Frères Séeberger


The Séeberger dynasty, known as the Frères Séeberger; three brothers Jules, Henri and Louis' sons Jean and Albert, pioneered fashion photography in France, beginning in the twentieth century.

Background

Fashion photography began with engravings reproduced from photographs of Leopold-Emile Reutlinger, Nadar and others in the 1890s. After high-quality half-tone reproduction of photographs became possible, most credit as pioneers of the genre goes to the French Baron Adolph de Meyer and the Luxembourgian Edward Steichen who, borrowing his friend’s hand-camera in 1907, candidly photographed dazzlingly-dressed ladies at the Longchamp Racecourse and who by 1911 had been assigned by the French magazine Art et Décoration to produce pictures of dresses by the Parisian designer Paul Poiret, competing with the drawings and pochoir prints earlier, and contemporaneously, used for fashion plates.

The Séebergers

A family devoted to the genre was the Séeberger dynasty over two generations. Three brothers Jules, Louis and Henri were born to Jean-Baptiste, a Bavarian tradesman who had migrated to France in 1870, and their mother Louise, a widow from Lyon with a daughter Félicie. The second generation, sons of Louis, brothers Jean and Albert also inherited a love of photography. Together, their work spans most of the twentieth century and was devoted to elegance and fashion.
The brothers went to Paris for secondary education at the Lycée Rollin where Louis was awarded first prize for drawing. They completed their schooling at the municipal art school Palissy, before Jules and Louis start their training as designers of fabric at the atelier of J. Souchon, a specialist in “high innovations, gowns, ribbons, damask linens, Jacqaurd fabrics and drafting.” From thence came an interest, and much inside knowledge of, fashion.
While the three brothers worked as fabric designers, it was in 1891 that Jules started in evening drawing classes and also picked up photography. After a move to 39 rue Lafayette in the 10th Arr., Louis won the Danton Jeune prize dedicated to a disadvantaged child at the Ville de Paris art school, while Jules won a travel grant to Normandy. In the meantime, the youngest, Henri, enrolled at a school for applied art and also won prizes. After the death of their father in 1894 the family moved to the quieter 13 rue Fénelon.
In 1899 Jules submitted photographs to various contests, an interest soon shared by his brothers, winning prizes in amateur competitions organised by the newspaper Lectures Pour Tous. He experimented with bromoil, especially the Rawlins process. Jules took documentary photography awards in 1903 and 1904 for pictures he made on the Seine riverbanks and in Montmartre. Images by the three brothers, who signed their initials were exhibited and published in various journals and as postcards by the Kunzli brothers and Leopold Verger.
Supported by their mother, their older sister and Louis’ wife Anna, the three brothers established a family business in 1909 under the name 'Frères Séeberger' in a studio at 33 rue de Chabrol, also in the 10th and five minutes walk from their home.

Fashion photographers

While magazines like Les Modes published careful portraits, most hand-coloured, of high society women in outfits designed by the renowned couturiers, the daily newspapers like Le Figaro and Le Gaulois had been running pictures in their late editions taken, like Steichen’s, of women at the racetracks, and their approach was taken up by the magazine Femina, in an effort to satisfy the curiosity among their readership about what was fashionable in ‘real clothing’, a trend soon picked up by Paris Illustré or La Nouvelle Mode that from 1901-1902 featured snapshots taken by obscure amateurs Carle de Mazibourg or Edmond Cordonnier, though these were soon displaced by more professional images.
The brothers followed the in-crowd calendar as they went to beach resorts, ski resorts, and other fashionable locations in Paris. Their quarry was photographs of lady’s fashion, for which they found a ready market in La Mode Practique from May 22, 1909 onwards.
Incidentally, though their focus was on dresses, shoes, bags, hats, furs, and feathers, they also captured imagery of a truly haute couture, a ‘high society’ normally inaccessible to those of their class, who, though conscious at all times of the camera and allowing themselves to be photographed, would only acknowledge those belonging to the great studios and certainly not the Séebergers.
From their imagery, since it was published immediately in a long list of over 50 publications, fashion historians are able to track the influence on style of the great designers Chanel, Paul Poiret, Jeanne Lanvin, Elsa Schiaparelli, Jean Patou, Robert Piguet, Madeleine Vionnet, Lucien Lelong, Paquin et al., of whom the Séebergers also made portraits.
Not all of their subjects were of the higher classes. The great houses of Poiret, Lanvin, Worth or Patou hired models for their slim figures and tutored poses who would troop together ready to be seen and photographed. Lesser, or newer, couturiers hired casuals by the hour and often dressed them in their most eccentric costumes to attract attention, while some wore the insignia of the designers on their backs like sandwich-board bearers while they circulated alone. Milliners did not shy from wearing their own creations. The ‘fashionables’ were another class of model; well-known personalities known as ‘amphibians’, ‘jockeys’ or ‘society consultants’ who, while their celebrity lasted, wore the great designers latest creations sold to them at huge discounts or loaned free.

