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  • Franz Xaver Setzer (1886-1939) Der Autor Stefan Zweig mit seiner Frau Friderike, 1926 © IMAGNO/Archiv Setzer-Tschiedel
  • Franz Xaver Setzer (1886-1939) Der Komponist Arnold Schönberg. Wien, 1922 © IMAGNO/Archiv Setzer-Tschiedel
  • Franz Xaver Setzer (1886-1939) Die Sopranistin Betty Fischer in der Operette »Die Königin« von Oscar Straus, 1927 © IMAGNO/Archiv Setzer-Tschiedel

A visual memory of “Viennese society”: Franz Xaver Setzer’s portrait photographs

18.12.2013 - 12.01.2015

Extended until 02.02.2015

From Stefan Zweig to Arnold Schönberg, from Grete Wiesenthal to Maria Jeritza

 

Within the framework of the new permanent presentation “Between the Wars. Art from 1918 to 1938”, the Leopold Museum now affords interesting insights into the sophisticated world of Viennese society of the 1920s and 30s with a selection of unique photographs from the studio of the Viennese photographer Franz Xaver Setzer.

 

Photo expert Piffl: “Extraordinary testament to Viennese cultural history”

Under the heading “Viennese Society”, the photographic expert and head of the picture agency Imagno, Gerald Piffl, has put together an interesting selection of more than one hundred portrait photographs from the 1920s and 30s for the Leopold Museum. Piffl: “The archives of the photographic studio Setzer-Tschiedel, which is still family-owned, represent an invaluable gem of Viennese photographic history and an extraordinary testament to Viennese cultural history.The initial insights shown here can be seen as a preliminary report on the ongoing exploration and analysis of the studio, which is to be followed by an in-depth presentation in the near future”.

 

Franz Xaver Setzer: Photographer of Viennese society

Franz Xaver Setzer (1886 - 1939) was one of the most important photographers of Viennese society in an era full of style and glamour. Opened in 1911, his attic studio in the Museumstraße in Vienna’s 7th district soon became a meeting place for the rich and famous, for artists and the bourgeoisie. Setzer’s studio is the only photographic studio from the interwar period to have survived in its original condition until today.

 

Grand opera: Divas from Jeritza to Lehmann as guests of Setzer’s

For stars from the stage, a visit to Setzer’s studio was an absolute must. Operatic divas, including Maria Jeritza, Elisabeth Schumann, Jamilla Novotná and Lotte Lehmann, as well as the start tenor Leo Slezak, were only too happy to be photographed by Setzer and had a fondness for being portrayed in their stage costumes.

 

Stefan Zweig and Arthur Schnitzler – Arnold Schönberg and Richard Strauss

Franz Xaver Setzer not only captured opera singers on camera but also composers, directors, theater actors and everybody who was anybody in the world of the stage. Notable literary figures, such as Stefan Zweig, Arthur Schnitzler, Felix Salten and Richard Beer-Hofmann, as well as the brilliant director Max Reinhardt, were photographed by Setzer in his inimitable manner. Composers of the early 20th century, including Giacomo Puccini, Richard Strauss, Maurice Ravel and Arnold Schönberg, as well as the operetta composer Franz Lehár, were immortalized by Setzer in the 1920s. A wonderful example from the glamorous age of operettas is a photograph of the soprano Betty Fischer in a role from the operetta “Die Königin” by Oscar Straus.

 

The conductors Bruno Walter and Clemens Krauss

Two photographs taken in the 1930s show eminent conductors with dramatically diverging biographies – the frontal view of a serious looking Bruno Walter, who had to emigrate first to Austria and later to the US following the rise to power of the National Socialists, and the distinctive profile of Clemens Krauss, who was adored by the regime.

Legendary actors: From Raul Aslan to Paula Wessely

Equally impressive are the portraits of the legendary actors Conrad Veidt, depicted in his role of Cesare from the film “The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari”, Raoul Aslan, Emil Jannings, Attila Hörbiger, Paula Wessely, Ewald Balser and Wolf Albach-Retty.

 

From the Federal President to an aviation pioneer

Further highlights among these photographs taken in the 1920s and 30s include the portraits of the Federal President Wilhelm Miklas, of the entrepreneur Julius Meinl III and of the aviation pioneer and inventor of the Etrich Taube, Igo Etrich. Particularly interesting are the photographs of Elisabeth Ephrussi, the grandmother of Edmund de Waal, author of “The Hare with Amber Eyes”, of the German developmental psychologist Charlotte Bühler, of the photographer Lisette Model and of the dancer Grete Wiesenthal. The portrait of actress Lotte Medelsky as Marthe Schwerdtlein in Goethe’s “Faust” is delightful, while that of the dancer Toni Birkmeyer as Carnival Prince is dashing. The three “Children of Baron Loudon” are adorable, while the 1929 photograph of the elegant Norwegian-born entertainers “The Rocky Twins”, who enjoyed great popularity in the US, is somewhat peculiar.

 

Pictures of a young Rudolf Leopold

The photographs of a young Rudolf Leopold with his family, which were taken at the studio Setzer-Tschiedel in the 1940s, represent both a digression and a delicacy.

 

After Setzer: Assistant Marie Tschiedel takes over and preserves

Following Franz Xaver Setzer’s death, his assistant Marie Karoline Tschiedel (1899 - 1980) took over the studio, which she ran until 1979. While the studio closed that year, it has remained unchanged until today thanks to a series of fortunate circumstances.

Information on the studio Setzer-Tschiedel

For further information on the studio Setzer-Tschiedel please visit the website: www.setzer-tschiedel.at

 

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