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Rudolf Busler was a German news photographer and cinematographer active from the 1950s to the 1970s.

Photographer

In 1955 his exuberant photograph of German boogie-woogie dancers in full swing,[1] shot with flash and blur from nearly floor-level, was included by Edward Steichen, with the work of ten other German photographers, for the Museum of Modern Art’s world-touring exhibition The Family of Man, seen by 9 million visitors. There is evidence that Steichen found Busler’s image at the Institut fur Bildjournalismus, a German photojournalism institute in Munich.[2]

Cinematographer

Busler went on to become cinematographer[3] on documentaries and short features for screen and television. In 1967 he was behind the camera in Rome and Lazio in Italy filming the 45 minute black-and-white Film in Rom ('Cinema in Rome')  directed by Alois Kolb and screened in West Germany on 9 April 1967 by Bayerischer Rundfunk (BR) and featuring interviews with Marco Bellocchio, Marcello Mastroianni, Pier Paolo Pasolini and Romano Scavolini.

He was Director of Photography on the 1969 18 minute short Freitag Morgen ('Friday morning'), directed by Peter Kölsch who also wrote the screenplay, showing a mother’s (Nora Pap) anxiety about her 12-year-old boy (Andy Pap) riding to school for the first time on his new bicycle, and the triumph of self-confidence that the adventure brings. For Susanne Fuhrmeister’s Der Schwarze ('The black man'), a 47 minute German 1974 psychological drama starring Rita Russek, Joost Siedhoff and Henry van Lyck, Busler was once again Director of Photography.

  1. ^ Knauer, W., & Jazz-Institut. <Darmstadt>. (2002). Jazz und Gesellschaft: Sozialgeschichtliche Aspekte des Jazz ; eine Veröffentlichung des Jazz-Instituts Darmstadt. Hofheim: Wolke. p.22-23
  2. ^ Kristen Gresh (2005) The European roots of The Family of Man , History of Photography, 29:4, 331-343, DOI: 10.1080/03087298.2005.10442815
  3. ^ Deutsches Bühnen-Jahrbuch, Volume 82 Druck und Kommission verlag F.A. Günther & Sohn, 1974 p.627