Bill Brandt (GBR)

Bill Brandt, Nude, Campden Hill, London, 1947
Gelatin silver print, mounted on cardboard, printed in the 1970s
34 x 29 cm (image) / 50 x 40 cm (sheet)
Signed by photographer recto
Bill Brandt, Nude, Campden Hill, London, 1947
Gelatin silver print, mounted on cardboard, printed in the 1970s
34 x 29 cm (image) / 50 x 40 cm (sheet)
Signed by photographer recto

Bill Brandt

(GBR)

Born in 1904 in Hamburg, Germany. Died in 1983 in London, UK.

Bill Brandt was one of the acknowledged masters of 20th century photography. Taken as a whole, his work constitutes one of the most varied and vivid social documents of Great Britain, producing a body of photographic works that range from stark realism and social commentary to pure abstraction and surrealism. Brandt admired the work of Edward Weston and Orson Welles. Taking a cue from their words, he liked to use older cameras that did not mimic human vision capabilities, and he often employed wide-angled lenses, especially when he photographed nudes.

Brandt’s works are represented in international collections including the Museum of Modern Art, New York, USA; Philadelphia Museum of Art, USA; George Eastman Museum, Rochester, USA; Bibliotheque Nationale, Paris, France; Victoria & Albert Museum, London, UK, among others.

Photographs
Bill Brandt, Nude, Campden Hill, London, 1947

Bill Brandt, Nude, Campden Hill, London, 1947
Gelatin silver print, mounted on cardboard, printed in the 1970s
34 x 29 cm (image) / 50 x 40 cm (sheet)
Signed by photographer recto

Bill Brandt, Nude, Campden Hill, London, 1947

Bill Brandt, Nude, Campden Hill, London, 1947
Gelatin silver print, mounted on cardboard, printed in the 1970s
34 x 29 cm (image) / 50 x 40 cm (sheet)
Signed by photographer recto