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Details
- Date
- 1928
- Media category
- Photograph
- Materials used
- gelatin silver photograph
- Dimensions
- 22.8 x 16.6 cm image/sheet
- Signature & date
Not signed. Dated l.c. verso, pencil ".../ 1928 ".
- Credit
- Purchased with funds provided by the Photography Collection Benefactors' Program 2000
- Location
- Not on display
- Accession number
- 55.2000
- Copyright
- © Estate of Werner Rohde, 1928/Bild-Kunst Copyright Agency
- Artist information
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Werner Rohde
Works in the collection
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About
Werner Rohde’s visual play with the animate and inanimate draws him close to the aesthetics of the surrealists while maintaining a strong alignment with Germany’s new-vision avant-garde. Rohde experimented widely with double exposures, photomontage, perspective and dramatic lighting which reflected his interest in filmic effects. The son of a glass painter (a medium he would turn to later in life), Rohde took up photography during his studies at the Arts and Craft School in Halle. Like Kesting, Willy Zielke and Kretschmer, he participated in the 1929 ‘Film und foto’ exhibition in Stuttgart which remains one of the historical focal points for Germany’s new photographic vision. Despite this early recognition of his work, Rohde fell into obscurity after the war until the rediscovery of his photographs in the mid 1970s.
Rohde’s fascination with the play between life and lifeless, animate and inanimate, has strong reverberations with surrealism. Masks, mannequins and paper models were used in his photographs to illuminate the uncanny. They were also employed in his self-portraiture in which he mimicked his idol Charlie Chaplin. These techniques of visual illusion provided a mnemonic tool for the images of his wife in which she is posed and photographed to resemble a doll or mannequin. In the act of art imitating life, ‘Wachspuppenkopf’ is uncanny in its mimicry of the human form with realistic teeth, eyes, skin and even the unusual detail of small wrinkles under the eyes. The downward angle, lighting and odd doubling of the neckline utilises standard surrealist methods to infer life and movement.
© Art Gallery of New South Wales Photography Collection Handbook, 2007
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Exhibition history
Shown in 3 exhibitions
Werner Rohde Fotografien 1925-37, Museum Folkwang, Essen, Germany, 13 Sep 1992–08 Nov 1992
Werner Rohde Fotografien 1925-37, PPS Galerie, Hamburg, Hamburg, 26 Nov 1992–18 Dec 1992
Werner Rohde Fotografien 1925-37, Städtische Galerie Moritzburg, Halle, Germany, 24 Jan 1993–28 Feb 1993
Werner Rohde Fotografien 1925-37, Forum Böttcherstrasse, Bremen, Germany, 05 Mar 1993–05 May 1993
Puppen Körper Automaten, Stiftung Kunstsammlung Nordrhein-Westfalen, Germany, 24 Jul 1999–01 Nov 1999
Imprint, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, 06 Feb 2016–18 May 2016
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Bibliography
Referenced in 3 publications
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Judy Annear, Look, 'Doubling the real', pg.22-23, Melbourne, Nov 2000, 23 (illus.).
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Donna Brett, Photography: Art Gallery of New South Wales Collection, 'The surreal aesthetic', pg.113-129, Sydney, 2007, 114, 121 (illus.).
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Werner Rohde, Werner Rohde Fotografien 1925 - 1937, Berlin, 1992, 32 (illus.). as 'Wachskopf'
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