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Elsa Thiemann

Elsa Thiemann
Porträt Elsa Thiemann um 1929-30.jpg
Born (1910-02-07)7 February 1910
Toruń, West Prussia
Died 15 November 1981(1981-11-15) (aged 71)
Hamburg
Other names Elsa Franke-Thiemann
Education Bauhaus
Occupation Photographer
Spouse(s) Hans Thiemann (married 1947-1977)

Elsa Thiemann (neé Franke, 7 February 1910 - 15 November 1981) was a German photographer and former Bauhaus student. She also designed wallpaper based on photograms.

She was born in Toruń, West Prussia, which is now part of Poland.

In 1921 her family moved to the Neukölln suburb of Berlin, where she also later lived with her husband.

After leaving school she attended the Kunstgewerbe- und Handwerkerschule in Berlin and the Vereinigten Staatsschulen für Freie und Angewandte Kunst, which later became the Universität der Künste Berlin (Berlin University of the Arts).

She studied at the Bauhaus from 1929, receiving her Bauhaus Diploma in July 1931. In the first year she undertook Josef Albers' preliminary course, and then studied photography under Walter Peterhans, in a course that was affiliated with the Printing and Advertising workshop. She also attended painting courses given by Wassily Kandinsky and Paul Klee.

Her wallpaper designs were never commercially produced as part of the Bauhaus wallpaper collection, as they were very different from the other patterns which were mainly bright and cheerful. Her work was composed of collaged dark photograms produced using plants, thread, and blobs of paint.

The then Elsa Franke met the painter Hans Thiemann () (1910-1977) at the Bauhaus and they lived together in Berlin after he completed his studies in 1933.

From 1931 Thiemann worked in Berlin as a freelance photographer and a press photographer. She had anti-Nazi views and Hans Thiemann's surrealist art work was considered degenerate, so to keep a low profile she avoided taking photos that might seem to make political statements, instead photographing ordinary street scenes, particularly around Hertzbergstrasse in the Neukölln area where she lived, often taking photos directly from her apartment windows. During World War II, the couple stayed in Berlin and worked for the publishers, Hoffmann and Campe.


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