- Walter Sheffer
Infobox Artist
bgcolour = #6495ED
name = Walter S. Sheffer
imagesize =
caption =
birthname =
birthdate =August 7 ,1918
location =Youngsville, Pennsylvania
deathdate =July 14 ,2002
deathplace =
nationality =
field =Photography
training =
movement =
works =
patrons = | influenced by =
influenced =
awards =National Council on Aging 1985Walter S. Sheffer (
August 7 ,1918 -July 14 ,2002 ) was an Americanphotographer and teacher, born inYoungsville, Pennsylvania . He moved toMilwaukee, Wisconsin in 1945 to work at the studio of John Platz, Milwaukee's main society photographer. When Platz retired, Sheffer inherited his clientele and was able to establish his own "look" and very successful portrait studio by 1953. He also taught advanced portraiture at theLayton School of Art from 1952 to 1970. [James Auer and Fanny White. "Photographer Sheffer helped others to open eyes", "Milwaukee Journal Sentinel," Milwaukee, Wisconsin, July 15, 2002, sec. B1-2.]Early Career
After attending
Houghton College , where he studied history with plans to be a lawyer, Sheffer returned to his hometown ofYoungsville, Pennsylvania to teach high school history. He often lectured against war in his class room as World War II escalated. Working for the college year book atHoughton College exposed him to photography and lead him to leave teaching to work as a photographer for a department store inPittsburgh . He later answered a newspaper ad for a photographer in Wisconsin because he admired the work of Wisconsin architectFrank Lloyd Wright and respected thatCapital punishment in Wisconsin was abolished in 1853. He moved toMilwaukee in 1945 without "knowing a soul" [Walter Sheffer lecture, Milwaukee Institute of Art & Design, April 8, 1993] to work for the prominent society portraitist John Platz. Inspired by the artistic achievements ofYousuf Karsh ,Julia Margaret Cameron ,Henri Cartier-Bresson , andEmily Dickinson , Sheffer approached portraiture in a poetic and artistic manner working to get close in order to isolate the subject. [Walter Sheffer lecture, Milwaukee Institute of Art & Design, April 8, 1993] Using a handheld 35 mm camera, natural side lighting and dramaticdarkroom techniques, the portraits he generated out of his own Jefferson Street studio were known as having the "Sheffer look". His portraits of Milwaukee's mid-century social elite, artists and architecture earned him the title "Photographer of Photographers" from the Wisconsin Professional Photographers Association in 1955. His clients included actorJimmy Stewart , comedienneTallulah Bankhead , and politicianJoseph McCarthy who he photographed forLife (magazine) . [James Auer and Fanny White. "Photographer Sheffer helped others to open eyes", "Milwaukee Journal Sentinel," Milwaukee, Wisconsin, July 15, 2002, sec. B1-2.] He created the "Portraits of Men" series in the mid-1950s forDuPont , a manufacturer of photographic film and paper, which was destroyed in a fire at his studio. [Walter Sheffer lecture, Milwaukee Institute of Art & Design, April 8, 1993.] . He was president of the Milwaukee Photo Pictorialists and the "Darlot Club" which he once described as the "self-appointed ten best photographers in Wisconsin." The groups favoredpictorial style soft focus lenses, and deep shadows in prints. He photographed theater productions extensively forMarquette University from 1955-1968 where many of his works are preserved in a photographic archive. [Marquette University, http://www.marquette.edu/library/collections/archives/projects/players/shefferportrait.html] . Several of his portraits are also held in the collection of theMilwaukee Art Museum .Sheffer photographed Victorian building facades and architectural fragments for the "Heritage Milwaukee: The Esthetics of the City" exhibition organized by and exhibited at the Milwaukee Art Center April 2-May 10, 1964. Director Tracy Atkinson wrote of Sheffer, "A city is fortunate to have a chronicler with so perceptive an eye. A long-time Milwaukee resident, Sheffer is among that small group of people in love with the face of the city, and he is, in addition, an artist acutely sensitive to its many moods and its slightest changes of expression." [Tracy Atkinson and Joy Gross Berman. "Heritage-Milwaukee" (Arrow Press, Milwaukee, March 1964) p. 2.]
Among his most notable students at the
Layton School of Art , where he taught from 1952-1970, was photographer/film makerLarry Clark who often named Sheffer as an early artistic influence and once described him as "the society photographer in town, but he was very hip." [Eleanor Lewis, "Darkroom" (New York: Lustrum Press, 1944) p. 44.]Late Career
After years of decreased activity due to personal strife in the 1970s and early 1980s, Sheffer gained national attention in the mid-1980s for his "Faces of Aging" photographic series. Thirty-five dramatic black-and-white portraits of his fellow residents at the River Hills East Health Care Center on Milwaukee's east side became a inspiring, travelling exhibition. The display travelled from Milwaukee to Newport Beach, San Diego, Chicago, Washington DC and Seattle. Together with Milwaukee artist
Sue Bartfield , who worked with him on the project, he was honored in 1985 by theNational Council on Aging in Washington D.C. for this work. [American Medical Services, Inc., 1985 Annual Report (Milwaukee, Wisconsin), p. 22-23.]Sheffer remained engaged with art, music, poetry and ideas throughout his life. He often attended gallery and museum openings and presented lectures on his life's work at
Milwaukee Institute of Art and Design where he once told students: "Photography will change your life. After you photograph, you notice the light and it exposes you to beauty." His circle of friends gathered daily at theBrady Street Pharmacy inMilwaukee to discuss art and recent events. FormerMilwaukee Art Museum photography curatorTom Bamberger described Sheffer as "the center of intellectual life" in Milwaukee. [James Auer and Fanny White. "Photographer Sheffer helped others to open eyes", "Milwaukee Journal Sentinel," Milwaukee, Wisconsin, July 15, 2002, sec. B1-2.] Sheffer continued to photograph friends and maintained a flower garden on the roof top of Christopher Street East Health Care Center until his passing.Notes
Sources
*James Auer and Fanny White. "Photographer Sheffer helped others to open eyes", Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, July 15, 2002.
*Joy Gross Berman and Tracy Atkinson. "Heritage-Milwaukee", Arrow Press, Milwaukee, March 1964.Persondata
NAME= Sheffer, Walter S.
ALTERNATIVE NAMES=
SHORT DESCRIPTION= Photographer
DATE OF BIRTH= August 7, 1918
PLACE OF BIRTH=Youngsville, Pennsylvania
DATE OF DEATH= July 14, 2002
PLACE OF DEATH=
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.