Wolfgang Sievers

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Wolfgang Sievers at the Counihan Gallery in Brunswick, Victoria in 2005
Wolfgang Sievers in 1996

Wolfgang Georg Sievers, AO (18 September 1913 – 7 August 2007) was an Australian photographer who specialised in architectural and industrial photography.

Early life and career

Sievers was born in Berlin, Germany. His father was Professor Johannes Sievers, an art and architectural historian with the German Foreign Office until his dismissal by the government in 1933, and author of the first four volumes of a monograph on the neo-classical architect Karl Schinkel. His mother was Herma Schiffer, a writer and educator of Jewish background who was Director of the Institute for Educational Films.

From 1936 to 1938, he studied at the Contempora Lehrateliers für neue Werkkunst in Berlin, a progressive private art school created by architect Fritz August Breuhaus de Groot, which, like the famous Bauhaus, strongly emphasized the unity of all applied arts. Sievers took architectural photographs for his father's books on Berlin's historical buildings, particularly the work of Karl Schinkel. He also spent a year working in Portugal from 1935 to 1936. In 1938, he was retained as a teacher at the Contempora, but decided to emigrate to Australia following rumours of the school's imminent closure by the authorities. He had arranged for his photographic equipment to be transported, but was briefly questioned by the Gestapo, then conscripted as an aerial photographer for the Luftwaffe. He fled the country immediately, going first to England in June.

In the evening I took the train to Holland. The next day I was in Holland, the day after that I was in England, in Kent, where my brother lived already, and he took me to the pub and I got drunk on cloudy Kentish cider for the first time in my life. It was wonderful![1]

In Australia, Sievers opened a studio in

June Browne
, who later made photographs herself under the pseudonym "Alice Springs".

Work

Significant corporate clients included

Walkabout
.

Sievers' work after the war was imbued with the Bauhaus ethos and philosophy of the New Objectivity he had learned in Berlin, combined with a socialist belief in the inherent dignity of labour. His photographs were often overtly theatrical, as he commonly photographed industrial machinery at night, isolating details with artificial light and posing workers for heightened effect. This can be seen in 'Gears for Mining Industry' (1967), perhaps his most well known single image.[3] Despite the contrived nature of many of these images,[4] this approach was extraordinarily influential in Australian post-war commercial photography.

In 1989, the

Australian National Gallery staged a retrospective of his work, an exhibition which travelled around the country, often accompanied by Sievers' lectures. In 2000, he was the subject of a major retrospective exhibition held in Lisbon, Portugal
at the "Arquivo Fotografico Municipal de Lisboa". For his services to photography, he was appointed an Officer of the Order of Australia (AO) in 2002.

The National Library of Australia has an archive of more than 50,000 of Sievers' negatives and transparencies.

Sievers was active in Australia, Germany and Austria with research into the emigration of war criminals to Australia from 1990 to 1998. In 2007, he donated several hundred photographs from his archive, worth up to A$1 million, to raise money for justice and civil liberties causes.[1]

Wolfgang Sievers died at the age of 93, a month short of his 94th birthday.[5][6]

References

  1. ^ a b , The Age, 21 April 2007, p. 11
  2. ^ "Melbourne post-war photography, Corporate and commercial images". State Library Victoria. Retrieved 13 December 2019.
  3. ^ "Gears for mining industry at Vickers Ruwolt, Burnley, Melbourne". Art Gallery of New South Wales. Retrieved 4 December 2015.
  4. ^ Andrew Stephens, "Witness to a lost time", The Age, 7 June 2014, Spectrum, p. 26. Retrieved 27 November 2015
  5. ^ Zuker, David; Jones, Barry (20 August 2007). "Titan's lens and moral compass enlightened all". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 4 December 2015.
  6. ^ Coslovich, Gabriella. "Photographer championed human rights to the end". The Age. No. 2007–08–09. Retrieved 4 December 2015.

Further reading

  • The Life and Work of Wolfgang Sievers, Australian National Gallery exhibition catalogue, 1989
  • Helen Ennis, 'Blue hydrangeas: Four émigré photographers' in The Europeans: Émigré Artists in Australia 1930-1960, Roger Butler (ed.), National Gallery of Australia, 1997
  • Helen Ennis, Wolfgang Sievers, Canberra: National Library of Australia, 2011.

External links