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August Sander 
Sander's studio/home, Cologne: Archive in the air raid shelter (Sander's Studio/Wohnung, Köln: Archiv im Luftschutzkeller) 
1943 (ca) 
  
Gelatin silver print 
15.9 × 23.2 cm (6 1/4 × 9 1/8 in.) 
  
J. Paul Getty Museum 
© J. Paul Getty Trust, Object Number: 84.XM.152.222 
  
 
LL/116510 
  
(Curatorial description, 15 December 2021)
On September 1, 1939, World War II broke out. August Sander and his wife, Anna (1878-1957), gradually moved their belongings to the safety of Kuchhausen, a small village in the Westerwald, to avoid food rationing and the threat of Allied bombs. In 1944 their son Erich (1903-1944) fell ill in prison and died shortly thereafter of “unknown causes.” During the same year, their Cologne apartment was completely destroyed in an air raid. Sander's forty thousand negatives survived the war, having been stored in the Cologne basement (see 84.XM.152.222 and 84.XM.152.223), however all but ten thousand of them were subsequently lost in a fire.
 
Before the move to Kuchhausen, Sander created an album of photographs documenting his household and studio in Cologne-Lindenthal (see all sixty-four images: 84.XM.152.160 - 84.XM.152.223). Just as he methodically recorded ways of life he feared would soon be lost in his portraits, Sander carefully mapped the exterior and interior of his home, room after room, preserving what he feared to be on the brink of destruction.
 
Far from being a simple inventory of possessions, these photographs can be seen as a page in Sander's emotional autobiography. They trace his story from the mines near Herdorf to the sophisticated avant-garde circles of Cologne. Oscillating as they do between tradition, and innovation, the photographs acknowledge his work life, his daily life, his artistic ties, and his intellectual debts. They celebrate his family, his friendships, and even his cat. They are documents of melancholic introspection and commemoration, a physiognomy of the self, created at a time of great danger and uncertainty. 
 

 
  
 
  
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