[go: up one dir, main page]

Yaakov "Jack" Rosner (Hebrew: יעקב רוזנר; 1902 in Munich – 1950) was an Israeli photographer.

Yaakov Rosner
Born1902
Munich, Germany
Died1950 (aged 47–48)
NationalityIsraeli
Known forPhotography
MovementIsraeli art
Spouse(s)Margot Klausner, m. 1926

Biography

edit

Born in Munich, Rosner became aware of his Jewish background following antisemitic incidents at his school, leading him to become an active Zionist. He became a leader of the Zionist youth group Blau-Weiss (Blue and White) in Munich. He achieved a degree in economics at the University of Frankfurt, and briefly worked for the newspaper Frankfurter Zeitung.[1] In 1926, he married Margot Klausner in Berlin, and they spent six months on honeymoon in Eretz Israel.

In 1926-27 he traveled to the United States to study advertising, where he met Alfred Stieglitz, who would become a great influence on his work. In 1928, Klausner and Rosner took part in the moving of Habima Theatre from Moscow to Tel Aviv. After moving to Israel, an affair developed between Klausner and Joshua Brandstetter [he], and she and Rosner divorced in the 1930s.

Rosner made aliyah in 1936, and started a new family in Tel Aviv. He served as a photographer for the Jewish National Fund.

Style

edit

Yaakov Rosner was a pioneering Israeli photographer who documented early Land of Israel events. Rosner developed a style which was a cross of sorts between documentary and staged photography. The subjects in these photographs were always handsome, strong, happy, and hard-working. When reality was incongruent with the expectations, it was staged in a pseudo-documentary fashion.[2]

edit

Education

edit
  • 1926–27 US, with photographer Alfred Stieglitz

Exhibitions

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ Rossen, Meir (9 August 1991). "Faces of Zionism". The Jerusalem Post.
  2. ^ "Rona Sela, curator". ronasela.com.
  3. ^ "Exhibitions | the Israel Museum, Jerusalem".
  4. ^ "שגיאה 404 – עמוד לא נמצא – מוזיאוני חיפה – שישה מוזיאונים במסגרת אחת". hms.org.il. Archived from the original on 18 December 2012. Retrieved 20 September 2011.
edit