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Judith Karasz

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Died
  
30 May 1977

Judith Karasz wwwtateorgukartimagesworkPP80P8098910jpg

Born
  
May 21, 1912 (
1912-05-21
)

Judith Karasz (21 May 1912 – 30 May 1977) was a Hungarian photographer interested in the medium's ability to reveal the hidden structures of everyday subject matter. Her photography brought together social documentary and modernist ideas such as Gestalt theory.

Contents

Early life

Karasz was born in Szeged, Hungary, and spent her childhood between Szeged, Pécs and Budapest. She began taking photographs in high school before enrolling at the École de la Photographie in Arles, France in 1930, followed by the Bauhaus school of art and design.

Bauhaus

On June 21, 1932 Karasz received a degree from the Bauhaus, where she majored in photography. She was taught by Walter Peterhans, who founded the school's photography department in 1929. Influenced by the work of artists such as fellow Hungarian László Moholy-Nagy who had previously taught at the school, Karasz began to experiment with compositional devices, such as bird's-eye perspective, and explored modernist themes and subject matters including industrial landscapes.

Politics

In 1931 Karasz became a member of Kostufa (Kommunistische Studenten Fraktion) a communist student group, and following her active role in election campaigns she was expelled from the Sachsen-Anhalt area of Germany.

Career

Between 1932-1935 Karasz worked as a laboratory technician at the Dephot in Berlin, a photographic agency that represented photojournalists, such as Robert Capa.

Karasz was involved with the Workers-Photography movement, a collective associated with communism dedicated to activating photography for social ends.

In 2014 Tate acquired 5 of her photographs. In 2015 these works were displayed at Tate Modern alongside photographs by Guy Bourdin and Astrid Klein.

References

Judith Karasz Wikipedia