Suzanne Szasz (October 20, 1915 – July 3, 1997) was a Hungarian-born American photographer of children and family life.
Biography
Born Suzanne Szekely in 1915 in Budapest, daughter of Joseph (a doctor) and Maria (Baron) Szekely. At thirty-one, Szasz moved to the United States in 1946.[1]
In 1947 she divorced her first husband Sandor Szasz, a diplomat, and working in New York that year as a counsellor at a children's summer camp Szasz began photographing with a borrowed camera.[2] Encouraged by winning a cover competition for the Ladies' Home Journal, she became a freelance photographer,[3] selling pictures to Life, Look, Parents, Good Housekeeping,[4]McCall's and Family Circle. An example of her work of this period, rare because it was specially commissioned instead of being 'on spec', is a story she made, with minimum equipment and mostly available light, over the course of eight months in 1952 for Women's Home Companion magazine; photographs in the children's polio ward of New York's Willard Parker Hospital. The series centres on 6 year old Eileen Dicheck.[5] Interviewed for a Photography magazine article[6] covering her approach to the story, she says:
I photograph best when other people are present–where there Is a relationship between the child and other children or adults. Il you put me in a room alone with a child then I can only photograph my relation to the child. But I am interested in the real relationships that chIldren have with the world around them, and not how they act in front of the camera.
Szasz' arresting low-light image of a wide-eyed girl in a toy indian headdress was selected by Edward Steichen for the 'Childhood Magic' section of the world-touring The Family of Man show for the Museum of Modern Art, which was seen by 9 million viewers. She went on to participate in four other international group exhibitions in Europe and held a series of shows in New York.
Child psychologists,[9] including Bruno Bettelheim and doctors at the Gesell Institute of Human Development in New Haven found Szasz's capacity to work with children, and ability to seem to 'disappear' when taking her apparently intimate and candid pictures,[10][11][6] of value to their work and collaborated with her.[1][12][13][14] She assisted in another study of women who used the birth control pill in Puerto Rico in 1962.[1] Her work illustrated articles of Margaret Mead,[15] Elizabeth Taleporos, Karl W. Deutsch and others.
Though she was not a parent herself, in the context of the post-war 'baby boom' Szasz's books on, and imagery of, child-rearing proved popular amongst an audience of anxious first-time parents eager for information and affirmation. Dr. Benjamin Spock, who wrote introductions to two of her books described her as "...a sensitive student of (children's) feelings...".[16]
Contributions to the profession
Szasz was a founding and active member of the American Society of Magazine Photographers,[17][18] through which she promoted the standing of women in the profession.[19][3] She contributed numbers of texts on technique in photography, particularly on using available light,[20][21] and her speciality, capturing children and their parents in a natural and unobtrusive manner.[22] Other texts demonstrate her ability to 'read' and interpret body language, gesture and other visual clues of emotion.[23]
Personal life
In America, on December 22, 1956, Szasz married Ray Shorr, also a photographer,[24] and they remained together until his death in 1994. There were no children from either of her marriages. Szasz died on July 3, 1997, in her native Budapest whilst visiting her relatives.
Books
Prudden, Bonnie; Szasz, Suzanne (1987), Fitness from six to twelve (1st Ballantine Books ed.), Ballantine Books, ISBN978-0-345-33302-5
Anna W. M. Wolf & Suzanne Szasz. 'David makes a friend'. In Woman's home companion. August 1950
Anna W. M. Wolf & Suzanne Szasz. 'Let me have it'. In Woman's home companion, September 1950
Szasz, Suzanne, 'How to Read Your Child's Body Language'. in Good Housekeeping ; New York Vol. 186, Iss. 6, (Jun 1978): 80, 82, 84, 86.
Texts about
Kreisel, Martha (1999), American women photographers: a selected and annotated bibliography, Greenwood Press, pp. 268–269, ISBN978-0-313-30478-1
Exhibitions
Solo exhibitions
December 1, 1982 – December 31, 1982 Suzanne Szasz: Juxtapositions. Photography Unlimited Gallery, New York.[16]
The Hungarian National Gallery in Budapest (retrospective 1982)[26]
January 11, 1981 – February 11, 1981, Suzanne Szasz: Children and Other People in Black and White from 1950 to the Present. Camera Club of New York.[27]
February 1982. Suzanne Szasz: Children and Other People. Neikrug Gallery, New York.[28]
Group exhibitions
December 12, 1977 - January 15, 1978 Weltausstellung der Fotografie - Die Kinder dieser Welt. 515 Fotos aus 94 Ländern von 238 Fotografen. Hochschule für Gestaltung und Kunst Zürich, HGKZ, Switzerland.
