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Wednesday, March 4, 2026 |
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| From ballet poses to bold leaps: ALBERTINA explores the rise of dance photography |
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Rudolf Jobst, Berta, Elsa and Grete Wiesenthal in the LannerSchubert Waltz, 1908. Silver gelatin print, retouched. ALBERTINA, Vienna Permanent loan from the Austrian Ludwig Foundation for Art and Science.
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VIENNA.- Dance has always been an art of the fleeting moment. A gesture, a jump, a turn and it is gone. But long before video existed, photographers were already finding ways to hold those moments still. Now, a new exhibition at the ALBERTINA brings that story vividly to life.
On view from March 3 through June 7, 2026, Tanzbild (Dance Image) traces the evolution of dance photography from the 1860s to the early 1940s. Drawing entirely from the museums own photography collection, the exhibition reveals how the camera gradually learned not just to document dance, but to interpret it and, at times, to transform it.
From stiff studio poses to star culture
In the mid-19th century, dance photography was largely a studio affair. Dancers stood in carefully arranged ballet poses, their movements frozen into dignified stillness. These images were sold as small cartes-de-visite and cabinet cards, eagerly collected by fans. The seeds of celebrity culture were already being planted.
What the early photographs lack in motion, they make up for in presence. The dancer was no longer just a performer on stage she became an image to be owned, exchanged, and admired.
Capturing movement: a technical revolution
Everything changed in the late 19th century. As exposure times shortened and camera technology improved, photographers began chasing something more ambitious: movement itself.
Suddenly, leaps, turns, and sweeping gestures could be recorded. Serial photography allowed viewers to see sequences of motion that the human eye could barely register in real time. These experiments not only transformed photography, but also influenced science and modern art.
By the early 20th century, the dancer was no longer confined to static poses. She could be seen mid-air, suspended in dynamic tension a radical break from earlier conventions.
Modern dance and a new artistic language
The exhibition pays special attention to the interwar years, when modern dance flourished across the German-speaking world. Rejecting the rigid codes of classical ballet, artists like Isadora Duncan championed personal expression and natural movement. In Vienna, a vibrant dance culture emerged, with figures such as the Wiesenthal sisters developing their own distinctive styles.
Photographers were not passive observers in this shift. Their collaboration with dancers became a creative dialogue. Together, they shaped how this new, expressive art form would be remembered.
The show includes works by prominent photographers such as Trude Fleischmann, Rudolf Koppitz, Charlotte Rudolph, and Erwin Blumenfeld, among others.
Women in front of and behind the camera
One of the exhibitions most compelling threads is the role of women. On stage, dancers such as Josephine Baker, Mary Wigman, and Anna Pavlova became icons of modernity.
Behind the camera, women photographers increasingly carved out professional space for themselves. In a field often dominated by men, they brought fresh perspectives to staging, gesture, and movement.
The result is a body of work that feels both intimate and bold portraits charged with personality, bodies caught in expressive defiance, and compositions that verge on abstraction.
From magazines to avant-garde experimentation
By the 1920s, photographs of dancers were everywhere in illustrated magazines, posters, and promotional materials. The dancers image became part of mass culture. At the same time, avant-garde photographers embraced new lightweight cameras, experimenting with unusual angles and dramatic compositions.
Images of dancers in mid-leap suggested speed, freedom, and modernity perfectly in tune with the restless spirit of the era.
A fragile art, preserved
The exhibition also confronts a darker chapter. With the rise of National Socialism in the 1930s, both the free dance scene and the photography world suffered devastating ruptures. Jewish and politically dissident artists were persecuted, forced into exile, or murdered. The creative networks that had flourished in Vienna and Berlin were torn apart.
Seen in this context, the photographs in Tanzbild become more than aesthetic objects. They are historical witnesses traces of an artistic energy that refused to stand still.
Holding movement still
What emerges from Tanzbild is not just a survey of dance photography, but a meditation on collaboration. Every image represents a shared act between dancer and photographer a negotiation of how a fleeting performance could become something lasting.
In freezing motion, these photographers did not kill it. Instead, they gave it another life.
At the ALBERTINA, that life continues to unfold one captured leap at a time.
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