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Alois Löcherer (14 August 1815 – 15 July 1862) was a professional German photographer active in the mid-nineteenth century. [1] [2]
He was born in Munich, and opened a business as a photographer there in 1840, after training as a chemist and pharmacist. [1]
His work consisted of daguerrotypes. It includes "The Torso Section of Bavaria, Munich" (c. 1848), which depicts the construction of the fifty-two foot tall nationalist statue "Bavaria." This image is an early example of photoreportage and is additionally noted for its surrealistic effects. [3] He also published, together with de:Hans Hanfstaengl, Album der Zeitgenossen (Album of Contemporary Figures), a collection of portraits of current celebrities, each accompanied by a capsule biography. [3] The work was republished in 1975. [4] Exhibitions of his photographs were held in Cologne in 1980-81 [5] and in Munich in 1998. [6]
You can help expand this article with text translated from
the corresponding article in German. (February 2014) Click [show] for important translation instructions.
|
Alois Löcherer (14 August 1815 – 15 July 1862) was a professional German photographer active in the mid-nineteenth century. [1] [2]
He was born in Munich, and opened a business as a photographer there in 1840, after training as a chemist and pharmacist. [1]
His work consisted of daguerrotypes. It includes "The Torso Section of Bavaria, Munich" (c. 1848), which depicts the construction of the fifty-two foot tall nationalist statue "Bavaria." This image is an early example of photoreportage and is additionally noted for its surrealistic effects. [3] He also published, together with de:Hans Hanfstaengl, Album der Zeitgenossen (Album of Contemporary Figures), a collection of portraits of current celebrities, each accompanied by a capsule biography. [3] The work was republished in 1975. [4] Exhibitions of his photographs were held in Cologne in 1980-81 [5] and in Munich in 1998. [6]