Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2011/07/16
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]*B?la T. Kalman, at 89; photographer who had an uncanny eye for* *his subjects* *By Gloria Negri* *Globe Staff July 16, 2011* To look at a photograph taken by Hungarian-born B?la T. Kalman is to witness a work of art. Known worldwide for his distinctive photographic style, Mr. Kalman was given the title of master in 1984 by the International Federation of Photographic Art. At that time, he was the federation?s only master in the United States. His work is included in the permanent collections of 18 museums. Mr. Kalman explained that his magic behind the camera was to look through the lens with his fabled ?third eye?? - ?The Third Eye?? is the title of one of his many books - and capture the essence of whatever he was shooting, portraits, street scenes, farm workers, the temples of Angkor in Cambodia, seashells, and flowers, all breathtaking enough to hang in museums and galleries. He even transformed an onion into a thing of beauty. His third eye, an intuitive inner lens ?enabled him to visualize compositions before framing them in his viewfinder,?? said his stepson, Eric Zimberg of San Diego. Mr. Kalman, a photographer for more than 55 years who formerly owned and ran Studio 350 on Newbury Street in Boston, died June 26 at Cape Cod Hospital in Hyannis of lung and cardiac complications. He was 89 and looking forward to his 90th birthday on July 29. Mr. Kalman and his wife, Edna, lived in Boston and summered in Centerville on Cape Cod. ?Bela liked to tell a story with his images,?? said Glenn Engman, who worked at Studio 350 for Mr. Kalman and said he learned a lot from his generosity of information before striking out on his own with On Target Inc., a digital imaging lab in Boston. ?I?ve told a lot of people that B?la was kind of like a slave driver and expected a lot from you,?? Engman said. ?When I did work there, I was glad because he was so demanding and was just as hard on himself.?? Mr. Kalman had Studio 350 for 25 or 30 years, his wife said. ?He was a phenomenal person . . . with an amazing sense of humor, who made the visual case for photography as art,?? said Elizabeth Ives Hunter, executive director of the Cape Cod Museum of Art, where Mr. Kalman had an exhibit. ?He was generous to a fault, a consistent donor to the museum. Because of him, I see photography now with a different set of eyes.?? Mr. Kalman?s work has also been exhibited in Santa Fe, where he and his wife spent part of 15 years. Longtime friend David Scheinbaum, chairman of the photography department at Santa Fe University of Art and Design who owns a gallery with his wife, described Mr. Kalman as ?a very gentle soul, a wonderful human being and philanthropist.?? ?Besides having success in his own right, both in the way of commercial and fine arts photography, he had many books published and has exhibited in galleries through the world.?? Scheinbaum said. ?B?la was an incredible support to young artists,?? he said. ?If someone new were having an exhibit, B?la would be the first to purchase a print. Both he and his wife encouraged young people in their creativity.?? Scheinbaum lauded Mr. Kalman?s eagerness to keep in step with new photographic technology, ?unlike a lot of people in that generation who tend to stay with what they know.?? ?Most of his generation used film and worked in a darkroom,?? Scheinbaum said. ?B?la totally embraced digital photography when it started to become a reality 20 years ago. He was as excited as a young photographer.?? His photographs are included in many handsome books. One of them, ?Indian Country: America?s Sacred Land,?? has a script by author Tony Hillerman. B?la Tibor Kalman was born in Budapest to Sandor and Paula (Kovacs) Kalman. His father was a journalist. Mr. Kalman?s biography in his book, ?The Third Eye,?? says he did not own a camera as a boy but had a photographic memory. He showed an interest in the theater early and ?years later, became Hungary?s best-known theatrical photographer.?? The outbreak of World War II prevented Mr. Kalman from studying at Columbia University. He graduated from the Berzsenyi Gimnazium in Hungary in 1939, earning his master?s degree there in 1943. During World War II, Mr. Kalman and his brother, Pista, as Jews, were called up for labor camp duty for about a year by the Nazis who occupied their country. At first, according to his stepson, they were sent to an overnight camp and then to a day labor camp, from which they escaped by impersonating rubble-clearing engineers. After the war, in 1952, Mr. Kalman opened Kalman Foto in Budapest, but the Soviets nationalized his studio, something he could not accept, his stepson said. By stealth, Mr. Kalman fled his homeland in 1956. It took him two weeks to get to the Austrian border. He found asylum there before an aunt in Chicago sponsored his coming to the United States. In Chicago, he worked as a photographer for Life magazine before moving to New York. He moved to Boston in 1960, became an American citizen in 1962, and had his first exhibit here in 1964. At a Newbury Street gallery, Edna Zimberg of Boston had purchased a photograph of flowers by Mr. Kalman. They met and talked. Both divorced, they married in 1965, and she would travel with him to many photo shoots, including in Cambodia, the Caribbean, and Europe. ?He was a very kind and very gentle man with very, very blue eyes, very remarkable and very stubborn about certain things,?? she said.? Her children were 6 and 8 at the time, and he ?took them on as his own,?? she said. They even went on their honeymoon with them in St. Croix. ?He was a very good father, and both children use photography in their work.?? His stepdaughter, Abby Zimberg of San Francisco, a graphic designer, described him as sensitive and ?definitely an intellectual, sometimes complicated with a big personality.?? He also loved reading, chess, plants, and his late dog, Charlie. In addition to his wife, stepson, and stepdaughter, he leaves two stepgrandchildren. A private gathering is planned. A reception in his honor will be held at the Photographic Resource Center, 832 Commonwealth Ave., Boston, at 6 p.m. on July 27. In ?The Third Eye,?? Mr. Kalman also included photographs of the art work of the late Hungarian artist Gyorgy Kepes, who founded the Center for Advanced Visual Studies at MIT, and his tribute to Mr. Kalman. ?Though the spectrum of his interest is varied and rich,?? Kepes wrote, ?his strongest pictures are those where he was truly enjoying nature?s vistas. But Kalman doesn?t close his eyes to the realities of this world. Guided by a warm heart, he constantly searches for ways to reveal hardship and blind alleys of the 20th century. Because he sees in the deepest sense beyond the surface, his photographs are more than mere competent poetical facsimiles of reality, they are moving metaphors. His quiet but powerful images show the drama and the richness of our multicolored and infinite universe.?? Gloria Negri can be reached at negri at globe.com. ? Copyright 2011 Globe Newspaper Company.