Erich Salomon - Pictures, Art, Photography

Erich Salomon

Background Information about Erich Salomon

Introduction

Born in Berlin in 1886, the lawyer and gentleman Erich Salomon, managed to gain entry to legal processes and, above all, conferences with leading statesmen, as a photojournalist. He moved confidently and, at the same, inconspicuously, within this part of society and could, almost on an equal level, document their proceedings, barterings and haggling from a close distance.  He did this soundlessly, through his eloquent photographs.  Solomon visualized the daily events of a dramatic era, which it seemed so inevitably had to end in catastrophe, as they sealed his own fate as a Jew. In anticipation, Solomon emigrated to the Netherlands in 1933, where he was later denounced during the German occupation and murdered along with his wife and youngest son in Auschwitz. However, his photographs set standards beyond his death. His pictures alone, of over-tired and sleeping politicians taken after nightly sessions, have a non-defamatory elegance. They preserve a respectful ethos, exemplary for many serious photojournalists of the next generation. In his honor, the Dr. Erich Salomon Prize has been awarded by the German Photographic Society (Deutsche Gesellschaft für Photographie) since 1971, as an award particularly for serious photojournalism. 

Bio

1886born in Berlin
Studied law in Munich and Berlin, JD
1926

First began working with photography and after a contracted project with Ullstein, became a successful freelance photojournalist for German and international newspapers.

Created numerous reportages consisting mostly of photographs from international conferences and society clubs of the Weimar Republic, Western Europe and the USA.

1933Emigrated to the Netherlands
1944

After the German occupation of the Netherlands he was denounced and murdered along with his wife and youngest son in Auschwitz

since 1971“Dr. Erich-Salomon-Prize“/ German Society of Photography (DGPh) Award