photography, gelatin-silver-print
portrait
print photography
archive photography
photography
historical photography
gelatin-silver-print
realism
Dimensions height 50 mm, width 50 mm
This photograph, taken in January 1930 by an anonymous photographer, captures Isabel Wachenheimer in a doorway on a balcony. The small, square format and candid nature of the image suggest a personal, perhaps familial context. Consider this image within the era's complex social and political landscape. In a time of growing anxieties, the innocence of a child becomes a poignant subject. The setting, a doorway, symbolizes both threshold and barrier, hinting at themes of transition and uncertainty relevant to the interwar period in Europe. The small size of the photograph invites an intimate viewing experience, almost as if we are peering into a private moment frozen in time. There's a quiet simplicity here that speaks volumes about identity, memory, and the subtle ways our histories are etched into the everyday. What does it mean to preserve the image of a child against an oncoming storm? What is captured, and what is lost?
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