martedì 5 aprile 2016

LEE MILLER: PHOTOGRAPHS - MARTIN GROPIUS BAU, BERLIN




LEE MILLER
PHOTOGRAPHS
Martin Gropius Bau
Niederkirchnerstraße 7 - Berlin
19/3/2016 - 12/6/2016

Lee Miller (1907-1977) is one of the most versatile USA photographers and photo-journalists of the 20th century. She united opposed genres such as surrealism, fashion, portrait and travel photography, as well as war reporting into her repertoire of works. The exhibition leads through the photographer’s diverse stations of life in New York, from Paris and Egypt up to Germany. Approximately 100 photographs that are exhibited illustrate Lee Miller’s life from different perspectives: as assistant, muse and partner of Man Ray in Paris in the 1930s; and as a pioneer of art photography and a photo-journalist during the Second World War. Her photographs of Germany’s national-socialist aerial bombardments of London, the liberation of Paris and the concentration camps in Dachau and Buchenwald are ranked amongst the most haunting war documents of the 20th century.
Lee Miller began her artistic career in Paris in 1929, when she began taking surrealist photographs with Man Ray. She was more than merely his muse and assistant, since the photographs were often created in close collaboration. In the nude photographs, which Man Ray took of her, Miller – a photo model for Vogue - deliberately put herself into the limelight.
In her own photographs – nudes, portraits and street scenes – she focused on surrealism’s stylistic devices and developed her own artistic language: Miller distorted the motifs of image by choosing close-cropped image details, fragmenting the human body and working with solarisation techniques, hence reversing the black and white values using strong overexposure.
After a short stay in the USA since 1932, where she continued to run her photo studio that she had founded in Paris, Miller followed her husband to Egypt in 1934. There and in subsequent trips over Athens to Bucharest, the photographer recorded landscapes, architecture and people in her photographs. Her eye for the ambiguity of reality, rooted in surrealism, is found again in the natural forms of her landscape pictures.
In 1938 Miller settled in England, working for a photographer for British Vogue from 1940 onwards, and recording the social circumstances and disastrous consequences of the Second World War as a photo-journalist. She photographed the destruction by German bombardments during the so-called “Blitz” in London. The pictures of destroyed city streets and people in full battle regalia are often staged artfully and they are still clearly characterised by Surrealism.
As one of few Americans, Miller obtained accreditation as a war correspondent and reported from the American front line for Vogue since 1944: She photographed the liberation of Normandy by the Allies and went through Europe with the advancing American troupes. Her works as a photo-journalist are characterised by an increasingly direct and objective pictorial language, which focuses on the documentary aspect. From 1945 on Miller photographed the consequences of the war in Germany and Austria and recorded as one of the first photographers the crimes of National Socialists in recently freed concentration camps in Dachau and Buchenwald. During a stop-over in Munich Muller spent time in Adolf Hitler’s private apartment, which had been occupied by American soldiers, and staged herself in the famous photograph of herself in the dictator’s bathtub – a politically charged act of appropriation allowing for manifold interpretations. The photograph was taken by her colleague David E. Sherman. In her entire photographic work Lee Miller created both staged as well as documentary images, which are unique exactly in their subjectivity and ambiguity.
The exhibition presents the entire spectrum of Lee Miller’s photographic work. All photographs in the exhibition – predominantly vintage prints – including portraits of Lee Miller by Man Ray, Sacha Masour and David E. Scherman, are on loan by the Lee Miller Archives.

The catalogue of the exhibition is published by the Hatje Cantz Verlag.

Image: Lee Miller, Fire Masks, London, England, 1941 (© Lee Miller Archives, England 2016).