Michel Auer


Michel Auer was a Franco-Swiss photographer, lexicographer, encyclopaedist, collector and historian of photography, known for his publications on vintage cameras and a comprehensive encyclopaedia of international photographers.

Education and training

Son of Victoire and Jules Auer, Michel was born in Zurich in 1933. After primary school from 1941 to 1945 in Geneva and secondary studies from 1946 to 1951 in the rural education boarding school at Glarisegg Castle near Steckborn in German-speaking Switzerland, he was apprenticed as an advertising photographer in Zurich.
After his recruit training in the Swiss military service in 1954, Auer started an advertising studio in Geneva in 1955. He married Françoise Guerin, whom he divorced in 1968 after having three children together.
In 1958, he obtained a federal diploma in photography.

Collector

In 1960, Auer founded and until 1975, managed, the 'Big' laboratory in Geneva specialising in oversize enlargements in black-and-white and colour. In 1961, abandoning advertising photography, Auer devoted himself to the collection of cameras and the writing of various books on the subject and making several trips to America in the 1970s. In 1971 in Vevey was staged a survey of the history of photography around Auer's collection, and that inspired the establishment of the Swiss Camera Museum.
In 1976 with another collector, Michèle Ory, at the Clignancourt flea market in Paris, they operated a stall specialising in cameras and photographs. They lived nearby, but later in life returned to live in Switzerland in the rue du Couchant in Hermance where they housed their collection.
In fact, Auer possessed at least three different collections of cameras. In 1973, Auer's first was sold to the Provinciaal Museum voor Fotografie in Antwerp, supplemented since by other collections including that of Agfa-Gevaert. In the early 1990s, the JCII Camera Museum in Tokyo added to its holdings of Japanese products examples of Western cameras purchased from Auer. Auer's personal collection of rare and significant cameras is kept at the Auer-Ory Foundation.
Amongst photographs sold to museums, the J. Paul Getty Museum has eighty-nine vintage daguerreotypes, the majority by Jean-Gabriel Eynard, purchased in the 1980s from Michel and Michèle Auer.

Historian

Auer's Illustrated History of the Camera: From 1830 to the Present was widely reviewed, and frequently cited. Michael McNay in The Guardian welcomed it as "a detailed exposition of the development of the techniques of photography"; Judith Hoffberg noted that "since camera technology changes constantly, the book becomes a historical, visual survey of a machine which has changed the world..." and considered that the only comparable book was A Century of Cameras by Eaton S. Lothrop Jr. which she regarded as "a less sumptuous work that is limited to the cameras in the George Eastman House". Auer was to collaborate with Lothrop on The Invisible Eye: Espionage Cameras.
Auer became accepted as a world authority on historic cameras, presenting, for example, in October 1985 at a symposium for the Photographic Historical Society at George Eastman House in Rochester, New York.

Encyclopaedia

Auer married Michèle Ory in 1980 and with her published in 1985 the Encyclopédie internationale des photographes de 1839 à nos jours a two-volume set that includes biographies of 1,600 photographers in French and English. In 1997, the encyclopaedia was updated and published on a CD-ROM to include entries, as noted by reviewer Peter Blank, on "3,135 individuals and less-complete information on an additional 3,000, from seventy-one different nationalities," in a format that he considered "visually pleasing and well organized". However, historian of 19th-century photography Larry Schaaf in reviewing the CD-ROM version found some errors of fact and others made in translation from the French, but considered that despite them "one can only admire and encourage the effort made by the Auers to make the mass of information they have gathered accessible to the public."

Foundation

In March 2009, the couple created the through which they exhibited their collection of more than 10,000 photographs as well as objects related to photography. In addition to the generally single-artist exhibitions held in their foundation, they initiated numerous off-site showings of their collections which cover aspects of photography since its beginnings.
Loans from the collection, of works by photographers as diverse as Nadar, Weegee and 19th-century Swiss-French pioneers, were made to curators of exhibitions such as:
Known also for their foundation's collection of photographers' books, Auer presented in a session with Gerry Badger at the Vienna PhotoBook Festival in 2015.

Death

Michel Auer died in October 2024 at the age of 91.

Books

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Exhibitions from the Auer collections

  • 2001, 5 July – 30 September: Nadar: Michel and Michèle Auer collection, Art Gallery of the General Council of Bouches-du-Rhône, Aix-en-Provence.
  • 2004, 13 January – 14 March: Collection M. + M. Auer: a history of photography, Théâtre de la photographie, Nice, then April 22 – September 12, 2004: Museum of Art and History, Geneva.

Personal exhibitions

  • 2005, 1 October – 5 March 2006: Micha Auer photographer, Camera Museum, Vevey, Switzerland
  • 2007, 10 January – 4 March: Micha Auer, Photographs in front of the camera, Maison Européenne Photo, Paris