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Ralph Steiner

 

Steiner, Ralph (1899-1986), American photographer and film-maker. After his 1921 graduation from Dartmouth College, where he learned photography, Steiner moved to New York and studied at the Clarence H. White School of Photography. Though he subsequently criticized its curriculum as too reliant on ‘design, design, design’, Steiner's 1920s commercial photography echoed its emphasis on clean modernist composition. Increasingly socially engaged, Steiner turned to a more realist documentary style. The shift is particularly apparent in his films: his early abstract study of water and light, H2O (1929), scored by Aaron Copland, was followed by documentaries in the 1930s. With Paul Strand and Pare Lorenz, he collaborated on The Plow that Broke the Plains (1936), and with Willard Van Dyke co-directed The City (1939). He joined a series of progressive, anti-fascist organizations for independent film- makers in the 1930s. After wartime military service and five years working for MGM in Hollywood, Steiner returned to art and advertising photography in New York. He always insisted that successful photography required deeply personal interpretations. In later years, in Vermont, he pursued expressive cloud photography.

— Patricia Johnston

Bibliography

  • Steiner, R., A Point of View (1978).
  • Payne, C., ‘Interactions of Photography and the Mass Media, 1920-1941: The Early Career of Ralph Steiner’, Boston University Ph.D. dissertation (1999)
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Ralph Steiner (left) and Pare Lorentz

Ralph Steiner (8 February 1899 – 13 July 1986) was an American photographer, pioneer documentarian and a key figure among avant-garde filmmakers in the 1930s. Born in Cleveland, Steiner studied chemistry at Dartmouth, but in 1921 entered the Clarence H. White School of Modern Photography. White helped Steiner in finding a job at the Manhattan Photogravure Company, and Steiner worked on making photogravure plates of scenes from Robert Flaherty's Nanook of the North. Not long after, Steiner's work as a freelance photographer in New York began, working mostly in advertising and for publications like The Ladies' Home Journal. Through the encouragement of fellow photographer Paul Strand, Steiner joined the left-of-center Film and Photo League around 1927.

In 1929, Steiner made his first film, H2O, a poetic evocation of water that captured the abstract patterns generated by waves. Although it was not the only film of its kind at the time -- Joris Ivens made Regen (Rain) that same year, and Henwar Rodekiewicz worked on his water film Portrait of a Young Man (1931) through this whole period—it made a significant impression in its day and since has become recognized as a classic: H2O was added to the National Film Registry in December 2005. Among Steiner's other early films, Surf and Seaweed (1931) expands on the concept of H2O as Steiner turns his camera to the shoreline; Mechanical Principles (1930) was an abstraction based on gears and machinery.

In 1930, Steiner joined the faculty of the so-called Harry Alan Potamkin Film School, which folded shortly before Potamkin's death in 1933; there he met Leo Hurwitz and, inspired by Hurwitz' ideas of utilizing film as a means of social action, left the Film and Photo League and joined Nykino, a loose coalition of New York based cinematographers who pooled footage for use in left-wing newsreels shown at worker's rallies, conventions and during strikes; precious few of these films have survived. During this time Steiner also worked on some topical, fictional "pool" film satires, including Pie in the Sky (1935), the earliest film to involve the talents of Elia Kazan.

Steiner worked, alongside Strand, Hurwitz and Paul Ivano as a cinematographer on Pare Lorentz' The Plow That Broke the Plains (1936) and likewise joined Lorentz on The River (1938) but did not receive credit. Although Steiner remained with Nykino throughout their transition into Frontier Films, he left in 1938, taking the footage of The City (1939) with him. The City, which Steiner co-directed with Willard Van Dyke and featuring original music by Aaron Copland, opened at the New York World's Fair in 1939 and ran for two years.

Despite his own stated disdain of Hollywood and the shared sentiments of his colleagues, in the 1940s Steiner went to Hollywood to work as a writer-producer, but returned to New York after only four years spent there. Then he plunged back into the world of freelance and fashion photography, working for Vogue, Look Magazine and others before retiring in 1962. Steiner then settled in Vermont, where he spent summers on a Maine Island.

Steiner's still photographs are notable for their odd angles, abstraction and sometimes bizarre subject matter; the 1944 image Gypsy & Her Girls is sometimes mistaken for Weegee. His experimental films, however, are considered central to the literature of early American avant-garde cinema, and the influence of Ralph Steiner's visual style continues to assert itself; for example, contemporary avant-garde filmmaker Timoleon Wilkins cites Steiner as an inspiration.

See also

External links

Filmography

  • H2O (1929; cinematographer/director)
  • Mechanical Principles (1930; cinematographer/director)
  • Surf and Seaweed (1931; cinematographer/director)
  • Panther Woman of the Needle Trades, or The Lovely Life of Little Lisa (1931; cinematographer/director)
  • Pie in the Sky (1935; cinematographer/co-director)
  • Cafe Universal (1936; cinematographer/director)
  • Granite (1936; cinematographer/director)
  • Harbor Scenes (1936; cinematographer/director)
  • Hands (1936; cinematographer/co-director)
  • The World Today: Black Legion (1936; cinematographer/co-director)
  • The World Today: Sunnyside (1936; cinematographer/co-director)
  • The Plow That Broke the Plains (1936; cinematographer)
  • People of the Cumberland (1937; cinematographer)
  • The River (1938; cinematographer)
  • The City (1939; cinematographer/co-director)

 
 
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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 "Ralph Steiner" Read more