Bill Brandt photograph

Bill Brandt

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Gender Male
Death40 years ago
Date of birth May 3,1904
Zodiac sign Taurus
Born Hamburg
Germany
Date of died December 20,1983
DiedLondon
United Kingdom
ArtworksEast Sussex Coast
Campden Hill, London
On view San Francisco Museum of Modern Art
Parents Louis Brandt
Louise Merck
Job Actor
Photographer
Journalist
Movies/Shows Shadows from Light
WorksEast Sussex Coast
NationalityBritish
German
Known for Photography
Date of Reg.
Date of Upd.
ID456457

Shadow of Light
Literary Britain, photographed by Bill Brandt
Bill Brandt
London in the Thirties
Portraits
Camera in London
Nudes, 1945-1980
Bill Brandt: Selected Texts and Bibliography
Brandt Nudes: A New Perspective
Bill Brandt, Early Photographs, 1930-1942
Homes Fit for Heroes: Photographs by Bill Brandt, 1939-1943
Portraits: Photographs
Shadow of Light: Photographs
Shelters: Living Underground in the London Blitz
Photographs
God's Love for Happiness: A Return to Family Values
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Bill Brandt Life story


Bill Brandt was a British photographer and photojournalist. Born in Germany, Brandt moved to England, where he became known for his images of British society for such magazines as Lilliput and Picture Post; later he made distorted nudes, portraits of famous artists and landscapes.

The converging art careers of Henry Moore and Bill Brandt

Feb 18,2020 5:23 pm

A new Exhibition and book explore the intersecting careers of two renowned British artists of the 20Th Century : sculptors Henry Moore and photographer Bill Brandt .

The two artists, born in the space of Ten Years , were in the order of The British government in The 1930S ; Brandt , as a photojournalist, and Moore as A War artist.

you both have pictures of civilians, the refuge from The Blitz in the London Underground , which is seen during the second World War at the top.

A portrait of Henry Moore , 1948, by Bill Brandt (left), and a self-portrait of Bill Brandt , 1966 (on the right).

The new Exhibition at The Hepworth Wakefield - to examine how the two artists, The British landscape and its communities.

The Exhibition brings together More Than 200 works, including well-known sculptures and photographs, together with drawings, unprinted negatives, and photo-collages.

"Both artists had said a fascination and poetic sensibility for capturing The Spirit of the place", Simon Wallis, Director of Hepworth Wakefield .

"It is particularly poignant to the presentation of this Exhibition in West Yorkshire , where Henry Moore was born and grew up. "

Brandt and Moore met in 1942, when Brandt was commissioned, a portrait of Moore in his studio for a 10-page spread about The Artist in Lilliput magazine. The feature comparison of the two artists " - pictures of the lightning shelters.

Liverpool Street Extension, by Bill Brandt , 1940. Sleeping Shelterers: Two Women and a child, by Henry Moore , 1940.

"Both artists have developed a strikingly similar visual vocabulary of rootlessness, isolation, threat and vulnerability, the harbingers of pictures of larger terror made later in The War ," writes Courtney J Martin, the Director of the Yale Center for British Art, in a Foreword to the book by Bill Brandt | Henry Moore .

in the course of their career, they crossed over each other in the dominant creative medium. Moore used photography to showcase his work, and Brandt looked at the sculpture as a way of viewing the nature, the landscape and the human body.

Contact deduction details to screams Auguste Rodin 's man, 1877-78, photographed by Henry Moore , 1967.

In their Early Work , Brandt and Moore were drawn to document Ordinary People , work and home.

Brandt highlighted the social deprivation in The 1930S , Depression-era Britain, with its impressive photographs of the impoverished mining communities, and families in the North of England .

Coal Miner's Bath, Chester-le-Street, Durham, Bill Brandt , 1937. Coal-miners ' houses without Windows to The Street , Bill Brandt , 1937. Northumbrian miner at his evening meal, the by Bill Brandt , 1937. Slag-Heap and miners ' cottages, Shotton, in the vicinity of Boldon Colliery, East Durham, Bill Brandt , 1937.

Moore was one of eight children in a mining family in Castleford, a mining town in Yorkshire, a place he would later document the sketch to The War .

A common theme for Moore, the representation of family groups, both as sculptures and drawings, a theme, starting with his early drawings of families in shelters during The Blitz . was

In the 1950s, Moore had, in a series of works that uses groupings of figures, the drawings at his house.

Six studies for groups or families, from Henry Moore , 1948. Family group, by Henry Moore , in 1944. Sculpture and Red Rocks , Henry Moore , 1942.

According to the urban subjects, Brandt , and Moore is shown during The War , The Artist , the later-to-nature sources of inspiration.

they were interested in rock formations, geological artefacts and megalithic sites such as Stonehenge and Avebury .

in fact, Moore let it be known that he mined sculptures with stone in the UK.

Avebury , Bill Brandt , 1963.

The Exhibition Bill Brandt | Henry Moore is up to 31. The book is published by Yale University Press .



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Source of news: bbc.com

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