Konrad Helbig
Konrad Helbig (1917–1986) was a German photographer, art historian and archaeologist.[1] He is mostly known for intimate images of young Sicilian men, discovered only after his death. Life and workHelbig was a soldier in Wehrmacht, fighting in the Soviet Union during World War II. He was taken into captivity as prisoner of war. Helbig was able to return in 1947 from Soviet captivity. Immediately thereafter, at the age of thirty, he began studying art history and archeology. He was particularly interested in the Mediterranean cultures. After graduation, he traveled many times to the Mediterranean over the next few decades. Helbig worked both as a photographer and author of journal articles, with publications such as travel magazine Merian and Atlantis. He also published picture books, such as the volume on Sicily, published in 1956. Helbig mainly photographed in black and white. An essential exception, however, are color slide positives, which were intended for his slide lectures.[citation needed] Helbig is mostly known for intimate images of young Sicilian men. Only after his death in Mainz in 1986 were the nude photographs of young men discovered in his estate. The photographs, some of which were taken in the 1950s, are seen in the tradition of Wilhelm von Gloeden and Guglielmo Plüschow.[citation needed] CollectionsHelbig's photographic work is held in the archives of the Deutsche Fotothek in Dresden including 160,000 photographs, of which 60,000 are color slides;[2] in the picture archive Foto Marburg of the University of Marburg (23,800 photographs, of which 11,000 are of Greece and 6,000 of Italy);[3] and in the State Archive Hamburg within the collection of the German Society for Photography archive.[citation needed] Exhibitions
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