Framing Two Worlds
Framing Two Worlds
January 3, 2017
Robert Haas: In the Böhmischer Prater Amusement Park on the Laater Berg, Vienna, 1938 © Wien Museum/Sammlung Robert Haas
Robert Haas (1898-1997) is among the great Austrian-American photographers of the twentieth century. He began his artistic career in Vienna as a graphic designer and typographer before studying photography with Trude Fleischmann. In the 1930s, Haas created stirring works of social reportage and sensitive depictions of everyday life, along with portraits and object studies. Beyond that, he spent several years as the official photographer of the Salzburg Festival.
Haas was forced to flee from the Nazis in 1938 along with countless other Jews, eventually settling in New York City. There, he re-established himself in the field of graphic design and printing. His impressive urban photography from the period revealed the influence of American visual culture. On the road, Haas documented the American way of life beyond the big cities. He photographed famous figures such as Albert Einstein and Oskar Kokoschka as well.
The Wien Museum Friends’ Association recently acquired Haas’s photographic archive. The exhibition “Robert Haas: Framing Two Worlds” presents his virtually unknown oeuvre to the general public for the first time: at once an artistic discovery of the first order and a richly detailed panorama of the times.
Please find more information at Wien Museum
Robert Haas: In the Böhmischer Prater Amusement Park on the Laater Berg, Vienna, 1938 © Wien Museum/Sammlung Robert Haas
Robert Haas
: Hotel de l’Europe, Salzburg, 1935
© Wien Museum/Sammlung Robert Haas
Robert Haas
: Marlene Dietrich at the Salzburg Festival, 1936/37
© Wien Museum/Sammlung Robert Haas