
Getty Museum
Expressway Built during the Third Reich, Neanderthal
Creator
August SanderGerman Photographer · 1876–1964
All works by this person →During military service, August Sander was an assistant in a photographic studio in Trier; he then spent the following two years working in various studios elsewhere. By 1904 he had opened his own studio in Linz, Austria, where he met with success. He moved to a suburb of Cologne in 1909 and soon began to photograph the rural farmers nearby. Around three years later Sander abandoned his urban stud
More on Getty ULAN- Date
- about 1936
- Medium
- Gelatin silver print
- Culture
- German
- Department
- Photographs
- Institution
- Getty Museum
> Around 1936 August Sander captured this sweeping vista of the newly completed *Reichsautobahn* near the Neanderthal, northeast of Cologne. A typed label attached to the print suggests that it may have been intended for use by a commercial picture agency. The photograph is virtually indistinguishable from other laudatory depictions of the German autobahn, hailing it as a great technological achievement, a grand, dominating gesture across the land. > > This image once again raises the question of Sander's association with the National Socialist political regime, a regime from which he had very little, if anything, to expect. It is not known whether photographs such as this were made simply as a source of income or whether Sander created them on his own initiative, hoping to use them for his own artistic ends. Whatever its purpose, the picture radiates a political significance that can be reconciled with Sander's other work only with great difficulty. It may simply be one more piece of evidence that he collected in pursuit of the spirit of the time. > > Originally published in *August Sander*, In Focus: Photographs from the J. Paul Getty Museum by Claudia Bohn-Spector (Los Angeles: J. Paul Getty Museum, 2000), 94. ©2000, J. Paul Getty Trust.
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