As a photographer, Matter won acclaim for his purely visual approach. A master technician, he used every method available to achieve his vision
As a photographer, Matter won acclaim for his purely visual approach. A master technician, he used every method available to achieve his vision
Die Bilder von Paul Senn sind zu Ikonen eines historischen Unrechts geworden.
Annemarie Schwarzenbach’s most famous journeys took her East, but in 1937 she travelled through the southern states of the US, still suffering from the Depression and divided by segregation.
Fotografien zählen für uns heute zu den wichtigsten Zeugnissen der Modernisierung während der Zwischenkriegszeit. Viele Städte sind im Gedächtnis der Nachwelt mit bestimmten Fotografen verbunden, die sich zu Chronisten dieser Entwicklung machten.
Der bedeutende Berner Fotograf Paul Senn hielt auf Streifzügen sein Bern fest. Eine zarte Liebeserklärung.
Annemarie Schwarzenbach’s most famous journeys took her East, but in 1937 she travelled through the southern states of the US, still suffering from the Depression and divided by segregation.
Wohltätige Institutionen steckten Buben und Mädchen bis in die 1970er Jahre zu Pflegeeltern und in Anstalten. Viele wurden misshandelt. – Paul Senn hat anfangs der 1940er Verdingkinder im Kanton Bern fotografiert,
Der vergessene Chronist der Kriegs- und Nachkriegszeit wurde wiederentdeckt: Ein neues Buch widmet sich den Arbeiten des Zürcher Fotografen.
Jeden Freitag präsentiert Redaktion Tamedia Fundstücke aus dem Archiv der Fotostiftung Schweiz. Heute: Schwarzweisse Ansichten aus Cafés in aller Welt.
As a photographer, Matter won acclaim for his purely visual approach. A master technician, he used every method available to achieve his vision
Walter Bosshard (1892–1975) est le premier photojournaliste suisse qui s'est rendu célèbre à l'international par ses reportages. Ses reportages photo
Emil Schulthess, famous Swiss photographer, 1961
The Shanghai office is committed to cultural exchange and artistic collaboration between Switzerland and Mainland China, Hong Kong, Macau and Taiwan.
Unless otherwise noted, these images are circa 1940s. Gustave Roud (20 April 1897, Saint-Légier – 10 November 1976, Moudon), French-speaking Swiss poet and photographer. In 1908, at the age of eleven, he moved, along with his parents and sister, to a farm in Carrouge in the Vaud countryside, inherited from his maternal grandfather; he would spend the rest of his life there. In high school he studied the classics and took classes with the renowned Swiss conductor Ernest Ansermet and the Swiss-French writer Edmond Gilliard. He continued his study of the classics at the University of Lausanne, where he obtained his licence ès lettres (equivalent to a Bachelor of Arts). During this time, he translated the poems of Hölderlin, Novalis, and Rilke, while also actively participating in a number of literary journals. Afterwards, while living a solitary life in his family farm at Carrouge, often in frail health, he maintained numerous friendships with artists, poets, and other intellectuals, and was also a mentor to the young Philippe Jaccottet, who would later become one of Switzerland's most accomplished poets. "Autoportrait au bureau", circa 1917. Considered one of the greatest poets of Romandie - the French-speaking part of western Switzerland - Roud's poetry is inspired by and dedicated to the landscapes of the Haut-Jorat. As a poet and as a man, he was in a constant state of wandering while absolutely rooted to the landscapes that he never actually left; "the road, my only country ...", he wrote, but that road was only a series of postponed departures, vague, endangered, fading. "Chemin de campagne avec vue sur Lussery". From the age of sixteen, he was also a passionate photographer; eventually he had his own dark room in which to print his work. His photographs, both black and white and color - numbering somewhere around thirteen thousand - were never exhibited during his lifetime. But they were well known to his associates, with whom he shared prints. And the models, his friends, local farm workers, were happy to pose; he was also something of the village photographer, shooting weddings and parties and award ceremonies. The homo-eroticism of much of his work, so obvious to us now, did not go entirely unnoticed in his lifetime. But the subtext of the images and the sexual nature of the poet - whatever that may have been - was left unexamined; only recently have scholars begun to open that door. "Paysans lors de la fenaison". "Table avec des fleurs, des photographies et des coupes, à l'intérieur de la maison de Roud", circa 1930-1960. "Olivier Cherpillod fauchant", circa 1925. "Route bordée d'arbres avec l'église de Cotterd". "Intérieur, avec bouquet de fleurs et photographies", circa 1940-60. "Paysans, dont Fernand Cherpillod, au foin", circa 1935-1955. "Fernand Cherpillod au labour". "Autoportrait avec Fernand Cherpillod". "Route bordée d'arbres et de champs". "Route longeant un bois, avec rue en arrière-plan"., "Autoportrait en ombre, avec André Ramseyer travaillant à la fourche". Autoportrait en ombre... self-portrait in shadow....
Annemarie Schwarzenbach’s most famous journeys took her East, but in 1937 she travelled through the southern states of the US, still suffering from the Depression and divided by segregation.
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