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Johannes Pääsuke

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Name
  
Johannes Paasuke


Role
  
Photographer

Johannes Paasuke Johannes Paasuke Art

Born
  
30 March 1892 (
1892-03-30
)
Tartu, Livonia, Russian Empire

Occupation
  
Photographer Film director Cinematographer

Died
  
January 8, 1918, Orsha, Belarus

Movies
  
Karujaht Parnumaal, Rannak Labi Setumaa

Walgelillep ev tartus the white flower day in tartu 1913


Johannes Pääsuke (30 March [O.S. 18 March] 1892 in Tartu – 8 January 1918 [O.S. 27 December 1917] in Orsha) was an Estonian photographer and filmmaker.

Contents

Johannes Pääsuke Johannes Paasuke Art

Tartu linn ja mbrus 1914 op johannes p suke


Life

Johannes Pääsuke FileJohannes Psuke 214 35jpg Wikimedia Commons

Very little is known of the youth of Johannes Pääsuke, the fourth of six children to a comfortably-off couple living in Tartu, Livonia, Russian Empire. Johannes's siblings were well educated, but all that is known about Johannes's own education is that he studied photography. On his own account, he started photography at fifteen, that is, in 1907, and it is likely that he contacted the Estonian National Museum (ERM) in 1912, having already taken photographs in various places in Estonia.

Johannes Pääsuke httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

In 1913, Pääsuke began a project for the ERM to document Estonia's lands, trades and architecture through photography and the collection of artifacts.

Johannes Pääsuke Johannes Psuke Wikipedia

A major part of this project was a tour Pääsuke made with an assistant, H. Volter, to the Estonian coast, from 10 June to 29 July 1913. The two traveled most of the way by foot, carrying the normal luggage and also cameras, a tripod, plates and so forth. Three hundred and seventeen photographs remain from this trip, many of Saaremaa and Muhu. Pääsuke's work was highly appreciated by ERM, which opened an exhibition of the photographs on 2 August 1913.

Johannes Pääsuke Johannes Paasuke Art

Pääsuke is known to have taken more than 1,300 photographs on glass plates in this national ethnographic project, which also included two larger series, one made in 1908–13 across much of the south of the nation, and the other made in 1914 in Tartu.

Johannes Pääsuke FileJohannes Psuke 6jpg Wikimedia Commons

Pääsuke was also the first Estonian to make a film. He made about 40 films in his career with 10 films still in existence − five newsreels, four documentaries, and one work of fiction, the political satire Karujaht Pärnumaal (Bear Hunt in the Pärnu County).

In 1915, Pääsuke was conscripted to serve as a second-rank infantryman in the reserve battalion of the Lithuanian Regiment of the Foot Guards; he was mobilized on 8 September and was in St Petersburg on 14 November. He managed to be recognized as a photographer, receiving a camera by the end of the month, and continued his photographic activities both in Russia proper and in Estonia.

Pääsuke died in a train accident in 1918 in Orsha, Belarus.

Photography

Pääsuke is notable as an ethnophotographer, a supplier of photographic documentation to the Estonian National Museum (ENM) in Tartu. By 2003, the ENM had identified 1305 photographs and 723 glass negatives as his work, and suspected that more among the unidentified were also by him. The photographs are of buildings, people, and activities, taken on a 13×18 cm or other plate camera.

Filmography

  • Utotškini lendamised Tartu kohal (Utochkin's flights above Tartu, 1912)
  • Utotškini lend (Utochkin's flight, 1912)
  • Tartu linn ja ümbrus (The Town of Tartu and Environs, 1912)
  • Ajaloolised mälestusmärgid Eestimaa minevikust (Historical memories of the Estonian past, 1913)
  • Retk läbi Setumaa (A Trip through Setomaa, 1913)
  • Karujaht Pärnumaal (Bear Hunt in the Pärnu County, 1914) (Available as 12MB mpeg file.)
  • References

    Johannes Pääsuke Wikipedia