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About The Artist
As early as 1898, Karl Blossfeldt began to photograph plants, seeds, and other natural specimens, using their organic forms to study linearity and design. A lecturer at the School of the Royal Museum of Arts and Crafts, he taught a course titled Modeling from Living Plants, in which he projected slides of his plant photographs for students to copy. He continued to add to his catalogue, and by the time these works were first exhibited in 1926, coinciding with the beginning of Neue Sachlichkeit photography by August Sander and Albert Renger-Patzsch, Blossfeldt had accumulated over 4,000 images. But neither the extraordinary diligence of Blossfeldt’s labor, nor the stark beauty of his minimalist approach, could explain the overnight international sensation created in 1928 by his first book of plant photographs Urformen der Kunst (Art Forms in Nature), a portfolio of 120 loose-leaf photogravure plates. The initial print run of 6,000 copies sold out within months, and further editions were published in Germany, France, England, and the United States. The Walther Collection
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Specifics
Karl Blossfeldt: Photographien (Taschen, 1994) | Edited by Rolf Sachsse.
Source: https://archive.org/details/karlblossfeldtph00sach.

The Internet Archive
The Internet Archive (https://archive.org/) is a non-profit library of millions of free texts, movies, software, music, websites, and more. It offers over 20,000,000 freely downloadable books and texts. There is also a collection of 2.3 million modern eBooks that may be borrowed by anyone with a free archive.org account. Books on Internet Archive are offered in many formats, including DAISY files intended for print disabled people. The list of my favorite photobooks on the Internet Archive you find here.






