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Helmut Newton. Polaroids

10.06.2011 - 20.05.2012

in short

Polaroid technology revolutionized photography. Polaroids have been used in artistic and commercial photography, both in creating preliminary studies and as a medium in their own right. Their use took off very soon after the introduction of the instant photograph at the Optical Society of America in 1947 by its inventor, Edwin Land.
Helmut Newton: Thierry Mugler, Polaroid, Monte Carlo 1998
© Helmut Newton Estate

Visitor entrance

Museum for Photography
Jebensstrasse 2
10623 Berlin
Germany 

Detailed information about the museum on euromuse.net

Helmut Newton Stiftung

in detail

 This unique imaging process has found enthusiastic devotees all over the world and in nearly all genres of photography - from landscape and genre, portrait and self-portrait, fashion and nudes.

Helmut Newton made intense use of the technology from the 1970s onwards, especially during his fashion shoots. As he once described in an interview, Polaroids satisfied his impatient urge to know immediately how a certain situation would look as a photograph. Newton's additional notes, written on the edges of the Polaroids, provide fascinating and revealing insights into the models, clients and locations. These comments, the haziness of the images and the print's visible signs of use are naturally also to be found on the enlargements of the Polaroids included in the exhibition; they testify to a pragmatic approach to the original work materials, which have since taken on a value of their own.

The over 300 photographs now on show offer the first comprehensive overview of this aspect of Newton's oeuvre. The exhibition gives visitors a chance to peer into the sketchbook of one of the most influential photographers of the 20th century.
Admission
Area Ticket Charlottenburg
Standard: 8 EUR
Reduced / Ermäßigt: 4 EUR
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Opening Times

Sun
10:00 - 18:00
Mon
-
Tue
10:00 - 18:00
Wed
10:00 - 18:00
Thu
10:00 - 22:00
Fri
10:00 - 18:00
Sat
10:00 - 18:00

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