Unseen Works by Robert Lebeck
Unseen Works by Robert Lebeck
March 22, 2016
Robert Lebeck, Hamburg, St. Pauli 1961
© Archiv Robert Lebeck
Among the most esteemed German photojournalists of the postwar period, Robert Lebeck used his charisma and mischievous nature to instantly and naturally connect with his subjects. His photographs of celebrities and world leaders such as Elvis Presley, Woody Allen, Romy Schneider and Willy Brandt have long been lodged in Germany’s collective visual memory. Lebeck’s wife, archivist and closest creative companion, Cordula Lebeck, has collected a stunning array of mostly unpublished photographs from the late 1950s to the ’70s. “Face the Camera” allows us to discover Lebeck’s endless sense of wonder and ferocious curiosity for everyday life in a time of great change.
Robert Lebeck, born in 1929 in Berlin, studied ethnology before turning to photography. For three decades he traveled widely as a photojournalist for Stern magazine, interrupted only by a short interlude as the editor-in-chief for photography at Geo magazine. He received the Dr. Erich Salomon Award from the German Photographic Society in 1991 and the first Henri Nannen Award in 2007 for his life’s work. Also an avid photo collector, Lebeck died in 2014.
Please find more information at Freundeskreis Willy-Brandt-Haus
Robert Lebeck, Hamburg, St. Pauli 1961
© Archiv Robert Lebeck
Robert Lebeck, Tokyo, Japan 1961
© Archiv Robert Lebeck
Robert Lebeck, Romy Schneider, Berlin 1976
© Archiv Robert Lebeck