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Debut novel puts real-life, celebrated photographer Philippe Halsman under fictional and psychological focus

August 10, 2012 12:56
Halsman's photo 'Dali Atomicus' in an exhibition in Barcelona in 2004

By

Anonymous,

Anonymous

1 min read

In the early 1950s, Latvian-born Jewish photographer Philippe Halsman devised an unusual method for encouraging his subjects to reveal their personalities: he asked them to jump, and pressed the shutter while they were mid-air.

He photographed hundreds of actors, artists and politicians in this way, including Salvador Dalí, Marilyn Monroe, Richard Nixon and Aldous Huxley. “Everybody hides behind a mask,” Halsman said. “In a jump, the subject… cannot simultaneously control his expressions, his facial and his limb muscles. The mask falls. The real self becomes visible.”

In The Jump Artist, debut novelist Austin Ratner imagines what might have lain behind Halsman’s own mask, taking as a starting point the extraordinary events of the photographer’s youth, when he was twice falsely convicted for patricide in the Austrian Alps.

Sigmund Freud was called to testify at the second trial and declared that he saw no psychological motive for murder. Despite this, the antisemitism then prevalent in the Tyrol, together with Halsman’s prickly behaviour in court, ensured that he was found guilty and sentenced to four years imprisonment.

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