Ylla

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Ylla
Ylla with toucan, photo by Eric Schaal c.1943
Born
Camilla Koffler

(1911-08-16)August 16, 1911
DiedMarch 30, 1955(1955-03-30) (aged 43)
NationalityHungarian
EducationBelgrade Academy of Fine Arts,
Académie Colarossi
Known forPhotography of animals
MovementNature, animals
U.S. Camera, October 1940

Camilla "Ylla" Koffler (Hungarian: Koffler Kamilla; 16 August 1911 – 30 March 1955) was a Hungarian photographer who specialized in animal photography. At the time of her death she "was generally considered the most proficient animal photographer in the world."[1]

Biography

Koffler was born in

Romanian father and Croatian mother, both Hungarian nationals. At age eight, she was placed in a German boarding school in Budapest, Hungary. In 1926, the teenage Koffler joined her mother in Belgrade, Yugoslavia, where she studied sculpture with Italian Yugoslav sculptor Petar Pallavicini at the Academy of Fine Arts; finding that her given name Camilla was the same as the Serbian for "camel" (камила, kamila),[2]
she changed it to "Ylla" (pronounced ee-la).

In 1929, Ylla received a commission for a bas-relief sculpture for a Belgrade movie theater. By 1931, she had moved to Paris, France, where she studied sculpture at the Académie Colarossi and worked as photo retoucher and assistant to photographer Ergy Landau.

In 1932, Ylla began photographing animals, exhibited her work at

Charles Rado and became a founding member of the RAPHO
press agency.

In 1940, New York's

U.S. Department of State
requesting an entry visa; she immigrated to the United States in 1941.

In 1952, Ylla traveled to Africa, and in 1954 she visited India for the first time.

In 1953, en route with her mother to Cape Cod by plane, the plane ran out of fuel and crashed. Ylla, trapped under water, struggled to free herself and fainted upon reaching the surface. She was rescued by a fisherman, her mother drowned. Proceeds from wrongful death insurance helped pay for Ylla's journey through India the following year.

In 1955, Ylla was fatally injured after falling from a jeep while photographing a

Bharatpur, North India. The last photographs she ever took were published in the November 14, 1955 issue of Sports Illustrated.[3]

Quotes and posthumous tributes

Julian Huxley:

. . . She is, I think, the outstanding animal photographer. She is outstanding in being able to seize in her pictures some essential quality of her subjects, which more orthodox photographers are apt to miss in their desire for so-called realistic and complete representation.[4]

Charles Rado
:

[Ylla was] one of the most skilled and dedicated photographers of animals. They were her life, she loved them all. . . . She was wonderfully alive, amusing, fond of travel and people, and she loved her work because she loved and understood animals. Her books, in particular, gave her much satisfaction. She worked on them with infinite patience, supervising their design and printing. Animals (1951) won a prize as one of the most beautiful books of the year. . . . She contributed to practically every illustrated magazine here and in Europe. . . . The thrill of observing and photographing wild animals in their natural habitat was a new and exciting experience to Ylla; she would never again be content with photographing zoo animals.[5]

Harry Phillips, Publisher of Sports Illustrated:

[Ylla’s accidental death] ended an outstanding career in its prime and brought a sense of almost personal loss to the millions all over the world who had come to know her through her beautiful, beguiling and painstaking studies of animals in a dozen books and a score of magazines.[6]

Movie Hatari! Character Based on Ylla

Her life work of photographing animals inspired famous movie director and producer, Howard Hawks, so much that he had his script writer, Leigh Brackett, change the script to create one of the main characters based on Ylla for his blockbuster movie, Hatari!, starring John Wayne. Hawks said, "We took that part of the story from a real character, a German girl. She was the best animal photographer in the world."[7] The movie character Anna Maria "Dallas" D’Alessandro is a photographer working for a zoo and was played by actress Elsa Martinelli.[8][9][10][11]

Selected bibliography

Notes

  1. ^ "Fall Kills Ylla, Camera Artist," New York Times (Obituary) (31 March 1955).
  2. ^ Auer, Michèle & Michel. Photographers Encyclopedia International, 1839 to the present (Editions Camera Obscura, Geneva, 1985)
  3. ^ "Country Fair: India," Sports Illustrated, November 14, 1955 (photographic essay and article on pages 14–19). Retrieved August 21, 2020
  4. ^ Huxley, Julian. Animals (New York: Hastings House; London: Harvill Press, 1950).
  5. ^ Rado, Charles. "Ylla: One of the most skilled and dedicated photographer of animals. They were her life, she loved them all," US Camera (annual), ed. Tom Maloney (1959).
  6. ^ Sports Illustrated, November 7, 1955.
  7. ^ Peter Bogdanovich,"The Cinema of Howard Hawks", Museum of Modern Art-Doubleday, 1962
  8. ^ Thomas McIntyre, May/June 2012, “Fifty Years of HATARI! – The Story of Most Expensive Safari In the World”, Sports Afield, pg 70

References

  • Beaumont Newhall: Photography 1839-1937 (Museum of Modern Art, New York, 1937)
  • John Szarkowski: The Photographer’s Eye (Museum of Modern Art, New York, 1966)
  • “Charles Rado, 71, of Photo Agency; Developed Popular Books from Ylla's Portfolio”, New York Times, October 5, 1970. (Obituary)
  • Ylla (Musée Nicéphore Niépce, Chalon-sur-Saône, 1983)
  • The Animal in Photography 1843-1985, ed. Alexandra Noble (The Photographers’ Gallery, London, 1986)
  • Les Femmes Photographes de la Nouvelle Vision en France 1920-1940, Christian Bouqueret (Editions Marval, Paris, 1998)
  • 1000 Dogs, ed. Raymond Merritt & Miles Barth (Taschen, Cologne, 2002)
  • YLLA: The Birth of Modern Animal Photography, Pryor Dodge, foreward by Maneka Gandhi (Hirmer Verlag, Munich, 2024, 978-3-7774-4262-4)

External links

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