fotoform was a secession from mainstream, realist post-war photography in West Germany, driven by a desire to reconnect to photographic tendencies of the 1920s and early 1930s, and thus to draw attention to the creative possibilities of photography which had been extinguished by the propagandistic
Nazi cultural policy. Otto Steinert asserted that “a new photographic style is one of the demands of our times,” but also consciously resurrected
Bauhaus principles, as exemplified in his X-ray-like
photogram Strenges Ballet, Hommage à Oskar Schlemmer of 1949/1950. The group's name is a clear reference to its adherence to
formalism, obtained through unusual framings or viewpoints, subverting technical aspects of focus and exposure or by manipulation of darkroom processes, while their commitment to
subjektive photography is a departure from 'objectivity', and a new direction toward personal expression; as Steinert explained; “subjective photography means humanised, individualised photography and implies the handling of a camera in order to win from the single object the views expressive of its character.” Subjective meant free, personal, non-functional practice. The radical artist
Chargesheimer (pseudonym of Karl-Heinz Hargesheimer) having studied graphics and photography at the Cologne Werkschulen (1942–43) and at the Bavarian State Institute for Photography in Munich (1943–44), and pursuing his interest in theatre from 1947 as a freelance photographer for various playhouses in Germany, encountered fotoform and in 1950 participated in their “photo-kino” exhibition in Cologne and also in their legendary exhibitions of “subjektive fotografie” in 1952 and 1954. In 1953
Heinz Hajek-Halke and Christer Christian (the pseudonym of the Swedish photographer
Christer Strömholm) joined the group. The photographers of fotoform were concerned with the
formed single image and only photographs which had been accepted by all members of the group were validated as fotoform photography. == Style ==