Bruno Bernard

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In this wiki you'll sometimes read about pre-war and post-war products, sometimes meaning "made before or after WWI", in most cases meaning "made before (pre) or after (post) World War Two". So what has the war delivered as war-winning innovation for photography? Aerial cameras? Germans and Japanese had developed superb aerial cameras for the war. But did they win? The war-winning photographic efforts achieved during hard long wars were those made by photographers. A good example: Bruno Bernard.

Bruno Bernard was born in 1911 in Berlin, Germany. He started with photography when he was 11 years old. He studied psychology at the Universities of Heidelberg, Kiel, Berlin and Paris. In 1937 he fled from the chicaneries which he suffered in pre-war Germany, and he continued his studies at the University of California. Beside his studies he learned a lot from theatre director Max Reinhardt and film director William Dieterle. He opened his photographic studio in L.A. at Sunset Strip in 1942, advertised as studio of "Bernard of Hollywood". He became the star photographer, getting many Hollywood stars as models for a new class of commercial photographs which became known as "Pin-Up" photos. The famous actresses became the "Pin-Up-Girls" of a great part of the war-winning soldiers. Many pin-up photos made by Bernard became iconic, and can be acknowledged as being made with high artistic quality.

Beyond his Pin-Up artistry he was a highly requested portrait photographer for the film stars.

Bernard prefered moderate use of artificial light. He prefered natural light like sun at the beach, and sometimes added a flash to his light concept.

In the 1960s he moved back to Berlin. He reported as photo reporter from the Eichmann trial in Israel for the German Spiegel magazine.

In 1987 Bruno Bernard died of cancer at the age of 75 years in Los Angeles.


Source: Fotohits magazine No. 6/2011, and PRWeb

Literature

  • Bruno Bernard, "Pin-Ups: A Step Beyond"

Links