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== Migration to Australia from Germany ==
== Migration to Australia from Germany ==
Kruger was born in 1831<ref>{{cite book|last1=Newton|first1=Gael|title=Shades of Light|date=1988|publisher=Australian National Gallery|location=Canberra|isbn=0642081522|page=65}}</ref> in [[Berlin]], Germany on the 18th of April, of a working class family, and moved to Melbourne in 1863 to join his brother as partner in a furniture business established by his brother Bernard in Victoria in 1854.
Kruger was born of a working class family on the 18th of April 1831<ref>{{cite book|last1=Newton|first1=Gael|title=Shades of Light|date=1988|publisher=Australian National Gallery|location=Canberra|isbn=0642081522|page=65}}</ref> at 16 Steingassestrasse, [[Berlin]], Germany , and was baptised Johān Friedrich Carl Krüger. He traded as an upholsterer and in 1858 married Auguste Wilhelmine Elisabeth Bauman at Friedrichwerder Church in Berlin. His wife and son migrated to [[Victoria, Australia]], arriving 23 April 1863, as he is thought<ref>Jennie Boddington (1980) Fred Kruger (1831–88)' ''Art Bulletin of Victoria'', issue 20. Melbourne: Council of Trustees of the National Gallery of Victoria. ISSN 0066 7935</ref> to have made the journey earlier to partner in the furniture business established his brother Bernard at [[Rutherglen, Australia|Rutherglen]] in 1854. Kruger subsequently became the sole owner of the furniture business, but then had it sold before 1866 when he set up as cabinetmaker in [[Taradale, Victoria|Taradale]].

Kruger subsequently became the sole owner of the furniture business, but then had it sold in late 1866.


== Photographic Career ==
== Photographic Career ==

Revision as of 12:18, 2 June 2015

Fred Kruger
View of Mount Pleasant, as seen from School of Mines, Ballarat by Fred Kruger (c. 1866)
Born
Johan Friedrich Carl Kruger

18 April 1831
Berlin Germany
Died15 February 1888
OccupationProfessional Photographer
Years active1866-1886
Victorian Aboriginals and war implements (c. 1883) by Fred Kruger

Fred Kruger was a German-born photographer noted for his early photography in Australia.

Migration to Australia from Germany

Kruger was born of a working class family on the 18th of April 1831[1] at 16 Steingassestrasse, Berlin, Germany , and was baptised Johān Friedrich Carl Krüger. He traded as an upholsterer and in 1858 married Auguste Wilhelmine Elisabeth Bauman at Friedrichwerder Church in Berlin. His wife and son migrated to Victoria, Australia, arriving 23 April 1863, as he is thought[2] to have made the journey earlier to partner in the furniture business established his brother Bernard at Rutherglen in 1854. Kruger subsequently became the sole owner of the furniture business, but then had it sold before 1866 when he set up as cabinetmaker in Taradale.

Photographic Career

Kruger was the first photographer to take group photos of the first Aboriginal cricket team in 1866, which became one of his most recognised images..

Kruger gained international recognition for his landscape photography, including the award of medals from both the 1872 Vienna 1876 and the Philadelphia Centennial exhibitions. He was commissioned by the Victorian Board for the Protection of Aborigines in 1877 to create a collection of work including portraits of the Aborigines at the Coranderrk Aboriginal Mission Station, which was made public in 1883. Kruger won more awards; a gold medal for the best collection of landscape views and another, for the best panoramic view of Geelong, at the Geelong Industrial and Juvenile Exhibition in 1879.

Kruger then settled in Geelong permanently. He created a collection in 1880 of twelve views of the streets and buildings of Geelong, winning him an award at the 1880 Melbourne International Exhibition. The government of Victoria engaged him to photograph the Yan Yean Waterworks for the Colonial and Indian Exhibition in London. Kruger gained commissions from house owners to photograph their homes, most famous of which was from Lady Loch, the wife of the Governor.

In March of 1879 Kruger was photographing groups of Geelong residents, ensuring each person could easily be identified in his detailed views, as he did when photographing the Corio Bay rowing crew in November 1879.

