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Picturing Progress: Hungarian Women Photographers,
1900-1945

March 20, 2009 - August 30, 2009
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Olga Máté
Still life with eggs and mushrooms, early 1920s
Gelatine silver print
6.57 x 4.02 in.
Hungarian Museum of Photography
   

 
At the turn of the 20th Century, photography afforded Hungarian women their first legitimate opportunity to become artistic professionals. This exhibition focuses on the work of Hungarian women photographers during the tumultuous years between 1900 and 1945, a transitional period that witnessed unprecedented growth in educational and career opportunities for women. Hungarian women artists, inspired by the success of their counterparts in America, eagerly took advantage of their newfound freedoms by pursuing careers in photography and by training at prestigious institutions in Vienna, Munich, Berlin, Hamburg, and Paris.

Between the two world wars, the number of women photographers and women-owned studios in Hungary greatly increased. Often filling the positions of male photographers who joined the service, these artists benefitted from a hungry market of soldiers who wanted photographs taken for their families before leaving for war. After World War II, many of these women pursued careers abroad, while others remained in Hungary and succeeded in variety of photographic genres. During the economic crisis of the 1920’s, many women photographers dedicated their work to the pursuit of social justice, disseminating images of the poor and unemployed.

Research programs dedicated to women artists in Hungary began in the early 1990’s. The last two decades have witnessed an increased recognition of Hungarian women photographers, with key exhibitions in Europe and the United States attracting the attention and appreciation that their work deserves.

This exhibition will be organized according to the following six categories: portraits, nudes, social photos, movement studies, cityscapes, still lifes, and advertisements.

The exhibition is a part of Extremely Hungary, a yearlong festival of performances and exhibitions in New York City and Washington , D.C. , throughout 2009. The festival is organized by New York’s Hungarian Cultural Center to celebrate Hungary’s contemporary arts and impact on American culture. Additional information and complete programming can be found at www.extremelyhungary.org.


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