Friday, February 2, 2018

August Sander Portraits from the Nineteen Twenties

August Sander
Brothers 
1920
gelatin silver print
Tate Gallery

August Sander
Nun 
1921
gelatin silver print
Tate Gallery

August Sander
Gewandhaus Quartet
1921
gelatin silver print
Tate Gallery

August Sander
Proletarian Intellectuals
ca. 1925
gelatin silver print
Tate Gallery

August Sander
Middle Class Child
ca. 1925
gelatin silver print
Tate Gallery

Completion

Yesterday today was tomorrow.

The goat, bought
to furnish milk
for white eskimo puppies,
cavorted, cutting jerky
angularities of goat-gesture
oblique to spring-cold daylight.

Some days later,
after illness,
she was wild wonder-eyed,
but less prankful and horn-tossing.

Even more days later she was dead,
so that no evidence
of crag-leaping dance-capacities
remained.

She was not then
amusing to look at.
She was skin and bones,
without caprice or whimsicality.

She was not anywhere –
Goats never become angels.

Tomorrow today will be yesterday.

– Robert McAlmon (1925)

August Sander
Photographer (August Sander)
1925
gelatin silver print
Tate Gallery

August Sander
Beggar
1926
gelatin silver print
Tate Gallery

August Sander
Blacksmiths
1926
gelatin silver print
Tate Gallery

August Sander
Circus Workers
ca. 1926-32
gelatin silver print
Tate Gallery

August Sander
Painter (Heinrich Hoerle)
1928
gelatin silver print
Tate Gallery

May 20, 1928

Now he is invulnerable like the gods.
Nothing on earth can hurt him, not the coldness of a
    woman, nor tuberculosis, nor the troubles of verse,
    nor that white thing the moon, which he is no
    longer obliged to capture in words.
He strolls beneath the lindens; he looks at balustrades
    and doorways, but not to remember them.
Now he knows how many nights and how many
    mornings he has left.
His will has imposed on him a precise discipline. He
    will perform specific acts, he will cross foreseen
    streetcorners, he will touch a tree or a grille, that
    the future might be as irrevocable as the past.
He behaves in that way so that the event which he
    desires and which he fears may be nothing else than
    the conclusive end of a series.
He walks down 49th Street; it strikes him that he will
    never go through this or that side door.
Without their suspecting it, he has taken leave now of
    many friends.
He thinks of what he will never know, whether the
    next day will be rainy.
He meets an acquaintance and cracks a joke. He
    knows that this incident will be, on some occasion,
    an anecdote.
Now he is invulnerable like the dead.
At a set time, he will climb some marble stairs. (This
    will survive in the memories of others.)
He will go down to the men's room; on the checkered
    floor the water will soon wash away the blood. The
    mirror is waiting for him.
He will slick back his hair, he will adjust the knot of
    his tie (he was always a bit of a dandy, as befits a
    young poet), and he will try to imagine that the
    other man, the one in the glass, is doing these
    things and that he, the double, is repeating them.
    His hand will not tremble when the end comes.
    Passively, magically, the pistol will by now have
    rested against the temple.
That, I believe, is how it happened.

– Jorge Luis Borges, translated by Robert Mezey

August Sander
Disabled Ex-Serviceman
ca. 1928
gelatin silver print
Tate Gallery

August Sander
Young Woman
1929
gelatin silver print
Tate Gallery

August Sander
 Boxers 
1929
gelatin silver print
Tate Gallery

August Sander
Farm Hands
1929
gelatin silver print
Tate Gallery

Poems from the archives of Poetry (Chicago)