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Bill Brandt

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Nationality
  
German-British

Known for
  
Photography

Role
  
Photographer


Name
  
Bill Brandt

Website
  
billbrandt.com

Movies
  
Shadows from Light

Bill Brandt Bill Brandt HSTRY

Full Name
  
Hermann Wilhelm Brandt

Born
  
2 May 1904 (
1904-05-02
)
Hamburg, German Empire

Died
  
December 20, 1983, London, United Kingdom

Artwork
  
East Sussex Coast, Campden Hill, London

Similar People
  
Brassai, Ansel Adams, Cecil Beaton, David Bailey, Stephen Dwoskin

Bill brandt bbc master photographers 1983


Bill Brandt (born Hermann Wilhelm Brandt; 2 May 1904 – 20 December 1983), was a British photographer and photojournalist. Although born in Germany, Brandt moved to England, where he became known for his images of British society for such magazine as Lilliput and Picture Post, later his distorted nudes, portraits of famous artists and landscapes. He is widely considered to be one of the most important British photographers of the 20th century.

Contents

Bill Brandt Bill Brandt Inspiration from Masters of Photography

Bill brandt


Career and life

Bill Brandt Bill Brandt Biography Bill Brandt39s Famous Quotes

Born in Hamburg, Germany, son of a British father and German mother, Brandt grew up during World War I, during which his father, who had lived in Germany since the age of five, was interned for six months by the Germans as a British citizen. Brandt later disowned his German heritage and would claim he was born in South London. Shortly after the war, he contracted tuberculosis and spent much of his youth in a sanatorium in Davos, Switzerland. He traveled to Vienna to undertake a course of treatment 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, whose Paris studio and darkroom Brandt would access in 1930.

Bill Brandt Bill Brandt Final Major Project

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 concentrated on many subjects – as can be seen in his "Camera in London" (1948) but excelled in portraiture and landscape. 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 his best 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.

Bill Brandt wwwvamacukdataassetsimage00202084425016

Brandt died in London in 1983.

Exhibition

  • 2004: Bill Brandt: A Centenary Retrospective, 24 March – 25 July 2004, Victoria & Albert Museum, London. "A selection of rare and famous prints from the Brandt archive".
  • 2013: Shadow and Light, Museum of Modern Art, New York. Curated by Sarah Hermanson Meister.
  • 2013: Bill Brandt, Early Prints from the Collection of the Family @Edwynn Houk, Edwynn Houk Gallery, New York. "A selection of rare and famous prints from the Brandt archive".
  • Recognition

    In 2010, an English Heritage blue plaque for Bill Brandt was erected in London at 4 Airlie Gardens, Kensington, W8.

    References

    Bill Brandt Wikipedia