Art

by Sam Williams

September 14, 2010 6:58 PM

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"Sacrow", 1934, by Marianne Breslauer © Marianne Breslauer / Fotostiftung Schweiz, Winterthur

IN PICTURES! In the 1920s, a generation of women took charge of the freedoms offered between two world wars. Breslauer's photographs mastered the emergent style, “Neues Sehen”. Sam Williams

IN PICTURES! In the 1920s, a generation of women took charge of the freedoms offered between two world wars. Photographic technology offered a new means of capturing the immediacy of that life.

Berlinische Galerie

Alte Jakobstraβe 124-128, 10969 Berlin

030 7890 2600

Click Here

Wed-Mon 10-18:00

    Marianne Breslauer studied photography in Berlin; her portrait photographs mastered the emergent style, “Neues Sehen”.

    In Paris, she snatched moments of life off the streets, in parks and along the Seine, with tramps and street performers. Breslauer later travelled to Palestine, Spain and Italy, documenting her experiences with photo reportage.

    MARIANNE BRESLAUER: MOMENTS UNNOTICED – PHOTOGRAPHS 1927-1936 | Through November 1

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    by Sam Williams

    September 14, 2010 6:58 PM

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