“I had no notion of how a photograph should be made or should look, or that there were certain things that ‘couldn’t be done’”, she said. Although undeniably influenced by Weston, she photographed without strict recourse to particular avant-garde movements. It was an experience that encompassed and engulfed my whole being.”Īs Koetzle tells AnOther, the relationship between the two photographers “must have been a close, fruitful, possibly intimate relationship”, though generally speaking, her name doesn’t appear in any of the ample literature on Weston, whereas his influence constantly hovers over her name. Upon being introduced to Weston’s work, Bernhard admitted, “It was overwhelming. Although she still spoke little English, the two formed a close relationship, one that would last until his death in 1958. Not long before, in a fortunate twist of fate she met the photographer Edward Weston while walking on a beach in Santa Monica. In 1935 Bernhard became a US citizen, and the following year she moved to Los Angeles where she opened a commercial photography studio. “The ground we walk on, the plants and creatures, the clouds above constantly dissolving into new formations – each gift of nature possesses its own radiant energy, bound together by cosmic harmony,” she said. “I have always identified and connected with nature and natural objects, and I feel that I know what it is like to be an animal.”Ĭarefully composed, her photographic arrangements – whether of animals, seashells, organic forms, or women’s bodies – reveal a reverence for the aesthetic principles of the New Objectivity movement, but also the artist’s poetic worldview, one which affirms the beauty of the world. Her comfort in and fascination with nature would manifest in her early photographic work. She lived among more animals than people (canaries, reptiles, and rabbits). The new family’s house was a menagerie, a “veritable zoo” according to the book. All my work is somehow related to that deprivation,” she said. All the things that I do and have done are the result of not having any parents. When her mother abandoned the family in 1907, Bernhard’s busy father – unable to adjust to single parenthood – sent her away, to live with another family. “No question, in her composition Ruth Bernhard emancipates herself decisively from tested patterns and distances herself from what often is described as the ‘male gaze’”, says Hans-Michael Koetzle, editor of the book.Īs a German-Jew with a fraught family history, Bernhard’s oeuvre is arguably an expression of her psychological interior. Revealing her lustrous meditations on beauty and light, Bernhard’s virtuoso studio photographs liberated both the female form and gaze. Twenty locals live there permanently.Ruth Bernhard: Photographies 1930-1976, published by Wasmuth & Zohlen, traces the artist’s 40-year career as she emigrated from Germany to the West Coast of the US between the wars.
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