
Passion flower by Cronquist

images that haunt us


















Mission : Léon Busy en Indochine; all images from Musée départamental Albert Kahn

Musée départamental Albert Kahn. Archives de la Planète. Opérateur : León Busy (x)

Musée départamental Albert Kahn. Archives de la Planète. Opérateur : Auguste Léon (x)









About Hans Grendahl (1877 – 1962)
Born in Rennebu. Son of farmer Ole Knudsen Grendahl and Ane Hansdatter, born Aas. He graduated in architecture with architect Solberg, Trondheim, in 1902, after which he went to Germany and studied architecture at the university in Karlsruhe. After completing his education, Grendahl was employed, among others in the company Jacob Digre in Ålesund, later he became an assistant teacher in building subjects, construction and freehand drawing at Trondhjem’s technical training institute. In 1916 he was employed as a teacher at NTH. In the 1920s and 30s took a number of photographs in color (Autochromes), i.a. interiors and exteriors of churches in Trøndelag, Gudbrandsdalen, Østerdalen, Møre and Romsdal and Telemark, as well as pictures from the Trøndelag exhibition in 1930 and the Drammen exhibition in the same year. The oldest color photo taken in his collection is from 1922. Grendahl left a unique archive of stereo images, about half of which are in colour, to his daughter Adelheide (Ada) Grue, in Stjørdal. The picture collection was bought by the Preus Fotomuseum in 1989 and digitalized in December 2021. It consists of 1017 photographs on glass plates in the format 90×140 mm. With a few exceptions, the images are stereo images.
quoted from Preus Fotomuseum



Three views of a Chinese peony blooming at the foot of the altar of the ancestors at the time of the Têt festival, Hà-dông, Tonkin, Indochina, February 1915. Mission : Léon Busy en Indochine


all images from Musée départamental Albert Kahn
![Jaromír Funke ~ Untitled (Hydrangea in blossom in pot), ca. 1920-24 [HGG2-summer 2019]](https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/52008384576_3b52162bf7_o.jpg)
A very rare photograph in a rather pictorialist style among the modern, abstract production by Funke.
![Jaromír Funke ~ Untitled (Hydrangea in blossom in pot), ca. 1920-24 [detail]](https://unregardoblique.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/jaromir-funke-untitled-ca.-1920-1924-hgg2summer19-det.jpg)
Jaromír Funke (1896–1945) studied medicine, law and philosophy at Charles University in Prague but did not graduate. Instead he concentrated on becoming a professional freelance photographer. By 1922 he was a leader of the young opposition movement in photography and a founder of the Czech Society of Photography (1924) whose mission was to create photography that would fulfil new social functions. In his work Funke managed to combine some of the leading trends in modernist European photography, uniting constructivism and functionalism with surrealism and social commentary, with traditional Czech aesthetics. His interest in modernist ideas led him to make clearly focused studies of simple objects. As the decade progressed, he turned to the production of carefully arranged still lifes emphasizing abstract form and the play of light and shadow. During this time he also produced several important series of photographs, including two inspired by the images of Eugène Atget: Reflexy (Reflections, 1929) and as trvá (Time Persists, 1930-34).
Funke was also influential as a teacher, first at the School of Arts and Crafts, Bratislava (1931-34/35), which followed a Bauhaus-inspired curriculum, and then at the State School of Graphic Arts, Prague (1935-44). While in Bratislava, he became interested in social documentary photography and joined the leftist group Sociofoto, which was concerned with recording the living conditions of the poor. Throughout his career Funke published articles and critical reviews dealing with photography. From 1939-41 he worked with Josef Ehm to edit the magazine Fotografik obzor (Photographic Horizon).
quoted from HGG ~ Howard Greenberg Gallery / Jaromir Funke