📸✨AI Reimagines the Masters✨ Lisette Model|229/1000
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Introduce briefly
Lisette Model was an Austrian-born American photographer known for her street photography and frank humanism. She was born Elise Amelie Felicie Stern on November 10, 1901, in Vienna, Austria-Hungary [2]. Model's work gained recognition in the 1940s, and she was a member of the New-York cooperative Photo League. Her photographs were published in magazines such as PM's Weekly, Harper's Bazaar, and US Camera [2].
Early Life and Education:
- Lisette Model was born into a bourgeois family in Vienna, Austria-Hungary [2].
- She had a privileged upbringing and was primarily educated by private tutors, becoming fluent in Italian, German, and French [2].
- Model studied music with composer Arnold Schönberg and was exposed to the contemporary art scene and avant-garde artists [2].
- She moved to Paris in 1924 to study voice and continued studying music while immersing herself in the cultural hub of the time [2].
- Model met her future husband, painter Evsa Model, in Paris, and they got married in September 1937 [2].
- In 1933, she gave up music and focused on studying visual art, initially taking up painting [2].
Photography Career:
- Model's interest in photography began when she bought her first enlarger and camera while in Italy [2].
- Her sister, Olga, taught her the basics of photographic technique, and Model became most interested in the darkroom process [2].
- She started photographing her sister and later made a series of portraits on the Promenade des Anglais in Nice, which gained recognition and were published in the magazine Regards [2].
- Model's photography style was characterized by close-cropped, unsentimental, and unretouched portraits that exposed the vanity, insecurity, and loneliness of her subjects [2].
- She moved to New York City with her husband in 1938 and quickly became a prominent photographer, publishing her work in various magazines [2].
- Model's work focused on the energy of New York City and explored American consumerism through series like "Reflections" and "Running Legs" [2].
- She worked for Harper's Bazaar from 1941 to 1955 and gained recognition for her unique viewpoint and preoccupation with notions of glamour and anti-glamour [2].
Teaching and Influence:
- Model began teaching photography in 1949, and one of her notable students was Diane Arbus [2].
- She taught at the New School for Social Research in New York from 1951 until her death in 1983 [2].
- Model's teaching and lectures had a significant impact on the direction of postwar photography [1].