Andor Kraszna-Krausz

Zeitschrift für alle künstlerischen, technischen und wirtschaftlichen Fragen des Filmwesens (Verlag Wilhelm Knapp) after 1926, and lived in Germany until 1937, when he migrated to the United Kingdom.

As a student, he had become interested in publishing, but turned his hand to writing; by the late 1930s, he was an experienced writer on photography.

[1] Across his career, Kraszna-Krausz also developed a reputation for predicting technological change in photography, with The Times calling him a "prophet of the camera arts".

[3] His works were especially popular in Germany, where he won the German Society for Photography's Culture Award in 1979.

In 1982, he established the Kraszna-Krausz Foundation,[3] which continues to make annual awards[4] to people whose books have made "original and lasting educational, professional, historical and cultural contributions to the field".