Bill Brandt. Normandy, Knees and Elbow, 1959.

Bill Brandt


Bill Brandt (1904–1983, born Hamburg, Germany) was one of the most formally inventive and psychologically penetrating photographers of the twentieth century, whose practice moved across documentary, portraiture, landscape, and the nude with a consistency of vision rooted in Surrealism and a lifelong fascination with the extremes of British life. Spending a formative period in Paris in 1929 working briefly in the studio of Man Ray, Brandt absorbed the Surrealist sensibility that would give his images their characteristic undercurrent of strangeness, even in his most straightforwardly documentary work.

Relocating to England in the early 1930s, he produced two landmark collections, The English at Home (1936) and A Night in London (1938), that documented British society from the wealthy to the working poor with a formally precise and morally unsentimental eye. During the Second World War he photographed Londoners sheltering during the Blitz for the Ministry of Information. In the postwar years his practice shifted toward landscape and the nude, culminating in Perspective of Nudes (1961), a series of distorted, wide-angle studies that pushed the photographic image toward sculptural abstraction.

His work is held in the collections of the Museum of Modern Art, New York, Tate Modern, London, and the Art Institute of Chicago.