Bill Brandt. Bombed Regency Staircase, Upper Brook Street, Mayfair. c. 1942. |
Bill Brandt is a founding figure
in photography’s modernist traditions, and this MoMA exhibition represents a
major critical reevaluation of his heralded career. Brandt’s
distinctive vision - his ability to present the mundane world as fresh and
strange - emerged in London in the 1930s, and drew from his time in the
Paris studio of Man Ray. His visual explorations of the society,
landscape, and literature of England are indispensable to any
understanding of photographic history and, arguably, to our
understanding of life in Britain during the middle of the 20th century.
Brandt’s activity during the Second World War, long distilled by
Brandt and others to a handful of now-iconic pictures of moonlit London
during the Blackout and improvised shelters during the Blitz, are
presented here for the first time in the context of his assignments for
the leading illustrated magazines of his day, establishing a key link
between his pre- and postwar work. Brandt’s crowning artistic
achievement, developed primarily between 1945 and 1961, is a series of
nudes that are both personal and universal, sensual and strange,
collectively exemplifying the “sense of wonder” that is paramount in his
photographs. Brandt’s work is unpredictable not only in the range of
his subjects but also in his printing style, which varied widely
throughout his career. This exhibition is the first to emphasize the
beauty of Brandt’s finest prints, and to trace the arc of their
evolution.The show runs until August 12.
There is a 208 page catalogue that supports the show, you can get it from Amazon HERE.
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