![]() ![]() ![]() Saudek often makes his shots in sepia or b&w colors, but even hand-colored photos reminding of vintage works seem disturbing, partly due to their soviet surroundings with scuffed walls and carpets everywhere.Īt the beginning of the 1950s, Saudek was an apprentice of a photographer. Despite being prolific, the photographs made by a holocaust witness living in his youth under a Soviet regime have a dark shadow on them. Saudek began his career as a photographer in 1950 when he bought his first camera Kodak Baby Brownie. The mother died in a camp, but the father was left alive by a miracle as his sons. Jan Saudek and his twin brother Kaja Saudek, being born in the family of a Czech mother and Jewish father, survived the holocaust. Jan Saudek, early 2000s () The Camp and the Camera Saudek treats the color as a way to accentuate details, like model make-up or her veins.įig. The Czech photographer Jan Saudek (born 1935) creates his sensual hand-colored daguerreotypes today, using the photograph as a sketch. In October, we’ve published an article devoted to pornographic daguerreotypes of the 19th century. ![]()
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