Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Herbert Gehr

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
Herbert Gehr


Herbert Gehr Herbert Gehr Pleasurephoto

Herbert Gehr (born Edmund Bert Gerard) (1911-1983) was a Jewish American photographer and television director who was associated with Life magazine.

In the Spanish Civil War Gehr worked as a stills photographer before travelling to Egypt at the wars commencement where he shot newsreels for Wide World photos. With the advent of Nazism in his native Germany, Gehr moved to the United States in March 1937. Upon arrival in the United States, Gehr found representation with the Black Star photo agency, and began working for Life magazine in 1938, photographing a large variety of subjects and stories for them over the next few years. By 1940 Gehr had been described as having shot such diverse subjects as "sphinxes, hair ribbons, wars and movie stars" for the magazine.

Gehr's photographic style was renowned for his use of artificial light. Gehr once used twenty assistants to illuminate six blocks of Manhattan's Meatpacking District with flash bulbs, and in a photograph of the Great Sphinx of Giza taken for Life in 1938, he used the headlights of three cars to illuminate the scene, with an exposure time of three hours. Gehr left Life in 1950 and became a television director for ABC.

In July 1950, shortly after leaving Life, Gehr shot his wife dead. In search of evidence of his adultery, Gehr's wife had unexpectedly arrived at his country house near Brewster, New York with detectives, while Gehr was with his mistress. Mistaking the visitors for prowlers, his shooting also injured two of the four detectives present. His mistress leapt out of a window. Gehr was arrested and stood trial for second degree murder, and was acquitted. Gehr changed his name after the trial. At the conclusion of the case the jurors blamed Gehr's case on the divorce laws of New York state, as his wife had been seeking evidence for his adultery, which was required by law.

Gehr resumed his work as a television director after his trial, and won three Emmy Awards before his 1983 death.

References

Herbert Gehr Wikipedia