Allotria 1953 © Herbert Dombrowski,Courtesy Galerie Hilaneh von Kories
Expositions du 7/3/2017 au 18/5/2017 Terminé
Museum Kunst der Westküste Hauptstr. 1, Island of Föhr D-25938 Alkersum Allemagne
Press release - The black-and-white works of the Hamburg photographer Herbert Dombrowski (1917–2010) offer a subtle and captivating look at everyday life in the Hamburg districts of Altona and St Pauli in the 1950s. They provide glimpses of a period situated between the repression of experiences in the “Third Reich” and the beginnings of the economic miracle.Museum Kunst der Westküste Hauptstr. 1, Island of Föhr D-25938 Alkersum Allemagne
Shot at the ‘right’ (for Dombrowski always unique) moment, the photographs capture life after the deprivation of the war years – on the wharves, at the fish market, on the Reeperbahn, in the dance halls and also at the more or less mondaine world of the horse races. During the http://fr.actuphoto.com/hashtag/Nazi">Nazi period Dombrowski was hunted after for anti-Semitic reasons, went into hiding and was incarcerated. He lost everything in the war – except his Leica camera. After 1945 he began to work with it as a professional photographer.
For Dombrowski, in his work, “every picture had to tell a story or represent a quiet drama.” He also documented the ‘old’ Hamburg-Altona, which would fall victim to the wrecking ball.
Seen from the outside, the milieu in the narrow streets among these working-class lodgings seems so picturesque – its image defined by pavements where chickens range freely and children play. The building society “Neue Heimat” wanted this town to disappear, to be replaced by a new and modern Altona.
The exhibition was developed in collaboration with the Galerie Hilaneh von Kories, http://fr.actuphoto.com/hashtag/Nazi">Nazi.