Frank Eugene Smith was an American photographer and etcher of considerable talent. He merged the skills of a graphic artist with those of a photographer, Eugene etched his negatives to produce startling and beautiful prints.
Background
Eugene was born Frank Eugene Smith on September 12, 1865, in New York, to German immigrant parents. His father was Frederick Smith, a German baker who changed his last name from Schmid after moving to America in the late 1850s. His mother was Hermine Selinger Smith, a singer who performed in local German beer halls and theaters. Eugene tended to use his shortened name while living in the United States and his full name when in Germany.
Education
After designing carpets in New York for a time as a young adult, Eugene enrolled in Munich’s Royal Bavarian Academy of Art in 1886. He studied painting and nature drawing there for eight years and began making photographs during that time, possibly using them as studies for his paintings.
Career
Frank Eugene returned to New York in 1894, secured success painting theater personalities and presented a one-person exhibition of them at the Blakeslee Galleries in 1897. Eugene was a member of the Camera Club of New York by 1899, when he had a solo show of over seventy-five of his distinctive photographs, mostly nudes and portraits. He performed extensive handwork on his images, usually scratching expressive lines into his negatives and then printing them on tissue platinum paper. A month after the exhibition, the art critic Sadakichi Hartmann wrote an appreciative article on Eugene for the December 1899 issue of the Photographic Times, in which he termed the artist a "painter-photographer", indicative of his dual skills.
In 1900, Eugene was elected to membership in England’s Linked Ring Brotherhood, and F. Holland Day included his work in the important exhibition, the New School of American Photography, seen in London and Paris. He was further honored by Alfred Stieglitz, who featured photogravures by him in both the periodical Camera Notes and the 1901 portfolio, American Pictorial Photography II. In 1902, he became a founding fellow of Stieglitz’s exclusive group, the Photo-Secession, when his work was included in its inaugural show at New York’s National Arts Club. Other major Photo-Secession exhibitions in which his pictures appeared were those in 1904 at the Carnegie Institute (Pittsburgh) and the Corcoran Gallery of Art (Washington), and in 1910 at the Albright Art Gallery (Buffalo).
Eugene traveled extensively for five years beginning in 1901, going to England, France, Italy, Holland, Greece, Bermuda, and the Caribbean. During this time, he managed to successfully send his photographs to salons in Brussels, Minneapolis, Paris, and San Francisco, and exhibitions in Berlin, Bradford, Cincinnati, Dresden, Glasgow, Hamburg, Leeds, London, Philadelphia, Rochester, St. Petersburg, Toronto, Turin, Vienna, and Wiesbaden.
The year 1907 was an eventful year for Eugene. He returned to Munich, where he was hired to teach advanced photography at the Lehr und Versuchsanstalt, an art academy. Among his eventual students there was Joseph Pécsi, who became a modernist advertising photographer in Hungary. That year, Eugene also presented a solo show in Munich that included many new photographic portraits of local male artists. And during the summer, he met up with Alfred Stieglitz and Edward Steichen at a lakeside resort in Tutzing, to learn how to make Autochromes, the first viable color process, in the form of glass transparencies. Autochromes by Eugene were seen in that fall’s Photo-Secession members’ exhibition in New York and at exhibitions in Munich in 1908 and Budapest in 1910.
In 1910, Stieglitz devoted two entire issues of Camera Work to photogravures by Eugene, a major achievement. These twenty-four plates were among the most by anyone that appeared in the quarterly, and comprised mostly portraits and figure studies. About this time, Eugene was also photographing dancers, Germany royalty, and the villas of artist friends such as the painter Franz Von Stuck.
Eugene left Munich in 1913 for Leipzig, where, for the next fourteen years, he taught nature photography at the State Academy of Graphic Arts. In 1914, he published a portfolio of twelve photogravures of male nudes, classically posed and rendered with his typical markings. The next year, he became a German citizen, prompted by World War I, his American-accented German, and his foreign origin. Shortly before he retired, Eugene organized the Exhibition of Nature Photography, which included work by both him and his students and that traveled around Germany from 1924 to 1926.
In 1927, Frank Eugene Smith returned to Munich, but spent most of his remaining years in a spacious farmhouse in Taufkirchen, a small nearby village. He died on December 16, 1936, of heart disease.
Views
His work was characterized by a distinctive style which emerged from his training as a painter. He would manipulate his photogravures with a variety of techniques, such as scratches and brushstrokes, to increase their relation to paintings and graphics.
Membership
Eugene was a member of the Camera Club of New York by 1899. In 1900, Eugene was elected to membership in England’s Linked Ring Brotherhood. In 1905 he joined the International Association of Art Photographers and three years later resigned from the Linked Ring.
Personality
Quotes from others about the person
It is a great pity that the majority of artistic photographers are as deficient in artistic temperament as Mr. Eugene is in the technique of photography.