Rogi André

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Jamesmcardle (talk | contribs) at 05:07, 1 January 2021 (→‎Career: Jacqueline Lamba pictures). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Rogi André (born Rozsa Klein, 10 August 1900, Budapest – 11 April 1970, Paris) was a Hungarian-born French photographer and artist. She was the first wife of André Kertész.

Early life

Rozsa Klein was born in 10 August 1900 in Budapest,[1] the daughter of a doctor. She suffered severe curvature of the spine that limited in her movements due to the steel corset her father prescribed for her. He encouraged her to study art and violin and she became accomplished in both, graduating from the Budapest School of Fine Arts.[2]

Career

Sculptor Jacques Lipchitz, photographed by Rogi André in 1935.
Rogi André, (c.1930s) Peggy Guggenheim, Paris. In the background, Notre Dame de Paris, and on the right, Dutch Interior II (1928) by Joan Miró.

Attracted to the bohemian milieu of Paris like other Hungarians including Brassai and André Kertesz, André settled there in 1925 amongst exiled supporters of Count Mihály Károlyi, temporary president of the Hungarian Republic, all opposed to the dictatorial Horthy regime. They included the sculptor István Beöthy and his wife, the painter Anna Beöthy-Steiner (1902–1985). On 2 October 1928, she married Kertész who was her neighbour in the Montmartre Hôtel de la terrasses. Kertesz who had just purchased his first Leica and was getting commissions from the prestigious Vu magazine, with credits on several covers.

She and Kertesz lived together at 75 Boulevard du Montparnasse next to the constructivist gallery/bookshop L’esthétique founded by their friend, the painter Evsa Model, husband of Lisette Model. Like Brassai, who also knew them, she was influenced in her photography by Kertesz, but like Brassai she nevertheless eschewed the 35mm camera for a Voigtlander Bergheil 9×12 folding camera that took glass plates (which by the 1920s were quite outmoded). In 1928, she produced her first nude photos and in 1936 some were published in Arts et Métiers Graphiques to which she had contributed from 1932, as well as to Paris Magazine and Verve, when she moved into a building on the Rue du Père-Cotentin to partner with two other photographers, Florence Henri and Ilse Bing. The move was the result of her divorce from Kertész that year; after he abandoned her for his mistress (who would become his second wife) Élisabeth Sali. From his first name, and out of continued affection for him, she created a new identity 'Rogi André'. On meeting Lisette Model she gave her the advice her husband had given her: “Never photograph something you for which you have little enthusiasm, but only what interests you passionately." [3]

She befriended the French and immigrant Surrealists including their leader André Breton for whom in 1934 she photographed Jacqueline Lamba‘s performances at Le Coliseum cinema and dance hall at 65 Rue de Rochechouart where several times a week she could be seen swimming naked. One was published to accompany Breton’s text in Minotaure and subsequently reproduced in his L’Amour Fou.[4]

She produced a series of portraits of personalities in the arts during starting in the 1930s.[5] Several are in the collection of the Museum of Modern Art, New York.[6] They include Pablo Picasso, Aristide Maillol, Wassily Kandinsky (she also photographed him lying in state), Fernand Léger, Balthus, Le Corbusier, René Crevel, Ambroise Vollard, Antonin Artaud, Colette, André Breton, Jacques Prévert, François Mauriac, Pierre Roy, Maria Elena Vieira da Silva, Oscar Dominguez, Julio Gonzales, Maurice Utrillo, Max Ernst, Henri Matisse, Peggy Guggenheim, Jean Lurçat, Chaim Soutine, Pierre Descaves, Roland Penrose, Jacques Lipchitz, Jean Cocteau, Georges Rouault, Marc Chagall, Maurice de Vlaminck, Luis Bunuel, André Gide, Pierre Reverdy, Jacques Villon, Raoul Dufy, Max Jacob, Alberto Giacometti, Django Reinhardt, Jean Sablon, Marie Laurencin, Piet Mondrian, Nush Eluard, Marcel Duchamp, André Lhote, Pierre Loeb, Pierre Bonnard, Florence Henri, Natalia Gontcharova, Georges Braque, and also André Derain, with a 1939 print of his portrait being held by London's National Portrait Gallery.[1] In 1937, she photographed Dora Maar.[7]

By 1941 André had prospered, but because of World War II, she was forced to flee in the free zone and take refuge in Touraine because of her Jewish origins, but shortly after, she managed to hide in Paris, thanks to with the help of gallery owner Jeanne Bucher.

