[Cleaning woman (Putzfrau)]

Getty Museum

[Cleaning woman (Putzfrau)]

Creator

August Sander

German Photographer · 1876–1964

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Artist

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

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Date
1927
Medium
Gelatin silver print
Culture
German
Department
Photographs
Institution
Getty Museum

> It has often been said that August Sander recorded only the typical in the faces and bodies of his subjects. But as Susan Sontag notes in her 1973 book *On Photography*: “It was not so much that Sander chose individuals for their representative character as that he assumed, correctly, that the camera cannot help but reveal faces as social masks. . . . All his subjects are representative, equally representative, of a given social reality—their own.” > > In 1927 Sander made this portrait of an unidentified cleaning woman. She appears in a utilitarian dress and an apron covered with old stains, the years of hard, underpaid labor written plainly on her face. The broom handle that she demonstratively holds across her chest is a sign of her manual occupation. The woman's humanity recedes almost completely behind her socially assigned function. > > Adapted from *August Sander*, In Focus: Photographs from the J. Paul Getty Museum by Claudia Bohn-Spector (Los Angeles: J. Paul Getty Museum, 2000), 54. ©2000, J. Paul Getty Trust.

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