eNews  
website            online version   edit | unsubscribe  
 
 
 
Paragons / Afterimages
 
Carl Röttger (Kaiserliche Hofbuchhandlung H. Schmitzdorff)
Reproduction of a painting by Balthasar Denner, Portrait of an Old Woman,
The State Hermitage Museum, Saint Petersburg, 1868, albumen print
© Archiv der Universität der Künste, Berlin
 

Paragons / Afterimages

 
Photographs from the Berlin University of the Arts 1850 – 1930
 

Ottomar Anschütz » Karl Blossfeldt » Adolphe Braun » Eugène Cuvelier » Georg Maria Eckert » Constant Alexandre Famin » Fratelli Alinari » Gustave Le Gray » Jakob August Lorent » Albert Renger-Patzsch » James Robertson » Henry Peach Robinson » F. Albert Schwartz » Giorgio Sommer » Wilhelm von Gloeden » Carleton E. Watkins » Zander & Labisch » ...

 
21 May – 5 September 2021
 
 

Museum für Fotografie

Jebensstr. 2, 10623 Berlin
Tel: +49 (0)30   3186 4825
mf@smb.spk-berlin.de
www.smb.museum/mf
www.facebook.com/staatlichemuseenzuberlin
Tue-Sun 11am-7pm, Thu 11am-8pm
 
 
Paragons / Afterimages
 
Hermann Priester (active 1860-1890)
Shipment of the Borsig locomotive with Paul and Clara Meyerheim (with quadrature grid), before 1873, collodion print
© Archiv der Universität der Künste, Berlin
 
 
"Paragons/Afterimages" – this conceptual coupling refers both to correlations between images and to the production of images that refer back to pre-existing models and archetypes. In the art academies and schools of applied arts in the 19th and early 20th centuries, photographs served as "models" or "paragons" and functioned as an independent and didactic class of images in their own right. Photographic reference material was an important resource in the creative practice of aspiring artists, and their use led to the creation of "afterimages" in art classes: paintings, sculptures, drawings and graphic.
 
 
Paragons / Afterimages
 
Wilhelm von Gloeden (1856-1931)
Male nude with quadrature grid, Taormina, ca. 1890, albumen print
© Archiv der Universität der Künste, Berlin
 
 
The archives of the Berlin University of the Arts have preserved a valuable collection of photographic images used as teaching aids that dates back to the 1850s, having originally been established by the university’s predecessor institutions, the Royal Prussian Academy of the Arts and the School of Applied Arts, then part of the Kunstgewerbemuseum. With approximately 25,000 individual photographic prints and additional bundles and albums, the collection is unique in Germany. For a long time largely ignored, in recent years it has been more thoroughly catalogued and researched, and is now being presented for the first time in this exhibition.
 
 
Paragons / Afterimages
 
Carleton Watkins (1829-1916)
Sequoia Grove, Calaveras County, ca. 1872, albumen print
© Archiv der Universität der Künste, Berlin
 
 
The most common pictorial genres and motifs include reproductions of artworks, landscapes, nature studies of water, clouds, trees, plants, rocks and the like, architectural scenes, still lifes, portraits, genre scenes and tableaux vivants, nudes and animal studies, along with Oriental and historical representations. The original studies – distributed in France as études d’après nature – are made by well-known European and American photographers.
 
 
Paragons / Afterimages
 
Albert Zander (1864-1897) & Siegmund Labisch (1863-1942)
Plaster cast of a dissected dog’s corpse, ca. 1893, gelatin silver developing-out paper print
© Archiv der Universität der Künste, Berlin
 
 
unsubscribe here
Newsletter was sent to newsletter@newslettercollector.com

© 20 May 2021 photo-index UG (haftungsbeschränkt)
Ziegelstr. 29 . D–10117 Berlin
Editor: Claudia Stein & Michael Steinke
contact@photo-index.art . T +49.30.24 34 27 80