Stephen Glass | |
---|---|
Born | Budapest, Hungary |
Died | Paddington, London, England | 23 August 1990
Nationality | British / Hungarian |
Known for | Nude photography |
Stephan Glass, more commonly known as Stephen Glass, was a Hungarian-British photographer best known for his nude studies.[1]
Early career
He was born in Hungary to Jewish parents. After three years of intensive study in commercial art schools in Budapest, he earned his living as a designer, cartoonist, and painter. At the end of the First World War, he left Hungary for Germany,[2] where he worked as art editor for the leading evening newspaper in Berlin[3] His younger brother Zoltán, who moved to Berlin in 1925,[4] founded the advertising photography agency, Reclaphot, and the Autophot agency, which specialised in automotive photography. Together with Peter Petersen, they took photographs for such firms as Daimler-Benz, Fiat and Auto Union. As Hungarian Jews, however, Stephen and Zoltán found working in Germany increasingly problematic and they eventually emigrated to England,[5] where they shared a photography studio, in London.[6]
Life in London
In the 1940s and 1950s, Stephen specialised in photographing nudes for such magazines as Health and Efficiency and The Naturist.[7] In addition, his work regularly featured in continental magazines such as Paris Hollywood, Femina and Modelstudier making him one of the most prominent photographers of the nude at the time. The models, June Palmer and Pamela Green both posed for him, and he frequently used Spielplatz nudist camp in Bricket Wood as a location. In 1950 he photographed the first Miss Venus contest at Spielplatz. It was the year Pamela Green won.[8]
Glass would often use his flat as a studio. It was on Old Church Street, less than a ten-minute walk from his brother's studio on the King's Road, London.[9][10]
In addition to magazines, his work graced a series of books published by The Naturist, such as Pool of Enchantment (1950), Beauty and Naturism, and Sussex Maidens (1949).[11] Stephen Glass died 23 April 1990.[12]
The National Portrait Gallery holds one of his works, a 1930s photo of "Sir Thomas Beecham, 2nd Bt".[13]
Books published by The Naturist
Books published by The Naturist for which Stephen Glass provided the photography.
- Rosemary Andre, My Life Story, The Naturist Ltd, 1945
- Michael Rutherford, British Naturism, The Naturist Ltd, 1946
- Roy Wyatt, Sussex Maidens, The Naturist Ltd, 1949
- Anne Seton, Pool of Enchantment, The Naturist Ltd, 1950
- Charles Sennet, Nudist Life in Spielplatz, The Naturist Ltd, 1956
- Melvyn Oakdale, The Mystery of Naturism, The Naturist Ltd, 1956
- Stewart Douglas, Beauty and Naturism, The Naturist Ltd,
- Ronald Mason, Eve in the Sun, The Naturist Ltd,
- Douglas Stewart, Ideal Manhood, The Naturist Ltd
References
- ↑ Nudist Camp Follies. Wolfbait Books. 25 March 2019. p. 7. ISBN 9781999744182.
- ↑ Klinger, D.M. (1991). Die Erotische Fotografie in den 50er Jahren 19 - Stephen Glass. DMK-Verlag. ISBN 3923642652.
- ↑ Glass, Stephen (January 1951). "How I Take My Naturist Pictures". Health and Efficiency.
- ↑ Zoltán Glass: Speed and Spirit. Hatje Cantz Verlag. 2001. p. 12. ISBN 9783775790505.
- ↑ Zoltán Glass: Speed and Spirit. Hatje Cantz Verlag. 2000. p. 20. ISBN 9783775790505.
- ↑ Glass, Stephen (July 2020). Nymphs and Naiads. Wolfbait Books. ISBN 9781916215122.
- ↑ Forcer, Tim (October 2020). "Raising a Glass". H&E Naturist: 55.
- ↑ "Miss Venus 1950". Pamela Green: Never Knowingly Overdressed. 3 April 2019.
- ↑ Glass, Zoltán (1959). How to Photograph Beauty. Whitestone.
- ↑ Glass, Stephen (2019). Nudist Camp Follies Volume I. Wolbait. ISBN 9781999744182.
- ↑ "Stephen Glass as Never Before". N, the Magazine of Naturist Livin. 39 (2). 2019.
- ↑ Amazons of Yesteryear. Wolfbait Books. 2017. p. 9. ISBN 9781999744113.
- ↑ "Stephen Glass (died 1990), Photographer". National Portrait Gallery.