PARIS.- In 1930, when Eva Besnyö arrived in Berlin at the age of only twenty, a certificate of successful apprenticeship from a recognised Budapest photographic studio in her bag, she had made two momentous decisions already: to turn photography into her profession and to put fascist Hungary behind her for ever.
Like her Hungarian colleagues Moholy-Nagy, Kepes and Munkacsi and a little later Capa, Besnyö experienced Berlin as a metropolis of deeply satisfying artistic experimentation and democratic ways of life. She had found work with the press photographer Dr. Peter Weller and roamed the city with her camera during the day, searching for motifs on construction sites, by Lake Wannsee, at the zoo or in the sports stadiums, and her photographs were published albeit, as was customary at the time, under the name of the studio. Besnyös best-known photo originates from those years: the gypsy boy with a cello on his back an image of the homeless tramp that has become familiar all over the world.
Eva Besnyö had a keen political sense, evidenced by the fact that she fled in good time from anti-Semitic, National Socialist persecution, leaving Berlin for Amsterdam in autumn 1932. Supported by the circle surrounding woman painter Charley Toorop, filmmaker Joris Ivens and designer Gerrit Rietveld, Besnyö meanwhile married to cameraman John Fernhout soon enjoyed public recognition as a photographer. An individual exhibition in the internationally respected Van Lier art gallery in 1933 made her reputation in the Netherlands practically overnight. Besnyö experienced a further breakthrough with her architectural photography only a few years later: translating the idea of functionalist New Building into a New Seeing.
In the second half of the 30s, Besnyö demonstrated an intense commitment to cultural politics, e.g. at the anti-Olympiad exhibition D-O-O-D (De Olympiade onder Diktatuur) in 1936; in the following year, 1937, she was curator of the international exhibition foto 37 in the Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam.
The invasion of German troops in May 1940 meant that as a Jew, Eva Besnyö was compelled to go into hiding underground. She was attracted to a world view shaped by humanism in the post-war years, and her photographs became stylistically decisive for neo-Realism and immensely suitable for the moralising exhibition, the Family of Man (1955).
The mother of two children, she had experienced the classic female conflict between bringing up children and a profession career as a crucial and very personal test. Consequentially, Besnyö became an activist in the Dutch womens movement Dolle Mina during the 70s, making a public commitment to equal rights and documenting demonstrations and street protests on camera.
This first retrospective exhibition at
Jeu de Paume, showing ca.120 vintage prints, aims to introduce the public to the life and work of this emigrant and Berliner by choice, a convinced cosmopolitan and the Grande Dame of Dutch photography. Like many other talents, that of Eva Besnyö was lost to Germany and its creative art as a direct consequence of the National Socialists racial mania. (Karl Steinorth, DGPh, 1999)
Curators: Marion Beckers and Elisabeth Moortgat