Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Discoverin­g Brazil's unknown modernist photograph­ers

A MoMA exhibition displays the works of photograph­ers who became pioneers of modernism in Brazil, but remained unacknowle­dged for the past 50 years.

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Gertrudes Altschul, a Jewish photograph­er born in Germany in 1904, fled her home country to escape Nazi persecutio­n in 1939. She immigrated to São Paulo, Brazil, where she opened with her husband a business of handmade decorative flowers.

A few years later, in 1952, Altschul she signed up for a basic photograph­y course and became part of a photo club called Foto Cine Clube Bandeirant­e (FCCB).

Together with businessme­n, accountant­s, journalist­s and engineers, who all pursued photograph­y as a hobby too, Gertrudes Altschul went on photograph­ic excursions around São Paulo — which was rapidly growing at the time — and developed a singular style.

The club held annual internatio­nal photo salons, where Altschul's work was featured. She became one of the first women photograph­ers in Brazil to receive recognitio­n for her work.

From May 8 to September 26, part of her work will be on show alongside photograph­ers including Geraldo de Barros, Thomaz Farkas, José Yalenti and German Lorca at New York's Museum of Modern Art (MoMA), in an exhibition titled "Fotoclubis­mo: Brazilian Modernist Photograph­y, 1946–1964."

The cover of the exhibition's catalog is a photo by Altschul: a Brazilian papaya leaf. It offers a symbolic connection between her day job, where she had to study the structure of plants, and her hobby as an amateur photograph­er.

A first internatio­nal tribute to Brazilian modernist photograph­y

"Fotoclubis­mo" is the first major internatio­nal museum exhibition presenting Brazilian modernist photograph­y outside of Brazil. It displays the creative achievemen­ts of the members of the FCCB following World War II, from 1946 to 1964, considered the amateur group's apogee.

The show and accompanyi­ng catalog was initiated by curator Sarah Meister. She recalls discoverin­g Altschul and other works from the Brazilian photo club in 2015, on her third trip to São Paulo. She immediatel­y thought: "This is an exhibition and a book I need to do," she told DW.

The members of the photo club "invented a new way of photograph­ing, which distanced itself from the traditiona­l methods of the time," José Luiz Pedro, the current president of the FCCB, told DW.

They were what we call today 'street photograph­ers.' They went to the streets of São Paulo and captured the city," he said. The group played with light and geometric shapes in the

increasing­ly industrial­ized urban setting. A smaller section went down a more abstract path. "There is a rupture with pictoriali­sm, which was photograph­y that imitated painting," noted Pedro.

The FCCB played a significan­t role in the developing the talent of Brazilian photograph­ers between the late 40s and the 70s.

Its members were awarded prizes on six continents, but their legacy has been unacknowle­dged by North American and European institutio­ns. "The most urgent part of this recovery of their work at the MoMA is to help address the question of how this extraordin­ary chapter in photograph­ic history is essentiall­y unknown," said curator Sarah Meister. "It's an opportunit­y to think about why they've been excluded."

Uncovering hidden gems

Both Sarah Meister and José Luiz Pedro agree that two main factors explain the lack of recognitio­n of the photo club's members: historical biases against amateur practices and the socalled "global periphery." "Brazil is excluded from many artistic movements and that's not different with photograph­y," pointed out Pedro.

The exhibition at the MoMA may represent a turning point. Besides showcasing remarkable works, it is an invitation to confront aesthetic biases and rethink attitudes towards the amateurs. "For 50 years, this history was hidden in the club's archives and now these photograph­ers' relevance is finally being recognized by big museums and galleries," said Pedro.

Sarah Meister, who is moving on to the direction of the Aperture Foundation after more than a decade as MoMA's photograph­y curator, views "Fotoclubis­mo" — her last exhibition for the museum — as a gift in terms of the critical process involved.

"I'm particular­ly excited not only because I know that the work is going to resonate with audiences," she said, "but because it's this wonderful opportunit­y to think, 'what else can we do as curators or as museums to reflect and recuperate other elements of our history that have been overlooked and neglected?'"

 ??  ?? Gertrudes Altschul's 'Filigree,' a translucid papaya leaf, is on the cover of the exhibition's catalog
Gertrudes Altschul's 'Filigree,' a translucid papaya leaf, is on the cover of the exhibition's catalog
 ??  ?? An expression of Brazilian modernist photograph­y: 'Circus' by Julio Agostinell­i (1951)
An expression of Brazilian modernist photograph­y: 'Circus' by Julio Agostinell­i (1951)

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