Sasha Stone (photographer)

[1] One of his best-known works is the photomontage he designed for the cover of Walter Benjamin's Einbahnstraße (One-Way Street) published in 1928.

While in the United States Army he was granted a stay at the American Expeditionary Forces (AEF) Art Training Centre in Paris after the war.

[1] In Berlin, Sasha was associated with the sculptor Aleksandr Archipenko, and was a contributor to the magazine G-Material für elementare Gestaltung.

Due to an economic downturn in Europe during this period, Sasha focused on photography as a main source of income.

Sasha had become an extremely versatile photographer, working with portraits, journalism, feature images, advertising, property, fashion, and architecture photos.

[1] His photos appeared in Adolf Behne's edition of Berlin in Bildern, and Paul Cohen–Portheim's travel guide Paris.

A collection of nudes by Sasha and Cami Stone was published in Les Femmes through the French magazine Arts et Metiers Graphique in 1933.

Stone's photomontage for the cover of Walter Benjamin 's Einbahnstraße. Stone has signed his work in red, above the second-smallest one-way street sign.