NURITH WAGNER-STRAUSS 
Photographer. Traveller. Feminist .

Nurith Wagner-Strauss photographs people, especially women and children. She studied baroque recorder and music education and is the mother of four children. She has been working as a freelance photographer since 1987. In her photo reportages, she has reported on Roma in the southern Peloponnese, Syrian refugees in Serbia, children in slums or migrant workers in India. Wagner-Strauss expresses her social responsibility with the artistic means of photography. For her long-term project "Gel(i)ebtes Leben", she portrays women born between the two world wars and records their stories acoustically. Her exhibition "Between the Worlds", which was shown at the Frauenmuseum Hittisau in 2022/23, presents 23 of these women. Nurith Wagner-Strauss has participated in numerous exhibitions, including those at the Musil Museum Klagenfurt, the MAK, the Lentos Museum Linz or the Belvedere Museum Vienna. 

Nurith Wagner-Strauss / © Claudia Prieler

Finding beauty - everywhere - is the elixir of life for me. And by that I mean beauty on both a small and a large scale, inner and outer beauty.
— Nurith Wagner-Strauss

Fassade Frauenmuseum Hittisau

GOSPODA

Vorarlberger Museum Magazin

Exhibition design © Stefan A. Schumer Architects

BETWEEN THE WORLDS 

For my work "Between the Worlds" I portrayed and interviewed Austrian women born between 1915 and 1935. The faces of very old women have always fascinated and touched me in equal measure - these faces in which life has marked itself - where joy and sorrow, happiness and grief, crying and laughing have left deep traces. There is a fullness of lived life in these faces and they radiate something so soft, delicate, fragile, vulnerable that I find beautiful.  It is naturally a different beauty than that of the thoroughly questionable and illusionary advertising aesthetics. We are incessantly flooded with images of young, smooth faces that want to suggest that youth and beauty are inseparable. And this despite the fact that demographic trends clearly show that our western society is ageing more and more. Women at the age of 50 or 60 at the latest are gradually becoming invisible and women in their last two decades of life at all marginalised and disappearing from our consciousness - and yes, actually in old people's or nursing homes and similar institutions, are at most still perceived as a problem. 

When the idea for this project matured in me, I immediately had the vision of double portraits - and that one of each of the portraits of the respective woman must be printed on glass, which radiates something fleeting, ephemeral and which I perceive as a metaphor for the inexorably approaching removal of the soul from the body. But the arrangement of the two pictures is also a symbol for the existence of these very old women "between worlds", where they perhaps already catch a glimpse of another world in certain moments... 

At the same time, it was clear to me that I wanted to capture the women's stories - stories from a time that is so completely different from ours, and which would otherwise be lost forever. The stories of these 23 women, who come from the most diverse social classes (there is the farmer, the doctor, the worker, the teacher, the scientist, the housewife, the artist, the writer and many more), tell of happy childhoods, hard work, expulsion, flight, loss, deprivation, of unrealisable career aspirations and of war experiences - which have a frightening topicality again. 

Each of the women tells her individual biography and together a kind of collective biography emerges, a biography of that time - from a woman's perspective. Women's stories are only documented and heard in a few cases - although they have carried, borne and endured so much. It was and is a great concern of mine to make them visible and audible. (Notes on my latest project, which I am continuing to work on as long as there are still contemporary witnesses among us). The exhibition "Between the Worlds" was shown at the Frauenmuseum Hittisau, Vorarlberg, from 13 November 2022 to 18 June 2023. (www.frauenmuseum.at/zwischen-den-welten)