"Like Atget, [Kruger] shows the keen awareness of an observer who catches the seasons’ flight and the daily plodding tread of history. He journeyed many miles with his equipment in the photographic cart…patiently collecting hundreds of images of immaculate and unpretentious veracity. We must look closely to get the full value of his sense of history: in small details in countless views, usually in the lower foreground, are the little figures he has assembled to tell us about those people and times and places, with a great deal of precious visual information." Jennie Boddington, Curator of Photography, NGV, 1980.[3]

Fred Kruger made three visits to the Queenscliff region in 1881, 1882 and 1885, capturing views to include the buildings of the settlement and its marine setting.

On the 15th of February 1888, Fred Kruger died of peritonitis (inflammation of the membranes of abdominal wall and organs). Large holdings of his work have been showcased at the National Gallery of Victoria.[4]

Wreck of the ship George Roper, Point Lonsdale (1883) by Fred Kruger

Projects and Exhibitions

Fred Kruger’s work has been showcased all over the world. One of his most famous pieces of work was the very first group photo of the Aboriginal Cricket team, this piece of work was named “Aboriginal Cricketers of Coranderrk”, taken in 1866. He had also taken portraits at his studio of the three managers of the Aboriginal cricket team.[5] Kruger has done many works involving views and landscapes, gaining huge recognition for his work as a landscape photographer. Kruger’s main work was as a landscape photographer and did many different views around the area of his residence, evidentially winning numerous awards for his work in Geelong. [6]

A comprehensive exhibition Fred Kruger: Intimate Landscapes was held at The Ian Potter Centre: NGV Australia from 4 February to 8 July 2012, featuring over 100 of Fred Kruger’s prints, some of the images showing popular towns, building and streets familiar to many Victorians. Some images depicting the Esplanade at Queenscliff, Point Lonsdale and the You Yangs, and plenty more locations and scenes around Victoria. This collection also shows of how Kruger used a type of photographic language to show the social and political standards of Victoria in the mid to late 1800s. This collection of images displays how the Europeans changed the environment and made Australia more advanced while also keeping the nature shown in his images. [7]

Awards

Yarra Street wharves, Geelong (c. 1878) by Fred Kruger

During his time as a photographer, Fred Kruger had won a numerous amount of awards and gained huge recognition for his panoramas. Winning a variety of gold medals and other medals. His first medal award came at the 1872 Vienna exhibition in Austria. He won plenty more awards after that, in 1876 he won another medal at the Philadelphia Centennial exhibition, at one exhibition in Geelong he won two gold medals, that was in 1879, the exhibition was called Geelong Industrial and Juvenile exhibition, a year later he won another gold medal in Geelong at the Geelong exhibition. Soon after he started gaining more recognition and his work started to get exhibited more. The exhibitions include: The Vienna exhibition, the Philadelphia Centennial exhibition, Geelong Industrial and Juvenile Exhibition, the Melbourne International exhibition, Colonial and Indian exhibition and the Geelong exhibition.[8]

References

  1. ^ Newton, Gael (1988). Shades of Light. Canberra: Australian National Gallery. p. 65. ISBN 0642081522.
  2. ^ Jennie Boddington (1980) Fred Kruger (1831–88)' Art Bulletin of Victoria, issue 20. Melbourne: Council of Trustees of the National Gallery of Victoria. ISSN 0066 7935
  3. ^ Jennie Boddington (1980) 'Fred Kruger (1831–88) Art Bulletin of Victoria, Issue 20. Melbourne: Council of Trustees of the National Gallery of Victoria. ISSN 0066 7935
  4. ^ http://www.daao.org.au/bio/johan-friedrich-carl-kruger/biography/
  5. ^ http://www.daao.org.au/bio/johan-friedrich-carl-kruger/works/
  6. ^ http://www.daao.org.au/bio/johan-friedrich-carl-kruger/biography/
  7. ^ https://www.ngv.vic.gov.au/media_release/fred-kruger-intimate-landscapes/
  8. ^ http://www.daao.org.au/bio/johan-friedrich-carl-kruger/events/

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