Helmar Lerski

(1871-1956)

    Helmar Lerski (18 February 1871, in Strasbourg – 19 September 1956, in Zürich) was a photographer who laid some of the foundations of modern photography. His works are on display in the USA, Germany, Israel and Switzerland. He focused mainly on portraits and the technique of photography with mirrors.

    His birth name was Israel Schmuklerski. In 1876, the family moved to Zürich, Switzerland, where the family was naturalized. In 1888, Lerski emigrated to the United States, where he worked as an actor. Around 1910, he began to photograph. In 1915, he returned to Europe and worked as a cameraman and expert for special effects for many films, including Fritz Lang's Metropolis. At the end of the 1920s, he made a name as an avant-garde portrait photographer.

    In 1932, he emigrated with his second wife to Mandate Palestine, where he continued to work as a photographer, cameraman, and film director. On 22 March 1948, they left what was by then Israel and settled again in Zürich.

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    Projects

    Painter
    Everyday Heads

    Anonymous working-class individuals, photographed with dramatic lighting techniques and stripped of social context, to evoke a universal essence.

    Metamorphosis through Light

    Study of identity fluidity and perception through a series of 175 portraits of a single individual created with mirrors and natural sunlight.

    Books

    Helmar Lerski: Pionnier de la Lumière

    (Gallimard, 2018)

    Faces: The Power of the Human Visage

    (Hirmer Publishers, 2021)

    Métamorphoses Par La Lumière

    (Images en Manœuvres, 2003)

    Metamorphosis Through Light

    (Luca Verlag, 1982)