Fred Stein: Portraiture by an Eyewitness

30/04/2026
Robert Capa and Gerda Taro 1936 sitting in a cafe

Fred Stein and the Leica

Flight and Exile

Paris

New York

Germany

“Full recognition of a person is not in the exterior identity alone, but elaborated and made convincing by some visible element of individuality. The photographer is therefore alert to attitude, gesture and expression, and snaps the shutter at the critical moment when these signs all blend together to describe the inner personality.”

Fred Stein

Fred Stein with Leica I 1937

Fred Stein with the Leica I 1937 I ©Fred Stein Archive

About Alfred Stein

Alfred “Fred” Stein was born on 3 July 1909 in Dresden, the son of a Rabbi. Very politically engaged, he became a member of the Socialist Labour Youth when he was 16. He studied law in Heidelberg, Munich and Berlin. On 30 June 1933, he was dismissed from judicial service on antisemitic grounds and was no longer admitted to the second state examination. In August 1933, he married Liselotte ‘Lilo’ Salzburg (1910–1997). Their mutual wedding gift was a Leica I. At the beginning of October, they fled Germany and he opened Studio Stein in Paris in 1934. Lilo supported him in all his business and technical tasks. With the start of World War II, Stein was imprisoned for ten months in internment and labour camps. After escaping from a camp, he met up with his family again in Toulouse in 1940. They immigrated to the USA on 6 May 1941, arriving in New York City on 13 June. He was granted American citizenship in 1952. On 27 September 1967, Fred Stein died in New York after a short illness. His archive is maintained by his son, Peter Stein.

Website Fred Stein