Artist
Max Burchartz(German, 1887–1961)German, 1887–1961
CultureGerman
Titles
- Lotte's Eye
- Lotte's Auge
Date1928
PlaceGermany
MediumGelatin silver print
DimensionsImage: 11 15/16 × 15 11/16 in. (30.3 × 39.9 cm)
Sheet: 11 15/16 × 15 11/16 in. (30.3 × 39.9 cm)
Sheet: 11 15/16 × 15 11/16 in. (30.3 × 39.9 cm)
Credit LineGift of Manfred Heiting, The Manfred Heiting Collection
Object number2002.735
Not on view
Explore Further
Department
PhotographySpecial Collections
Object Type
During the 1920s, photographers pursued many strategies to push the medium beyond the accepted norms of photographic representation—images made without a camera, “bird’s eye” and “worm’s eye” perspectives, negative prints, and chemical manipulations, for instance. Here, Max Burchartz’s radical cropping transformed an utterly banal portrait of a freckle-faced young girl in a sweater and felt hat into an emotionally engaging, graphically powerful, and boldly modern image.
ProvenanceEx-collection: Kurt Kirchbach (Helene Anderson collection); Sotheby's, London, May 2, 1997, lot 15.
Bought by Manfred Heiting from Sotheby's London, on 5/1/1993.
Exhibition HistoryFilm und Foto", Deutscher Wekbund, Stuttgart, 1929.
"Das Lichtbild", Folkwang Museum, Essen, 1931.
"Avant-Garde Photography in Germany", San Francisco Museum of Art, 1980.
"Happy Birthday Photography", Kunsthaus Zürich, 1989.
Inscriptions, Signatures and Marks
Inscribed in pencil, verso, lower right corner: 41
Stamped in blue, verso, lower right: MHC 1525 [numbers in pencil]
Stamped in blue, verso, lower right: MHC 1525 [numbers in pencil]
Unsigned.
Cataloguing data may change with further research.
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