Recognition

In 1935, the photographer and theoretician of photography Emmanuel Sougez, writing in the journal Arts et Métiers Graphique[8] compared the photography of Rogi André and that of Laure Albin Guillot, and criticized the former for posing her subjects in their environment. Some critics have noted in her portraits an influence of Cubism, for example, in the portrait of Dora Maar (c. 1940) in which she creates a geometric composition using the play of shadows and lights.

In 1936, she presented four portraits in the international photography exhibition at the Pavillon de Marsan in Paris and in 1937, she appeared in the famous exhibition Photography, 1839-1937 organised by Beaumont Newhall at the Museum of Modern Art in New York (MoMA).

Late career

From 1950, André resumed painting, though meanwhile showed in an international group exhibition of portrait photography in the Galeries Mazarine et Mansart of the Bibliothèque nationale, in 1961.[9] In 1962, while living on restricted means, she attended the Academy of painter André Lhote, while continuing to do photographic work on commission. A friend, Bernadette Dufort, generously helped her by developing her negatives for free and by making prints in her own darkroom.

On April 11, 1970, Rogi André died in Paris, in poverty, and her modest possessions were put on sale at the Hôtel Drouot. Part of her archives, and in particular her prints, were however saved from destruction or loss thanks to the efforts of Jean-Claude Lemagny, curator responsible for contemporary photography at the Department of Prints and Photography, Bibliothèque nationale de France, who acquired them for the collection.

Bibliography

  • Brigitte Ollier, Élisabeth Nora, Frédéric Develay, Rogi André, photographe, éditions du Regard, 1999  (ISBN 978-2-84105-105-2)
  • Rogi, André; Beslon, Renée (1981), Rogi André : portraits, Éditions du Regard

References

  1. ^ a b "Rogi André (née Rozsa Klein) (1900-1970), Photographer". National Portrait Gallery. Retrieved 31 December 2019.
  2. ^ Isabel Steva Hernández, Rogi Andre, una experta retocadora, in Viejas colegas. Fotógrafas pioneras nacidas en el siglo XIX, éd. La Lamentable.org
  3. ^ Jim McQuaid and David Tait, Interview with Lisette Model, 1977
  4. ^ Margaret Cohen, "Underwater Optics As Symbolic Form", French Politics, Culture & Society, Vol. 32, No. 3, Winter 2014 doi:10.3167/fpcs.2014.320301
  5. ^ Butler, Cornelia H; Schwartz, Alexandra; Museum of Modern Art (New York, N.Y.) (2010), Modern women : women artists at the Museum of Modern Art, Museum of Modern Art : Distributed in the United States and Canada by D.A.P./Distributed Art Publishers, ISBN 978-0-87070-771-1
  6. ^ "Rogi André (Rozsa Klein) | MoMA". The Museum of Modern Art. Retrieved 2019-12-31.
  7. ^ "Dora Maar, Paris". Phillips. Retrieved 31 December 2019.
  8. ^ Emmanuel Sougez, Deux femmes, quatre-vingt hommes, in Arts et Métiers graphiques , n. 48, 15 August 1935, p. 40-45.
  9. ^ Adhémar, Jean (1908-1987) Auteur du texte; texte, Bibliothèque nationale (France) Auteur du (1961). Salon international du portrait photographique : [exposition, Paris], Bibliothèque nationale, Galeries Mazarine et Mansart, 1961 / [catalogue réd. par Jean Adhémar] ; [préf. de Julien Cain].{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)