in Life, Illustrated, Picture Post, and elsewhere.

In 1954, eighty-seven of his portraits of famous Swedes were published in the book Sweden in Profile. His 1955 book, Reportage, featured a selection of his early work. In 1963 his photoessay about the Swedish Salvation Army appeared in several magazines and in his book Hallelujah.

In the mid-1950s he began experimenting with new photographic techniques to make extreme close-up photographs. These advances, combined with very thin endoscopes that became available in the mid-1960s, enabled him to make groundbreaking photographs of living human blood vessels and body cavities. He achieved international fame in 1965, when his photographs of the beginning of human life appeared on the cover and on sixteen pages of Life magazine. They were also published in Stern, Paris Match, The Sunday Times, and elsewhere. The photographs made up a part of the book, A Child is Born (1965); image from the book were reproduced in the April 30 1965 edition of Life, which sold eight million copies in the first four days after publication.[1] Some of the photographs from this book were later included on both Voyager spacecraft.

In 1969 he began using a scanning electron microscope on a Life assignment to depict the body’s functions. He is generally credited with taking the first images of the Human Immunodeficiency Virus, and in 2003, he took the first image of the SARS virus.

Around 1970 he joined the staff of the Karolinska Institutet and has worked there since.

Nilsson has also been involved in the creation of documentaries, including The Saga of Life (1982) and The Miracle of Life (1996).

Awards and honors

Nilsson became a member of the Swedish Society of Medicine in 1969, received an honorary doctorate in medicine from Karolinska Institute in 1976, an Honorary Doctor of Philosophy from the Technische Universität Braunschweig in Germany in 2002, and an Honorary Doctor of Philosophy from Linköping University in Sweden in 2003. He won the Swedish Academy Nordic Authors’ Prize, the first Hasselblad Foundation International Award in Photography (in 1980), the Royal Swedish Academy of Engineering Sciences’ Big Gold Medal in 1989, and in 2002 received the 12th presentation of the Swedish government’s Illis Quorum. His documentaries won Emmy awards in 1982 and 1996.

Nilsson’s work is on exhibit in many locations, including the British Museum in London, the Tokyo Fuji Art Museum, and the Modern Museum in Stockholm.

Since 1998, the Lennart Nilsson Award has been presented annually during the Karolinska Institute's installation ceremony. It is given in recognition of extraordinary photography of science and is sponsored by the Lennart Nilsson Foundation.

Works

Books

  • 1959 Myror (Ants)
  • 1959 Liv i hav (Life in the Ocean)
  • 1963 Halleluja, en bok om frälsningsarmén (Hallelujah, a book about the Salvation Army)
  • 1965, 1976, 1990, 2003 Ett barn blir till (A Child is Born)
  • 1973 Se människan (Behold Man)
  • 1975 Så blev du till (How You were Made)
  • 1982 Vårt inre i närbild (Abbreviated version of Behold Man)
  • 1984 Nära naturen (Close to Nature)
  • 1985 Kroppens försvar (The Body Victorious)
  • 1986 Människan – en fantastisk skapelse (The Incredible Machine)
  • 1986 I mammas mage (Being Born)
  • 1993 Vi ska få ett syskon (We are Getting a Sibling)
  • 2002 Hans livs bilder (Images of His Life)
  • 2006 Life

References

  1. ^ Goldscheider, Eric (10 August 2003). "Fetal positions". Boston Globe. http://www.boston.com/news/globe/magazine/2003/0810/fetus/. Retrieved 2 October 2009. 

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Photography Encyclopedia. The Oxford Companion to the Photograph. Copyright © 2005 by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Lennart Nilsson" Read more