We have previously featured classical photography in color by Ernst Haas, and now it is time for you to enjoy his black & white masterpiece portraits and landscapes. Haas, who died in the 1980s, was mostly known as a pioneer of color photography, but there is also a great expressiveness to his monochrome work. Aside from the featured stills of Marilyn Monroe on set and Albert Einstein in his study, Haas also photographed random people, as well as their daily surroundings, celebrations and moments of anguish. It is perhaps Haas’s own view on photography, as “a bridge between science and art” that is most relevant to this incredible showcase of life and history, as we will only know them from pictures.
Source: Ernst-Haas.com
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