Eric Schuett's portraits of villagers in peasant dress transport the viewer to another century

At the turn of the 20th century, many women still wore the dress, but by the 1950s, they'd become outsiders, often laughed at

Gillian Orr
Friday 14 August 2015 14:13 EDT
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Marie Meier, Schaumburger Land
Marie Meier, Schaumburger Land (Eric Schuett)

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It is fair to say that Eric Schuett has always had his head in the past. As a child, the German photographer would ask his grandfather endless questions about the Second World War, and at university he took history and history of art. He began to study photography in Berlin in 2004 and while he enjoyed taking portraits of people, he wanted to offer something more unique.

He had been working in a museum on a project about the former rural life of a small village in the Black Forest, and began photographing people with old-fashioned jobs such as shoemakers and blacksmiths.

Then, in 2008, he met a woman from the area in her nineties, who'd worn traditional peasant dress her whole life. "I felt as if I'd been thrown into another century by a time machine," the 48-year-old says. He met more and more of these women – all in their eighties or nineties, most widowed.

"In former times, traditional peasant garbs were very common in some rural parts of Germany. Different kinds of dresses served as clothing for everyday use as well as special occasions. From the colour and cut you could conclude whether a woman was married, how old she was and how wealthy she was."

At the turn of the 20th century, many women still wore the dress, but by the 1950s, they'd become outsiders, often laughed at.

"I am not sure I feel nostalgic; I just respect these women and their kind of living," says Schuett. "We are losing diversity around the world. People dress the same, watch the same TV shows, play with the same smartphones. I think it's necessary to document and portray what will be lost."

For more: ericschuett-photographie.de

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