September 16, 1977 – October 9, 1977 Women Photograph Men. International Center of Photography, New York.
September – October 1975 Breadth of Vision: Portfolios of Women Photographers Museum at the Fashion Institute of Technology, New York.[29]
October 13, 1973 - Nov 18, 1973. 3rd Weltausstellung der Fotografie - Unterwegs zum Paradies. Gruner + Jahr AG, Druck- und Verlagshaus, Stern, Hamburg, Germany
December 6, 1968 - January 5, 1969 Die Frau - 2nd Weltausstellung der Photographie. Kunstgewerbemuseum der Stadt Zürich, KGMZ, Switzerland.
October 2, 1964 - November 8, 1964, Der Mensch - First Weltausstellung der Fotografie. Organisiert von 26 europäischen Museen zum Thema: Was ist der Mensch?. Kunstgewerbemuseum der Stadt Zürich, KGMZ, CH.
January 24, 1955 - May 8, 1955 The Family of Man. The Museum of Modern Art, New York[30]
References
^ abcSuzanne Szasz, 81, Photographer of Children.(Cultural Desk)(Obituary). (1997, July 10). The New York Times, p. The New York Times, July 10, 1997.
^Szasz, Suzanne. "Take Your Camera to Camp," Modern Photography
15, 7 (July 1951):58-61
^ abSzasz, Suzanne. "Want to Be a Freelance?" Popular Photography 30, 5(May 1952): 46-51
^How to Read Your Child's Body Language, Szasz, Suzanne . Good Housekeeping ; New York Vol. 186, Iss. 6, (Jun 1978): 80, 82, 84, 86.
^ abBob Schwalberg, 'Suzanne Szasz shoots a Polio Picture story: by natural light and bounce flood her sensitive camera records a little girl's fight against a crippling disease'. Photography, Volumes 32-33. Ziff Davis Publishing Company, 1953, p.36-40,78
^Karl W. Deutsch (1972) Relating and Responding: The Adult, Childhood Education, 48:5, 227-235, DOI: 10.1080/00094056.1972.10727368
^Szasz, Suzanne. "The Invisible Photographer," U.S. Camera 15, 1(January 1952): 38-40
^Weber, Mrs. Helen. "Youngsters in Action: Two Days with SuzanneSzasz," The Professional Photographer 82 (November 1955): 30-35
^Helms, D. B., & Turner, J. S. (1976). Exploring child behavior. WB Saunders Company.
^Rambusch, N. M. (1963). Learning how to learn: An American approach to Montessori. Helicon.
^Williams, B. M. (1970). "Of Hairy Arms and a Deep Baritone Voice": A Symposium: Men in Young Children's Lives; 1. Childhood Education, 47(3), 139-147.
^Mead, M. (1970). Working Mothers: And Their Children. Childhood Education, 47(2), 66-71.
^ abFondiller, Harvey V. 'Shows We've Seen'. Popular Photography, Mar 1983, Vol. 90, No. 3. ISSN 1542-0337. p.93-94, 170
^Schwalberg, Bob. "Portfolio: Suzanne Szasz," Popular Photography 9 1, 1 (January 1984): 14-20
^ASMP Picture Annual 1957
Simon and Schuster, p.192
^Ferrers, V. (1959). PRESS PHOTOGRAPHY NOTES. The British Journal of Photography, 106(5173), 371.
^Szasz, Suzanne (1980), The unspoken language of children, Norton, ISBN978-0-393-00989-7
^Shorr, Ray. "Suzanne Szasz,' The Picture Universe. U.S. Camera 1961. New York: U. S. Publishing Co., 1960
^Bezner, L. (2002). Wedding Photography: 'A Shining Language'. Visual Resources, 18(1), 1-16.
^Szasz, S., Popper, P., & Magyar Nemzeti Galéria. (1982). Suzanne Szasz: A retrospective at the Hungarian National Gallery. Budapest: Hungarian National Gallery
^New York Magazine. 9 Feb 1981. Vol. 14, No. 6. ISSN 0028-7369 New York Media, LLC. p.77
^New York Magazine. 15 Mar 1982 Vol. 15, No. 11. ISSN 0028-7369. New York Media, LLC p.86
^New York Magazine, 13 Oct 1975. Vol. 8, No. 41. New York Media, LLC ISSN 0028-7369. p.32