Art News

The Royal Academy To Host "Eyewitness: Hungarian Photography in the 20th Century"

artwork:  Robert Capa - Collaborator Woman who had a German Soldier’s Child, Chartres, 1944. Silver gelatin print, 33 x 49 cm. Hungarian Museum of Photography. © ICP/Magnum Photo. On view in "Eyewitness: Hungarian Photography in the Twentieth Century" at the Royal Academy, from June 30th through October 2nd.

London.- This summer, the Royal Academy of Arts will stage an exhibition dedicated to the birth of modern photography, featuring the work of Brassaï, Robert Capa, André Kertész, László Moholy-Nagy and Martin Munkácsi. Each left their homeland Hungary to make their names in Europe and the USA, profoundly influencing the course of modern photography. “Eyewitness: Hungarian Photography in the 20th Century” will be on view in the Sackler Wing of Galleries from June 30th through October 2nd.

Many other talented photographers who remained in Hungary, such as Rudolf Balogh and Károly Escher, will also be represented in the exhibition. Over 200 photographs from 1914 to 1989 will show how these world renowned photographers were at the forefront  of stylistic developments and reveal their achievements in the context of the rich photographic tradition of Hungary. Brassaï, Capa, Kertész, Moholy-Nagy and Munkácsi are each known for the important changes they brought about in photojournalism, documentary, art and fashion photography. By following their paths through Germany, France and the USA, the exhibition will explore their distinct approaches, signalling key aspects of modern photography.

artwork: Rudolf Balogh - "Shepherd with his Dogs, Hortobágy", circa 1930 - Silver gelatin print - 18 x 29 cm. © Hungarian Museum of Photography. On view at the Royal Academy, London from June 30th.

André Kertész (1894 – 1985) showed an intuitive talent for photography which blossomed when he moved to Paris in 1925.  Using a hand-held camera,  he captured lyrical impressions of the ephemeral moments of everyday urban life. Proud of being self-taught, Kertész considered himself an ‘eternal amateur’ whose vision remained fresh; his highly personal style paved the way for a subjective, humanist approach to photography. A painter and designer as well as a photographer, László Moholy-Nagy (1895 – 1946) became an instructor at the Bauhaus in 1922.  He was a pioneer of photograms, photomontage and visual theory, using unconventional perspectives and bold tonal  contrasts to manifest his radical approach. His camera-less images and experimental techniques reflect on the centrality of light to the medium. Martin Munkácsi (1896 – 1963) was a highly successful photographer first in Budapest, then Berlin, covering everything from Greta Garbo to the Day of Potsdam. He moved to the US in 1934, securing a lucrative position with Harper’s Bazaar, revolutionising fashion photography by liberating it from the studio. Taking photographs of models and celebrities outdoors, he invested his photographs with a dynamism and vitality that became his hallmark.

The image of modern Paris was defined by Brassaï (1899 – 1984).  Introduced to photography by Kertész, who was then at the heart of an energetic émigré community of artists, Brassaï is known for his classic portraits of Pablo Picasso.  His stunning photographs of sights, streets and people bring vividly to life the nocturnal characters and potent atmosphere of the city at night. Robert Capa (1913 – 1954) left Hungary aged seventeen, first for Berlin where he took up photography, then on to Paris. He is often called the ‘greatest war photographer’ documenting the Spanish Civil War, the D-Day landings and other events of World War II.  In 1947, he cofounded Magnum Photos with Henri Cartier-Bresson and George Rodger. The exhibition will also celebrate the diversity of the photographic milieu in Hungary, from the early 20th century professional and club photography of Rudolf Balogh, Károly Escher and József Pécsi, to the more recent documentary and art photography of Péter Korniss and Gábor Kerekes.

artwork: László Fejes - "Wedding, Budapest", 1965 - Silver gelatin print - 15.5 x 23.8 cm. © Hungarian Museum of Photography. On view at the Royal Academy, from June 30th.

Key works by over forty photographers will show how major changes in modern photography have been interpreted through a particularly Hungarian sensibility. Varied subject matter will include ‘Magyar style’ rural images; urbanite ‘New Objectivity’ photography in Budapest and Berlin; vivacious fashion photographs; powerful photojournalism of war; and emotive social documentary in post-war Hungary. Highlights include images from Brassaï’s  Paris by Night series, and such iconic photographs as Capa’s  Death of a Loyalist Militiaman, 1936; Munkácsi’s Four Boys at Lake Tanganyika, c. 1930 and Kertész’s Satiric Dancer, 1926. The exhibition will feature works from the Hungarian National Museum of Photography in Kecskemét together with the National Museum Budapest and public and private collections in Hungary and the UK. Visit the Royal Academy’s website at … http://www.royalacademy.org.uk