Age, Biography and Wiki

Werner Haberkorn was born on 12 March, 1907 in Mysłowice, German Empire, is a Photographer. Discover Werner Haberkorn's Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is He in this year and how He spends money? Also learn how He earned most of networth at the age of 90 years old?

Popular As N/A
Occupation Photographer
Age 90 years old
Zodiac Sign Pisces
Born 12 March 1907
Birthday 12 March
Birthplace Mysłowice, German Empire
Date of death (1997-07-01) São Paulo, Brazil
Died Place São Paulo, Brazil
Nationality Brazil

We recommend you to check the complete list of Famous People born on 12 March. He is a member of famous Photographer with the age 90 years old group.

Werner Haberkorn Height, Weight & Measurements

At 90 years old, Werner Haberkorn height not available right now. We will update Werner Haberkorn's Height, weight, Body Measurements, Eye Color, Hair Color, Shoe & Dress size soon as possible.

Physical Status
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Dating & Relationship status

He is currently single. He is not dating anyone. We don't have much information about He's past relationship and any previous engaged. According to our Database, He has no children.

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Werner Haberkorn Net Worth

His net worth has been growing significantly in 2022-2023. So, how much is Werner Haberkorn worth at the age of 90 years old? Werner Haberkorn’s income source is mostly from being a successful Photographer. He is from Brazil. We have estimated Werner Haberkorn's net worth , money, salary, income, and assets.

Net Worth in 2023 $1 Million - $5 Million
Salary in 2023 Under Review
Net Worth in 2022 Pending
Salary in 2022 Under Review
House Not Available
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Source of Income Photographer

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Timeline

2014

Part of this collection was shown in the exhibition Werner Haberkorn e o Fotolabor, at Caixa Cultural São Paulo in 2014. With part of the photographic and documentary set of the Haberkorn Collection, the public was able to have a greater contact with the photography market, mainly in the 1940s and 1950s.

1999

Currently, the Werner Haberkorn Collection is part of the collection of the Museu Paulista Collection, and was acquired in 1999. The photographs are exhibited to the general public, as well as information on his editing processes. The collection has more than 640 images, containing photos from São Paulo, Campinas, Santos, Rio de Janeiro, as well as photos of products that they were probably used for showcase purposes by Fotolabor customers. The documentary part of the collection includes invoices, order forms, and advertising cards. The relevance of São Paulo to Haberkorn's production is clear: 367 of them depict the city.

1997

Werner Haberkorn (March 12, 1907 - July 1997) was a German-Brazilian engineer, photographer, and businessman. Haberkorn arrived in Brazil as an immigrant in the 1930s, accompanied by his wife Luise. Together with his brother, Geraldo Haberkorn, he founded one of the most important postcard companies in the country, Fotolabor. It produced thousands of postcards throughout the 1940s and 1950s, many of which were widely circulated. Haberkorn body of work allows the visualization of the urban transformation of the city of São Paulo in the mid-20th century.

Werner Haberkorn died in 1997 at the age of 90. He left a legacy of aerial photographs, panoramic views, advertising stills, postcards, albums and photographic montages. A large body of his work is located at the Werner Haberkorn Collection at the Paulista Museum of the University of São Paulo. The remainder of his archive remains with his children.

1970

Fotolabor operated in the advertising market until 1970s, working with both small agencies and larger companies, such as Colabor and Panam Propaganda. At the same time, the company entered the cinema exhibition market, offering the production of slides for television. The Haberkorn brothers' company operated for five decades, ending its activities in 1990. Werner was responsible for keeping Fotolabor running until the last year of its operation, since Geraldo's unit closed its activities in the 1980s. The company's facilities and equipment were gradually passed on to its employees.

1955

The company increased to 40 professionals to accommodate this great production. They performed developing, processing, enlarging, and catalog assembly. Around 1955 they opened a Fotolabor branch, but there they offered the service of a third-party photography laboratory.

