Frank Habicht
Frank Erich Habicht (9 December 1938 – 8 October 2024) was a German-born photographer, best known for his photographs of the emergent new fashions and lifestyles of the young baby boomers of "Swinging London" in the 1960s,[1] documenting the libertarian attitudes which were expressed through fashion, design and political activism,[2] and the class and political divides of that time and place,[3] as the conservative postwar British culture was shouldered aside to make way for a younger generation wanting an unconstrained life with free love, peace and harmony.[4]
Biography
[edit]Born in Hamburg on 9 December 1938,[5] Habicht attended the Hamburg School of Photography in 1962, and soon relocated to London. There, Habicht worked as a freelance photographer (for publications including Esquire, The Sunday Times, and The Guardian), still photographer for movies, and as photographer for the London Playboy Club and Top of the Pops. He took his black-and-photographs with, usually, a compact Rolleiflex. He took his photos in the street, at concerts, at rallies. Some were crowd shots, some close-ups of individuals. Most were candid photography of street denizens, but he also staged photos with models, sometimes nude (and sometimes in public places), and some of celebrities he had met in his movie and other work, such as Mick Jagger and Vanessa Redgrave.[1][6]
Habicht's book Young London, Permissive Paradis was published in the late 1960s, and In the Sixties in 1997.[6] His film still photographer work included The Virgin and the Gypsy (1970) and Mesmerized (1985), and he had a small acting role in What We Do in the Shadows (2014).[citation needed]
Habicht moved to New Zealand in 1981, and photographed the life and landscapes of Bay of Islands where he lived.[7] He published the books Bay of Islands: Where the Sunday Grass is Greener (a satirical pictorial of the area) and Bay of Islands: A Paradise Found.[6]
His "Karma Sixties" collection was exhibited in 2004 at the Colette Gallery in Paris, and other exhibitions of his photographs were at the Arterium Gallery in Moscow (2008), the Barbican Centre in London (2016), the Manchester Art Gallery (2016–2017), and the Beetles and Huxley Gallery[2] in London.[6]
Habicht and his wife, Christine, had two sons, including New Zealand film director Florian Habicht.[8]
Habicht died in Kawakawa on 8 October 2024, at the age of 85.[5][8]
References
[edit]- ^ a b Natalie Almeida (21 May 2019). "Book Review: As It Was". Musée. Retrieved 9 October 2024.
- ^ a b Tom Seymour (24 June 2016). "Class and Culture in Modern Britain". British Journal of Photography. Retrieved 9 October 2024.
- ^ Steph Eckardt (30 December 2018). "What Street Style Looked Like in the Swinging Sixties, Featuring Serge Gainsbourg and Jane Birkin". W. Retrieved 9 October 2024.
- ^ Hatje Cantz. "As It Was: Frank Habicht's Sixties". Artbook. Retrieved 9 October 2024.
- ^ a b "Frank Habicht obituary". The New Zealand Herald. 15 October 2024. Retrieved 15 October 2024.
- ^ a b c d "Bio". Frank Habicht official website. Retrieved 9 October 2024.
- ^ "In The Sixties -- Frank Habicht". Made in Wonder. Retrieved 9 October 2024.
- ^ a b Ahwa, Dan (15 October 2024). "Iconic New Zealand photographer Frank Habicht has died aged 86". The New Zealand Herald. Retrieved 15 October 2024.