Liselotte Strelow (11 September 1908 – 30 September 1981) was a German photographer.
Life
Born in Redel, Pommerania, the farmer's daughter went to Berlin in 1930, where she took photography courses at the Lette-Verein school. In 1932, she learned in the studio of the Jewish photographer Suse Byk, after which she was employed by Kodak (Germany). In 1938, she took over Suse Byk's studio on Kurfürstendamm[1] The studio as well as most of her photo archive were destroyed in a bombing raid in winter 1944.[2]
Strelow was a member of the Gesellschaft Deutscher Lichtbildner (GDL) and the German Society for Photography (DGPh). A part of her photographic estate - mainly portrait photographs - is in the Rheinisches Landesmuseum Bonn in Bonn, the much larger part of his theatre photography estate is in the Theatermuseum Düsseldorf [de], sooner the "Dumont-Lindemann Archiv".
The photographer died in Hamburg at the age of 73.
Prizes
1969: David Octavius Hill-Medaille, vergeben durch die Gesellschaft Deutscher Lichtbildner e.V. (GDL); seit 1988 vergeben durch :die Fotografische Akademie GDL, gemeinsam mit der Stadt Leinfelden-Echterdingen als David Octavius Hill Medaille / Kunstpreis der Stadt Leinfelden-Echterdingen
2019: Liselotte Stresow BILDERGESCHICHTEN, Johanna Breede PHOTOKUNST
Further reading
Liselotte Strelow. Das manipulierte Menschenbildnis oder Die Kunst, fotogen zu sein. Econ, Düsseldorf 1961
Liselotte Strelow. Portraits 1933–1972 (Exhibition catalogue, Bonn 1977), edited by Klaus Honnef, Cologne 1977, ISBN3-7927-0344-0
Johanna Wolf-Breede: Liselotte Strelow. Portrait einer Portraitphotographin. Munich 1987, MA - Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität, Munich 1987
Liselotte Strelow (1908–1981). Erinnerungen (Exhibition catalogue, Bad Bevensen), edited by Detlef Gosselk and Heide Raschke, with texts by Klaus Honnef and Johanna Wolf-Breede, Lüneburg 1989
^Christiane Kuhlmann [de]: Bewegter Körper - Mechanischer Apparat. Zur medialen Verschränkung von Tanz und Fotografie in den 1920er Jahren an den Beispielen von Charlotte Rudolph, Suse Byk und Lotte Jacobi. Peter Lang, Frankfurt 2003. Diss. Bochum 2001, p. 109
^Liselotte Strelow: Retrospektive 1908-1981. p. 16