Car Advice

Zoltan Glass – Automotive Photographer

By Anthony Crawford |

Born in Budapest on April 26, 1903 Zoltan Glass was to become one of the great photographers of the 20th Century – and automobiles, usually racing cars, were one of his favourite subjects.

It wasn’t long before Zoltan grew tired of his work as a cartoonist at a local newspaper, and in 1925, he moved to Berlin.

Initially, all he could find was the odd freelance work, until he landed a job as the picture editor of a Berlin newspaper, the 5-8 Uhr Abendblatt before moving on to the more prestigious role as a photojournalist at one of Berlin’s main daily newspapers.

Glass was doing particularly well by now, and it wasn’t long before he established a photographic agency that specialised in advertising work, and Autophot, a company dedicated to automotive photography.

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He was an amateur racer and keen motorsport enthusiast while living in Germany and covered the country’s biggest races at the Nurburgring and the Avus circuit, near Berlin.

The most famous of his photos were of the Mercedes-Benz team and their glorious Silver Arrows, which dominated Grand Prix racing from 1934.

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Due to his now well-regarded talent, he was asked to shoot the brand’s new cars for publicity material, and even managed to make ordinary scenes like loading as car onto a ship, look inspiring.

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Unfortunately for Zoltan, Hitler began to take hold of Germany in 1936 and work dried up for anyone with Jewish heritage.

With help from friends, he escaped to England where he became a citizen and set up a business shooting “erotic nude studies” which again was hugely successful for him.

Surprisingly, the only automotive shoot he accepted in England involved a female model posing with a 1961 Mercedes 300 SL Gullwing for a calendar.

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In 1964, he sold his Chelsea studio and moved to a villa on the French Riviera until his death in 1981 at age 78, leaving no children, nor a will.

The National Media Museum in Bradford, UK, is in the process of digitising much of the Zoltan Glass archive and is expected to be completed in April 2010.


 
  • http://Caradvice.com.au Baddass

    What a random article. Slow news day?

  • Ben

    What a totally random story…

    Who…cares?

  • dev

    What the? Weird article…is it a paid advertisement or something??

  • Wheelnut®™

    But wait there’s more….Next weeks story is on Luigi Di Marco the cleaner at the Ferrari Factory

  • Rob

    Geez, the site tries to broaden your understanding of the automotive world and all you can do is critisize. Zoltan Glass was one of the greatest automotive photographers of all time and demonstrated that the car can be art, not just a product. May I suggest that you simply bookmark the Holden and Ford websites and stay where you belong – amongst the automotive peasants of the world. The rest of us, who appreciate all aspects of motoring, appreciate the opportunity to view such articles. More please!

  • Angel

    Waste of a post

  • Rob

    Angel – see above. Back in your Commodore, you intellectual pygmy.

  • Cheyney

    Never heard of Zoltan.

    Photos look pretty average too, can’t have been that good…the top one isn’t even straight.

  • Spitfire

    Well said Rob. Unfortunately, because we live in a democracy all the idiots can vent their spleen.

  • Tomas79

    Well said Spitfire and Rob…
    I don’t know why people would put the effort into typing up a message to tell us they don’t care!!!

  • http://Caradvice.com.au Baddass

    Rob calm down and keep reading your Classic & Sport Cars annual. Seriously, this section is called NEWS: and I expect nothing less. This article belongs in an autobiography, which is probably where it was cut from.