From 24 October 2011 to 4 March 2012 the JHM is
presenting a retrospective exhibition of the work of the American
photographer and painter Saul Leiter (born in 1923). Following a
long period of obscurity, Leiter's work has recently been
rediscovered in the United States and Europe. This is the first
exhibition of his work in the Netherlands. On 23 October 2011, the
exhibition was opened by Dutch author and presenter Twan Huys. Read
his speech here.
On 5 February 2012 Saul Leiter gave a lecture on his life
and work in the JHM Museumcafé.
Saul Leiter is celebrated particularly for his painterly color photographs of the street life in New York, which he produced between 1948 and 1960. Amid the hectic life of the city he captured tranquil moments of everyday beauty. He was able to transform mundane objects - a red umbrella in a snowstorm, a foot resting on a bench in the metro, or a human figure seen through the condensation on a pane of glass - into what has been described as 'urban visual poetry'. His photographs are frequently layered, near-abstract compositions of reflections and shadows, which recall paintings by abstract expressionists such as Mark Rothko and Willem de Kooning, with whom Leiter felt a strong affinity.
Saul Leiter is seen as belonging to the New
York School of Photographers, a group of innovative artists, most
of them Jewish, who achieved fame in New York in the period
1936-1963, primarily with their images of the street and their
documentary photography. His black-and-white work displays a
lyricism, dreaminess and surrealism that might prompt comparison
with photographers such as Ted Croner, Leon Levinstein and Louis
Faurer, but where his color photography is concerned, he cannot be
compared with any other photographer. In the 1940s and 1950s,
Leiter was virtually the only non-commercial photographer working
in color.
Born in Pittsburgh, Leiter was destined to become a rabbi like his father. But his growing interest in art led him to abandon his religious studies. Instead, he went to New York and dedicated himself to painting. His friendship there with the abstract expressionist painter Richard Pousette-Dart, who was experimenting with photography, and the work of the photographer Henri Cartier-Bresson, inspired Leiter to take up photography. His friendship with the photographer W. Eugene Smith was another inspiring influence.
The exhibition Saul Leiter: New York Reflections was
prepared by the JHM in collaboration with the Howard Greenberg
Gallery in New York. Besides over 60 color and 40 black-and-white
examples of his street photography, a small selection of fashion
photographs, paintings, and painted photographs will be shown.
Visitors will also be able to watch a recent documentary about
Leiter by the British film maker Tomas Leach. This autumn, the
publisher Steidl will be publishing the third edition of Early
Color, the first book of Leiter's photographs, compiled in
2006 by Martin Harrison of the Victoria & Albert Museum in
London.
For the exhibition
Steidl Publishing House
decided to reprint
Early Color. The
first edition of this publication
was sold out in no time.
This magnificent book with
one hundred scenic color
photographs from the work of Saul
Leiter is available in the Museum Shop
(€ 44,50).
Attend and share with
your friends!