Hannes Rosenberg


Hannes Rosenberg was a German photojournalist active from the 1940s.

Career

The couple Hannes and Annelise Rosenberg produced reports for German and international newspapers and illustrated magazines during the post-WW2 era, including general news and specialist photography publications, as well as book illustration, and by the 1960s were undertaking general commercial and advertising work and interiors
From the mid-1940s Rosenberg concentrated on imagery of everyday life in Germany, such as theatre and cabaret in the beer hall, and was a photographer for Süddeutsche Zeitung and others before he garnered international commissions, with his ‘Through the Iron Curtain’ being published in The New York Times on July 27, 1952, followed in November 1954 by his illustrations for a story on the distribution of anti-communist propaganda over the West German border by balloon. He provided images for the Life magazine story on American journalist William N. Oatis after his release from jail 1953 for espionage by the Czechoslovak Socialist Republic.
In 1955 curator Edward Steichen selected photographs by both Hannes and Annalise for the world-touring Museum of Modern Art exhibition The Family of Man, seen by 9 million visitors. Hannes Rosenberg's photograph of proud grandparents watching their toddling grandchild is distinctly European in its setting; a broad, cobbled city square. Annelise contributed a picture of girls pinning Christmas decorations on their little sister's smock.
Rosenberg favoured the Leica 35mm camera for his reportage.

Portraits

Among Rosenberg's portrait subjects included German Federal Chancellor Konrad Adenauer; graphic designer and typographer Otl Aicher at the urban planning group at the Ulm Adult Education Centre in about November 1949; and writer Hans Werner Richter, Inge Aicher-Scholl, and architect Max Bill whom he photographed from underneath a glass tabletop at the Ulm School of Design in 1949/1950, for the weekend supplement of the Munich newspaper Neue Zeitung. As part of their journalistic work, the two photojournalists also wrote comprehensive reportages about the Ulm Adult Education Center and the Ulm College of Design, and their photographs are held in the archives and are part of the permanent exhibition of the HfG. As Hannes Rosenberg increasingly dealt with advertising, the strikingly modern institution served as a background for his publicity photos for AEG and other companies. Otl Aicher designed the furniture their apartment on Alfonsstraße in Munich, where artists and authors as well as members of Gruppe 47 frequently met, basing his designs for the study on the needs of the spouses by equipping the desk with a light table for viewing slides and a drawer for the 'Erika' typewriter, and a cupboard which stored their photo archive.

Publications

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