Artwork Information
Frank Hofmann was an influential photographer, both commercially and artistically, who introduced interwar European modernist ideas and practices to New Zealand. Born in Prague in 1916, Hofmann (who was Jewish) escaped to England after the Nazi occupation of Czechoslovakia and emigrated to Christchurch in 1940 where he established himself as a freelance photographer.
Hofmann's work explores the camera's capacity to express heightened emotions and a contemporary essence, drawing on techniques that were pivotal to the modern photography movements of the 1920s and 1930s. His images frequently employ ambiguity, a lyrical interplay of line, shape, light and shadow, strange angles, and above all a transformation of the ordinary.
Studio arrangement is an example of Hofmann’s ‘New Objectivist’ photography, in which everyday objects are stripped of their associated meanings and depicted in a way that emphasises formal properties such as texture, composition and light. Hofmann made arresting images out of such things as kitchen equipment, toys, and corrugated carboard.
- Artist
- Frank Hofmann
- Title
- Studio arrangement
- Production Date
- 1944
- Medium
- gelatin silver print
- Dimensions
- 217 x 160 mm
- Credit Line
- Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tāmaki, purchased 2024
- Accession No
- 2024/30/11
- Copyright
- Copying restrictions apply
- Department
- New Zealand Art
- Display Status
- Not on display
More by Frank Hofmann (15)

Inn Window, Austria
1935

Reversal Design
1952

Photographers bookplate
circa 1945

Helen Shaw
1952