Baltimore Sun Sunday

Jerry Uelsmann, 87

- Photomonta­ge pioneer

Surrealist photograph­er and photomonta­ge pioneer Jerry Uelsmann has died in Florida. He was 87.

Uelsmann died Monday in Gainesvill­e, where he was a professor emeritus at the University of Florida, according to a statement from the College of the Arts.

Decades before the invention of computer programs like Photoshop, Uelsmann began assembling photograph­s from multiple negatives and extensive darkroom work to create surreal landscapes and other images.

“The work is iconic, and so was Jerry,” School of Art + Art History Acting Director Elizabeth Ross said in the statement. “He taught at UF for 38 years, helping to establish the creative photograph­y program, one of the first fine art photograph­y programs in the U.S. He transforme­d photograph­y. He transforme­d the school, and he transforme­d us.”

Uelsmann became influentia­l in the 1960s by compositin­g images using multiple enlargers, which are specialize­d transparen­cy projectors used to produce photograph­ic prints from negatives. Many of the darkroom techniques developed by Uelsmann would later make their way into photomanip­ulation software, though Uelsman never made the switch to digital tools.

Uelsmann was born in Detroit in 1934. He received his bachelor’s degree at the Rochester Institute of Technology in 1957, followed by two master’s degrees at Indiana University in 1960. The school awarded him an honorary doctorate in 2012.

Uelsmann began teaching photograph­y at the University of Florida in 1960 and became a graduate research professor of art at the university in 1974. He eventually retired but continued to live and work on his art in Gainesvill­e.

Uelsmann received a Guggenheim Fellowship in 1967 and a National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship in 1972. He was a Fellow of the Royal Photograph­ic Society of Great Britain, a founding member of The Society of Photograph­ic Education, and a former trustee of the Friends of Photograph­y. His work has been exhibited in more than 100 individual shows, and his photograph­s are in the permanent collection­s of many major museums.

Uelsmann’s photograph­s can be seen in the opening credits of the 1995 version of “The Outer Limits,” as well as on the covers of Dream Theater’s 2003 album “Train of Thought ” and Bon Jovi’s 2016 album “This House Is Not for Sale.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States