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PHILIPPE HALSMAN
Vintages & photographs
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Halsman (*1906
Riga-1979 New York)
studied electrical engineering in
Dresden.
In September 1928, Halsman went on a hiking tour in the Austrian Alps
with his father, Morduch. During this tour, Morduch died from severe
head injuries. The circumstances were never completely clarified and
Halsman was sentenced to 4 years imprisonment
for patricide. The case provoked anti-Jewish propaganda and thus gained
international publicity, and
Albert Einstein and
Thomas Mann wrote in support of Halsman. Halsman was finally
released in 1931, under the condition that he leave Halsman
had his first success in
Dali Atomicus
(1948) by Halsman in an unretouched version, showing the devices which
held up the various props and missing the painting in the frame on the
easel. In 1941
Halsman met the
surrealist artist
Salvador Dalí and they began to collaborate in the late 1940s.
The 1948 work Dali Atomicus explores the idea of suspension,
depicting three
cats
flying, a bucket of thrown water, and
Salvador Dalí in mid air. The title of the photograph is a
reference to Dalí's work Leda Atomica which can be seen in the
right of the photograph behind the two cats. Halsman reported that it
took 28 attempts to be satisfied with the result. Halsman and Dali
eventually released a compendium of their collaborations in the 1954
book Dali's Mustache, which features 36 different views of the
artist's distinctive mustache. Another famous collaboration between the
two was In Voluptas Mors, a surrealistic portrait of Dali beside
a large skull, in fact a
tableau vivant composed of seven nudes. Halsman took
three hours to arrange the models according to a sketch by Dali. A
version of In Voluptas Mors was used subtly in the poster for the
film
The Silence of The Lambs, and less subtly
for the film
The
Descent.
In 1947, he made what was to become one of his most famous photos of
a mournful
Albert Einstein, who during the photography session recounted
his regrets about his role in the In 1951
Halsman was commissioned by
NBC to photograph
various popular comedians of the time including
Milton Berle,
Sid
Caesar,
Groucho Marx, and
Bob
Hope. While photographing the comedians doing their acts, he
captured many of the comedians in mid air, which went on to inspire many
later jump pictures of celebrities including the
Ford family,
The Duke and
Duchess of Windsor,
Marilyn Monroe and
Richard Nixon.
Halsman commented, "When you ask a person to jump, his attention is
mostly directed toward the act of jumping and the mask falls so that the
real person appears." The photographer developed a philosophy of jump
photography, which he called jumpology. He published Philippe
Halsman's Jump Book in 1959, which contained a tongue-in-cheek
discussion of jumpology and 178 photographs of celebrity jumpers.
His 1961 book Halsman on the Creation of Photographic Ideas,
discussed ways for photographers to produce unusual pieces of work, by
following three rules: "the rule of the unusual technique", "the rule of
the added unusual feature" and "the rule of the missing feature". Other
celebrities photographed by Halsman include
Alfred Hitchcock,
Judy
Garland,
Winston Churchill,
Marilyn Monroe,
Dorothy Dandridge, and
Pablo
Picasso. Many of those photographs appeared on the cover of
Life.
In 1958 Halsman was listed in Popular Photography's "World's Ten
Greatest Photographers", and in 1975 he received the Life Achievement in
Photography Award from the
American Society of Magazine
Photographers. He also held numerous large exhibitions
worldwide.
The Halsman trial was dramatized in the 2007 film
Jump!, in which Halsman was portrayed by
Ben
Silverstone.
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