1950

One of Fotolabor's most active years was 1950, when the company became one of the largest producers of photographic postcards in São Paulo. The city's industrialization process happened simultaneously to Fotolabor's success, and continued throughout the 1950s. São Paulo was going through great transformations, undergoing great urban and cultural changes. As a result of this economic and social change, Fotolabor's photographs also began to receive new treatments and uses. Another point that interfered with the circulation of photos was the increase in consumption by the population.

Despite all the success, the end of the era of Fotolabor's postcards was not long in coming. Photo processing machines were very expensive and color films were already becoming very popular. The Haberkorn brothers made an attempt to print the postcard with colors, but the quality of the chosen process was low and they were not successful. The interest of the consumer market was also changing, already being modified by the development of television and telephony. As a result, Fotolabor ceases to publish postcards in the late 1950s.

In the beginning of the production of postcards, Haberkorn showed interest in scenes daily life and the banal. However, postcards with the scenes disappeared in time, as they had little commercial appeal. The photographer was also always attentive to the major issues in the media so that he could somehow make postcards related to them. Among these postcards of this type are the photo of the singer Francisco Alves, at the time called "Rei da Voz" of Brazil; and the postcard with the Brazilian football team from the 1950s and 1958. Postcards from soccer were always among the best sellers, especially on game days. At that time, Brazil started to be considered "the country of football". For this reason, employees worked harder when a game was taking place.

1944

It is possible to say that Haberkorn's photography was exclusively linked to commercial, rather than artistic, concerns. Even the name of the business refers to its commercial aspect, with "labor" as part of the company name. According to advertisements in telephone directories, Fotolabor offered photo-retouching, advertising, catalogs, clichés and photocopying services from 1944 to 1946. The company expanded the services in 1950, adding developing, color copies, and photography for industry and commerce.

1942

Fotolabor published postcards beginning in 1942; it was initially a source of supplementary income for the company. As industrial photography market was seasonal, Werner produced postcards to complement the company's income. The postcards, however, started to have an increasing circulation, making this one of its main activities for a period of time. The central theme of its postcards were cityscapes and changes in large urban centers such as São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro. It is important to note that not all postcards had images made by Haberkorn. In the case of photographs of football teams and artists, for example, he only bought negatives to reproduce in postcard format.

1940

The Haberkorn brothers' company was founded in 1940. In addition to the photocopy brought from Germany by Geraldo, the beginning of Fotolabor was marked by the use of the coloring technique. The outbreak of World War II caused problems with the supply of raw materials needed for some of the equipment. The consequence of this was the end of the use of the Bermpohl photochromic system, which was also already being overtaken by new techniques and becoming commercially unfeasible. The company initially offered photocopying service and did works aimed at industrial photography, creating product catalogs and advertising for various brands.

Aerial photographs of the city of São Paulo were also part of the countless photographic projects that became postcards. Werner had an acquaintance who was able to contact the Brazil Ministry of Aviation, allowing him access to an airplane in the 1940s to photograph the city, something that uncommon up to that point. In some of these projects, the angle chosen by the photographer does not show the sky and focuses only on the numerous buildings in the city of São Paulo, always highlighting urbanization.

The establishment of Fotolabor was an important milestone for applied photography in Brazil, as well as in the field of advertising and industrial photography. To this day, its photographic style does not receive the same attention and recognition when compared to other iconographic genres. Through photographic collections, customer relations, purpose of orders and production records, it is possible to outline a general scenario of what the business models and strategies of marketing were like in the area of photography at that time, between the 1940s and 1960s, as well as getting to know the technical side of the photographs.

In addition, Haberkorn's photography allows the visualization of the transformations of São Paulo in the 1940s and 1950s, taking into account the changes in Brazilian infrastructure, lifestyle, and even changes in the urban design of the city. In the productions of this period, the two main factors of modernization are clear, namely verticalization, horizontal expansion, and self-mobilization. The fact that Fotolabor works for a while in the area of urban view meant that the photographer kept his attention on the primary symbolic points of the city, such as the Vale do Anhangabaú. Although his works are within a short period, each of the photographs allows the examination of the wider process of urbanization in Vale do Anhangabaú. This region was a favorite not only of Werner, but also of its competitors. They key symbols of the modernization of the city were located here, such as tall buildings and viaducts, were concentrated.

