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Ernst Haas: the Mad Men's favourite photographer

He created an advertising icon - the Marlboro Man - while his images captured the energy of '50s and '60s America

August 11, 2011 10:18
Haas: a maverick

ByMelanie Abrams , Melanie Abrams

3 min read

Ernst Haas was a maverick. He used his camera almost as an antidote to the hardships he had suffered in Nazi Vienna. With only sporadic training, he turned to photography after being kicked out of medical school for being Jewish, forced into hard labour and seeing his father die, heartbroken, at being stripped of his position in the Austrian government. Yet by the 1950s, Haas was recognised as one of the world's best photographers.

When he moved to America to join Robert Capa, Henri Cartier-Bresson and the other founders at Magnum photo co-operative, he avoided workaday photojournalism, preferring to focus on his own projects, whether exploring the streets of New York, Icelandic volcanos or the Buddhist monks of Tibet. "He was always an independent thinker, from a child. It was his way or no way. The struggle during the war made his independence even stronger. He thought: 'I'm not going to jeopardise my beliefs for anyone'," says his son, Alex Haas.

Rejecting the prevailing black-and-white aesthetic, Haas embraced colour as early as 1949, which earned him the honour of becoming the first photographer to have a solo show of colour work at the Museum of Modern Art (MOMA) in New York in 1962. He even explored the visual effects of movement, blurring the colours to look like they had been applied with paint.

"Haas was an experimental artist who worked with the DNA of still and moving pictures, the precursor to today's multimedia and time-based works," says Roxana Marcoci, curator of photography at MOMA.