Anyone having their portrait done by Madame d’Ora (1881–1963) could be confident they were lending themselves a touch of French elegance. Her sitters included writers such as Arthur Schnitzler, the composer Alban Berg, and the cultural critic Hermann Bahr. And she also produced portraits of the Wiesenthal sisters and Anna Pavlova, action shots of the scandalous nude dancer Anita Berber, and likenesses of operetta star Fritzy Massary and of famous figures like Josephine Baker and Coco Chanel.
From 1910 to the 1950s, Madame d’Ora was the portraitist of choice for Viennese and Parisian society as well as for Bohemian artists. People flocked to her studios in Vienna and Paris to take home aesthetically sophisticated and captivating portraits of themselves that exuded a contemporary look and underpinned their claim to a place in high society, the world of the beautiful, well-educated, and famous. The retrospective at the Museum für Kunst und Gewerbe Hamburg (MKG) presents the first-ever survey of Madame d’Ora’s work in a comprehensive exhibition featuring some 250 photographs spanning her early years in the 1910s until the 1950s, laying the groundwork for a re-assessment of this fascinating figure. In addition to its own holdings from the photographer’s estate, the MKG is able to draw for the show on other photographic works, magazines of the period, and examples of contemporary fashions from international lenders.
The Second World War would however mark a dramatic turning point for the Jewish photographer, who had dedicated her work up to that time exclusively to the beau monde. She was forced to flee Paris in 1940, traveling first to the Ardèche and later to Austria in 1945. There, she documented the fate of refugees near Vienna in 1945/1946, acting for the first time as a social reporter. In 1950 and 1958 she then created two series depicting slaughterhouses that are still capable of unsettling today’s viewer. These works can be understood as her personal artistic response to the horrors of war.
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