Toni Schneiders (1920-2006) is one of the great German photographers of the 20th century. With his formal, pictorial ambitions and his exciting motifs, he made a significant contribution to the renewal of photography after 1945. In 1949, he was a founding member of the fotoform group, which freed itself from the propaganda photography of the Nazi era through its artistic rigour and also set itself apart from the pleasing post-war photography, thus gaining international recognition.
Toni Schneiders’ photographs are characterized by formal rigour, virtuoso lighting and concentration on the essential pictorial elements [accentuating image details and emphasizing surface and line, including contour and structure]. But they are also permeated by the artist’s great interest in his subject, whom he depicts sometimes melancholically, sometimes poetically and sometimes cheerfully, but always with great empathy. In this way, Toni Schneiders succeeded in combining the rigour of fotoform, which was based on the New Objectivity of the 1920s, with his very personal, sometimes even humorous point of view. His photographs were published in more than 200 illustrated books.
The interplay of humanity, depth of content and formal rigour reflected in his work makes his works unique and a pleasure for the inclined viewer.
Text adapted from Stiftung F.C. Gundlach / Toni Schneiders bio