![]() France | ![]() New York | FRED STEIN 1909-1967 Fred Stein's photographs reflect a world seen with poignant clarity. Born in Dresden, Germany in 1909, he became a brilliant law student and fervent anti-Nazi activist. He was forced to flee to Paris in 1933. Living among a circle of expatriate artists and intellectuals, Stein took up photography. He was a pioneer of the small, hand-held camera - the Leica. Its mobility allowed him to range through the streets documenting the life he saw there with ease and naturalness. This new approach also enabled him to make strikingly intimate portraits of the people who shaped the intellectual life of Europe in the 1930's. When war was declared, Stein was put in an internment camp for enemy aliens. He managed to escape as the Nazi's were entering Paris, and after a harrowing journey, was reunited with his wife and infant daughter in Marseilles, Where the three boarded the S.S. Winnipeg, one of the last boats to leave France. New York in the 1940's gave him access to the great artists and thinkers who shaped our age; and the freedom and diversity of the New World inspired his reportage as he ranged from 5th Avenue to Harlem. The historical importance of his work is elevated by the beauty of his art. Photographs by Fred Stein are in the collections of The National Museum of American Art, The International Center of Photography, The National Portrait Gallery (Smithsonian), and numerous other museums, as well as private and corporate collections around the world |
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