Style and technique

The Séeberger’s photography involved knowing these models, keeping up with the latest trends likely to appeal to the publications and an exhausting hunt for the right models amongst the crowds of fashionable racegoers—all the more so when the ‘portable’ cameras, up until around 1935 when Henri adopted the Rolleiflex, were the huge folding Ernemann Klapp Nettel or more cumbersome Thornton Pickard 13 x 18 cm reflex camera, that they used at the Bois de Boulogne and in Saint Moritz. In each case Henri accompanied by his brother Louis directing the model, bearing a notebook to record details of the fashion, and passing dark slides. Even in 1911, despite the awkwardness of their camera, the Séebergers manage, with the assistance of professional models whom they can direct, to convey a sense of immediacy and apparent.

The French image

In addition the brothers’ fashion imagery overlapped with their portrayal of media celebrities including Joséphine Baker and Charlie Chaplin. A lesser known part of their practice, as noted by Gilbert Salachas, from 1923 International Kinema Research employed the Séeberger brothers to document locations which filmmakers adapted to create the formulaic Parisian ‘atmosphere’ in sets for movies such as the 1938 American romantic comedy Bluebeard’s Eighth Wife and A comedy of murders or even as late as An American in Paris , thus creating a mythic Paris that survives in cinema even today.

The second generation

The death of Julius in 1932 and then the declaration of war mark the final withdrawal of Louis and Henry from the family business, and a brief closure during the war mobilization of the next generation of Séebergers, Jean and Albert, Louis’ two sons who retained the name “Séeberger brothers” until closure in 1977. They were assisted by Jean’s wife Suzanne then successively by Albert’s wife Cecile, Jean’s son Daniel, and various collaborators.
After WW2 the brothers continued with fashion photography as their specialty, alongside some industrial commissions, but with increasing studio work with paid fashion models at a new premises 112 boulevard Malesherbes. While not in the vanguard, they digested the style of the Le Groupe des XV, typified in the work of Philippe Pottier, Pierre Jahan, René-Jacques, and Lucien Lorelle.
The family loyalty and devotion to photography endured across two busy generations; when Jean died in 1979, Albert wrote:

Major exhibitions

  • 1976 : Paris, la rue, Bibliothèque historique de la ville de Paris
  • 1979-1980 : Les parisiens au fil des jours . Photographies Séeberger frères, Bibliothèque Historique de la Ville de Paris
  • 1980 : Paris 1950 photographié par le Groupe des XV, Hôtel Lamoignon, Bibliothèque Historique de la Ville de Paris
  • 1982 : Exposition de photographies des frères Séeberger, MJC, Ribérac
  • 1992 : Les Séeberger - L'aventure de trois frères photographes au début du siècle, Centre Photographique d’Île-de-France, Pontault-Combault
  • 1994 : L'Occupation et la Libération de Paris par Jean Séeberger photographe, Centre culturel et bibliothèque municipale de Ribérac-en-Périgord
  • 1995 : 1910, Paris inondé, Direction du Patrimoine, Paris
  • 1995 : Le Paris d'Hollywood, sur un air de réalité, Caisse nationale des monuments historiques et des sites, Paris
  • 1999 : Les frères Séeberger - Une lignée de photographes, Château des Bouillants, Dammarie-les-Lys
  • 2002 : Séeberger, des photographes dans le siècle, Ancienne synagogue de la Ferté-sous-Jouare
  • 2006 : Les Séeberger - Photographes de l'élégance 1909-1939, Bibliothèque nationale de France, Galerie de la Photographie, 58 rue de Richelieu, Paris
  • 2007 : Collections années 50. Photographies Séeberger frères et Georges Dambier, Collégiale Notre-Dame, Ribérac
  • 2010 : Le Deauville des Séeberger, Festival Planche, Deauville

    Collections

  • Bibliothèque nationale de France
  • Centre des monuments nationaux, Département des ressources documentaires
  • Château-musée de Gien : Chasse, histoire et nature en Val de Loire
  • Médiathèque du patrimoine
  • ECPAD
  • Bibliothèque nationales de France
  • Bibliothèque-musée de l'Opéra
  • Bibliothèque historique de la Ville de Paris
  • Musée Carnavalet
  • Centre Georges Pompidou
  • Musée français de la photographie
  • Association Gaston Litaize
  • Palais Galliera - Musée de la Mode de la Ville de Paris