|
|
|||
|
||||
OverviewKathe Buchler (1876-1930) was a pioneering woman photographer whose exceptional photographs offer very personal insights into Germany during World War One, with a particular focus on the home front and the lives of women and children. Born Katharina von Rhamm in Braunschweig, Germany, and from a wealthy and privileged background, she was taught painting as a girl; many of her photographs have a notably painterly quality. She went on to study photography at Berlin's Lette Academy which, unusually for the time, admitted women. Like many women of the upper middle class, family life with her husband and children was Kathe Buchler's focus and became the central theme of her photography in the years before the First World War. During the war itself, in the most public phase of her career, her leading role in local institutions, including the Red Cross, gave her largely unrestricted access to the city's war effort and she produced unexpectedly intimate photographs of daily life in Braunschweig, in the city's military hospitals, as well as in the revealing series `Women in Men's Jobs'. As a result, she offers us a distinctive vision, raising the intriguing possibility of presenting the conflict from the perspective of women and children.Surprisingly, Buchler's work remained unknown outside its immediate locality, but it was exhibited in the United Kingdom for the first time between October 2017 and May 2018, allowing the process of placing it within its proper international context to begin. This catalogue, marking the exhibition Beyond the Battlefields, contains a wide selection of Buchler's work, including some of her exquisite Autochromes (using the world's first commercially available colour photographic process). The accompanying essays introduce the artist and address, amongst other things, the role of amateur photography in documenting war. In depicting the minutiae of daily life against the backdrop of war and its aftermath, Buchler's remarkable photographs speak to us across the intervening century, disrupting national stereotypes and opening up fresh perspectives on the Great War. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Sarah Lloyd , Kathe Buchler , Matthew ShaulPublisher: University of Hertfordshire Press Imprint: University of Hertfordshire Press Dimensions: Width: 20.00cm , Height: 0.50cm , Length: 25.00cm ISBN: 9781912260072ISBN 10: 1912260077 Pages: 72 Publication Date: 01 June 2018 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviewsAuthor InformationKathe Buchler (1876-1930) was a German photographer living and working in Braunschweig, whose pictures captured the lives of a diverse array of German people before, during and after the First World War. Her work includes the use of the earliest form of colour photography. Sarah Lloyd is Professor of History at the University of Hertfordshire and Director of Everyday Lives in War: First World War Engagement Centre. She has two main strands of research. Over the last few years she has worked on community histories of Hertfordshire and is currently leading an AHRC-funded Centre designed to connect academic and public histories of the First World War. She also has a long-established interest in the histories of charity and poverty in Britain during the long 18th century. Matthew Shaul is Director at Departure Lounge - a contemporary photographic gallery in Luton. He was formerly Artistic Director at the University of Hertfordshire Galleries. His most prominent curatorial project to-date was `Do Not Refreeze' a major survey of the documentary photography produced in the former East Germany. He has written/edited and published exhibition catalogues for publishers like Dewi Lewis and Passagen Verlag (Germany). Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |