Ilse Bing


Ilse Bing was a German avant-garde and commercial photographer who produced pioneering monochrome images during the inter-war era.

Biography

Background and early life

Ilse Bing was born into a wealthy Jewish family of merchants in Frankfurt am Main, Germany, on March 23, 1899. Louis Bing and Johanna Elli Bing were her parents. Bing was up in a culturally active family and was exposed to the arts at a young age. Her eventual career in photography was hinted at when she took her first self-portrait with a Kodak box camera, which she obtained when she was fourteen years old.
In 1920, Bing enrolled at the University of Frankfurt, initially pursuing studies in mathematics and physics. However, her academic interests soon shifted to art history and the history of architecture. During the winter semester of 1923–1924, she continued her education at the Kunsthistorisches Institut in Vienna, deepening her knowledge of European art and architecture. In 1924, she began work on a dissertation about the German Neo-Classical architect Friedrich Gilly, and to document architectural subjects for her research, Bing purchased a Voigtländer 9×12 cm camera. This practical use of photography gradually sparked a more artistic interest, and she began creating photographic works as part of her academic process, evolving into a lifelong interest in photography. When she finished her studies in the summer of 1929 and gave up her dissertation, she turned entirely to photography, bought a newly launched Leica and began working in photojournalism. For the next two decades, the Leica would remain the basis of Bing's artistic work.

Paris

At the end of 1930 Ilse Bing moved to Paris and continued her photographic work there. She received reportage assignments through the mediation of the Hungarian journalist Heinrich Guttmann. To develop her photos, Guttmann provided her with a garage that Bing used as a darkroom.
Her move from Frankfurt to the burgeoning avant-garde and surrealist scene in Paris marked the start of the most notable period of her career. She produced images in the fields of photojournalism, architectural photography, advertising and fashion, and her work was published in magazines such as Le Monde Illustre, Harper's Bazaar, and Vogue. After initially living in the Hotel Londres on Rue Bonaparte, she moved to Avenue de Maine, 146 in 1931. In the same year, Bing's work was exhibited in both France and Germany. Her rapid success as a photographer and her position as the only professional in Paris to use an advanced Leica camera earned her the title "Queen of the Leica" from the critic and photographer Emmanuel Sougez, whom she met in 1931. In 1933, Bing left Avenue de Maine and moved to Rue de Varenne, No. 8. With the pianist and music teacher Konrad Wolff, who lived in the same house, she was initially only known through his piano playing, which could be heard through the courtyard. A little later they would get to know each other personally and become a couple.
When Bing visited New York in 1936, she received the offer to work as a photographer for Life magazine, which she turned down in order not to be separated from Wolff, who lived in Paris. In the same year, her work was included in the first modern photography exhibition held at the Louvre, and in 1937 she traveled to New York City where her images were included in the landmark exhibition "Photography 1839–1937" at the Museum of Modern Art. Bing and Wolff married in November of the same year and moved to Boulevard Jourdan together in 1938.
Bing remained in Paris for ten years, but in 1940, when Paris was taken by the Germans during World War II, she and her husband who were both Jews, were expelled and interned in separate camps in the South of France. Bing spent six weeks in a camp in Gurs, in the Pyrenees, where she met Hannah Arendt.
In an interview with the German photographer Herlinde Koelbl, Bing later said:
“A lot of people just call it internment camps because we weren't mistreated. I felt it was a concentration camp. To be separated from my husband, not knowing where he is, not knowing what is going on out in the world. This bondage, the absolute lack of freedom and degradation. I always had a razor blade with me. I was determined not to let the Nazis intern me. Then I would have taken my life. But you can take a lot more than you think. It was worse than you could imagine and you could endure more than you thought possible.”
After Wolff stood up for Bing's release at great expense, they managed to reach Marseille together. There they waited nine months for their visa to enter the USA. The Affidavit of Sponsorship required for this was issued by the author and journalist Hendrik Willem van Loon, whom Bing had already met in 1930. In 1941, Bing and Wolff finally emigrated and settled in New York.

New York

In New York, Bing had to re-establish her reputation, and although she got steady work in advertising and portrait photography, she failed to receive important commissions as in Paris.
When Bing and her husband fled Paris, she was unable to bring her prints and left them with a friend for safekeeping. Following the war, her friend shipped Bing's prints to her in New York, but Bing could not afford the custom fees to claim them all. Some of her original prints were lost when Bing had to choose which prints to keep.
In the 1940s and 50s, Bing was best known for her portraits of children, but also photographed personalities such as Dwight D. Eisenhower and his wife Mamie.
By 1947, Bing came to the realization that New York had revitalized her art. Her style was very different; the softness that characterized her work in the 1930s gave way to hard forms and clear lines, with a sense of harshness and isolation. This was indicative of how Bing’s life and worldview had been changed by her move to New York and the war-related events of the 1940s.
Bing struggled with her identity professionally after moving to New York. Compared to 1936, Bing's response was much colder. She was one of many refugee artists who struggled to make a successful career for herself in this new culture, particularly while it was limited by the hardships of war.
Also in 1947, she went on a trip to Germany and France for the first time after the end of the war, visiting a.o. the war-torn Frankfurt and stayed in Paris for three months. From 1950 Bing worked with a Rolleiflex, which she used in alternation with the Leica for the next two years, but in 1952 decided to work exclusively with the medium format of the Rolleiflex.
In 1951 and 1952 she visited Paris again and always had her camera with her. In 1957 she turned away from black-and-white photography and concentrated on working with color negatives. In 1959, Bing decided to give up photography altogether. She felt the medium was no longer adequate for her, and seemed to have tired of it. As a result, texts, collages, and drawings were created. She later said:
“I couldn't say anything new with this medium. I stopped working with the camera at the height of my photographic developments. I couldn't use it to express what I was experiencing. Of course, I could have taken nice pictures, but it no longer came from within. The character of the work changed with my development and has now been given a new face."
In the mid-1970s, the Museum of Modern Art purchased and showed several of her photographs. This show sparked renewed interest in Bing's work, and subsequent exhibitions included a solo show at the Witkins Gallery in 1976, and a traveling retrospective entitled, Ilse Bing: Three Decades of Photography, organized by the New Orleans Museum of Art. Numerous solo exhibitions followed in New York, Las Vegas, Chicago, San Francisco, Frankfurt, and many more. Bing's photographs were also featured in multitudinous group exhibitions.
Bing published her first book in 1976 under the title Words as Visions at Ilkon. Press. Another publication with the title Numbers in Images followed in 1978 by the same publisher. In 1982 Bing published the illustrated book Women from Cradle to Old Age – 1929-1955, which contains numerous monochrome as well as color photographic portraits of women. The foreword was written by Gisèle Freund.
The emerging attention that Bing has enjoyed from the 1970s through the 1980s can be traced back to the growing fascination and interest in European photography of the 1920s and 1930s.
From 1984 onwards, Ilse Bing made a number of appearances in the USA and Germany as a speaker on the development of modern art, especially photography. In the course of this activity she held i.a. Lectures in Frankfurt, Essen, Cologne, New Orleans and New York.
In the last few decades of her life, she wrote poetry, made drawings and collages, and occasionally incorporated bits of photos. She was interested in combining mathematics, words, and images.
Bing died on March 10, 1998, shortly before her ninety-ninth birthday, in New York.

Versatility with Street Photography

Angles

Low and High Angles: Bing frequently used extremely low or high viewpoints to add drama and abstraction to his images. She would, for instance, take pictures of bridges, towers, and staircases from below to highlight their geometry and height.
Tilted Horizons: In contrast to the conventional, flat framing, she welcomed diagonal lines and tilted perspectives, commonly referred to as "Dutch angles". Her photos have a vibrant, modernist character as a result.
Geometric Composition: She transformed everyday scenes into captivating visual studies by emphasizing shapes, shadows, and light with acute angles. She frequently aligned her compositions with building lines or reflections.
Close-ups & Cropping: Bing didn't hesitate to use close-ups from unusual perspectives or to crop her subjects in unexpected ways. Depending on the topic, this produced an atmosphere of abstraction or closeness.
Motion and Time: Her interest in the movement of time and energy inside a still photograph is demonstrated by the times she employed tilted views to capture movement, such as dancers, shadows, or street scenes.