1939

Haberkorn and his wife converted to Catholicism between 1939 and 1940. Luise's parents and brothers moved to Brazil in 1939. Werner's first daughter, Vera, was born in 1940. Three years later, the couple had a son, Ernesto. Although they helped in the family business while, the photographer's children did not follow their father's career.

1938

Geraldo Haberkorn, his brother, attended the Bermpohl Institute in Germany and graduated in 1938. The name of the institute was a tribute to the creator of a color photographic system, Wilhelm Bermpohl. It was in this environment that Geraldo learned one of the techniques of color photography, which became known as the Bermpohl System. This system was based on trichromy; a camera was used to generate three negatives, allowing the reconstitution of colors at the time of the production of the positive copy. Geraldo moved to Brazil in 1939, bringing from Germany a copy of the Bermpohl machine and another one of photocopies. He additionally had a knowledge of photochromic procedures. Geraldo Haberkorn initially worked at Fotóptica but joined Werner in 1940. The two founded Fotolabor in the same year.

1937

Haberkorn arrived in Brazil as an immigrant in 1937, a year after his initial visit to the country. He was the first of his family to settle in Brazil. He, together with his wife, settled in the city of São Paulo between June and July 1937. He and his wife lived in the region of Vale do Anhangabaú and Praça da República for a period. The city's entertainment sector, such as cinemas and museums, was concentrated in the two neighborhoods. Haberkorn did not work in photography at first; he was the commercial representative of a German manufacturer. Werner left his role as a spokesman for the company, as there was great difficulty in importing the machinery from Germany as a consequences of World War II.

1936

The photographer's first trip in Brazil was in 1936. He recorded daily life in Rio de Janeiro and São Paulo, as well as life in factories and streets and some landscape photographs. Germany, at that time, was under the Nazi regime, responsible for the persecution of people of Jewish descent. In this political context, one of the motivations of his trip to Brazil was to spread information about Rio de Janeiro and São Paulo as possible destinations for Jewish communities willing to leave German and its associated territories.

On the way to Brazil with the ship Jamaique, Werner passed through Lisbon, also photographing the route, until he reached Brazil. He toured Petrópolis, Rio de Janeiro and São Paulo, staying for a month and a half in Brazil. The entire itinerary of the trip was recorded by photographs that made up an album. These records, however, remained in Germany, even after his immigration to Brazil. After the trip, Haberkorn gave some lectures in Germany on Brazil to Jewish communities. He used his body of photography from his 1936 to explain conditions of daily life in Brazil.

1930

Haberkorn graduated in 1930 from Technische Hochschule de Breslau, now the Wrocław University of Science and Technology. He graduated with a degree as a machine engineer, specializing in aircraft mechanics. Before opening his own company, he worked for a period at Junkers, the German aircraft and aircraft engine manufacturer.

Haberkorn was a photography hobbyist, and was influenced mainly by his father, who shared the same passion. As an amateur photographer during the 1930s, he dedicated himself to recording his travels in Europe, and maintained numerous albums. These collections are currently held by the family and express Haberkorn's attention to the landscape, with a focus on urbanized spaces.

1907

Werner Haberkorn was born on March 12, 1907, in Mislowitz (Mysłowice) in the Upper Silesia region. Upper Silesia belonged to Germany at the time of his birth, but today is part of Poland. His family was financially secure and established their businesses in Breslau, now Wrocław. Among Otto and Emmy Haberkorn's three children, Werner was the oldest. His father, Otto, worked in several commercial areas, two of which were hospitality and metallurgy, in addition to being the owner of a cigarette factory.