Viktor Bulla

Victor Karlovich Bulla

Karl, Alexander and Viktor Bulla
Born Виктор Карлович Булла
(1883-08-01)August 1, 1883
St. Petersburg
Died 1 October 1938(1938-10-01) (aged 55)
Citizenship Russia
Occupation Photographer
Years active 1899 - 1938
Parent(s) Karl Bulla

Viktor Karlovich Bulla (Russian: Виктор Карлович Булла; August 1, 1883 - October 1938) was a Russian photographer and cinema pioneer.

Biography

Early life

Viktor Bulla was the son of photographer Karl Bulla. Raised in a Catholic family, he attended a British School in St. Petersburg in 1899 before studying photography in Germany. After completing his studies, he worked with his brother Alexander in his father's photography firm, Bulla & Sons.[1]

Viktor's work was first recognized when he was nineteen years old, working as a photojournalist for the Siberian Reserve Brigade during the Russian-Japanese war. His reports from the front were published in the journals Niva and Sparks, and were often reprinted in Russian and overseas news publications. He was at the center of wartime events, and was awarded the Silver Medal for Courage.

20th century and revolution

After the war, he returned to his job as a photojournalist in the family photo agency, and soon developed an interest in newsreels. In 1909, he and his brother Alexander launched a documentary film company, Apollo. Viktor was the partnership's cameraman, producer and director. Apollo produced and distributed newsreels, nature films, films covering sporting events (including an international skating competition in Vyborg and a 1910 automobile race from St. Petersburg to Rome and back), and adaptations of classic works of literature (including A. Ostrovsky and M. Maeterlinck's On The busiest place and Blue Bird, and even a fairy tale, The Frog Princess).[2][3]

After the outbreak of World War I, Viktor returned to work in the family photography agency, shooting the revolutionary events of 1917-1918 and taking part in the creation of a documentary film on the February Revolution of 1917, titled Chronicle of the Revolution in Petrograd. His dynamic and still shots served as the foundation for directors Sergei Eisenstein and M. Chiaureli in the creation of films about the revolution of 1917.

Viktor photographed the events of the October 1917 uprising, and directed the photography of the Petrograd Soviet. He was one of the progenitors of film and photographic depictions of Vladimir Lenin, filming Lenin in the eighth and ninth congresses of the Russian Communist Party in 1919 and 1920, and during the second and third congresses of the Comintern, in 1920 and 1921. He created portraits of many famous Russian Leaders Grigori Zinoviev, Lev Kamenev, Stalin and other Soviet and Party leaders, essentially acting as a staff photographer in Smolny.[4][5]

In 1928 Viktor and his brother Alexander submitted 30 photographs to the exhibition Soviet photography over 10 years. The jury awarded Viktor an honorary diploma.

In 1935, the Bulla family's photographic collection, consisting of approximately 132,683 negatives, was handed over to the Archives of the October revolution and socialist construction of the Leningrad Region.

Arrest and exile

On 15 July 1939 (according to other sources, June 23, 1938) Bulla was arrested following a denunciation from one of the employees of the Bulla photo agency. He was questioned twice. The first round of questioning failed to produce any charges against Bulla, but during the second interrogation he was forced to confess to espionage activities. In 1938, a relative said that he was an "Enemy of the people", and he was exiled to the far east where he was sentenced to remain "ten years in solitary confinement." His mother reported that he died of stomach cancer in 1944 at one of the camps, although his grandson, Andrei Leonovich Kamensky, claims that he uncovered documents demonstrating that he was in fact shot in October 1938.

Relatives

Viktor's son, Yuri (born in 1919) also became a photographer and worked in Leningrad, pioneering photojournalism for the newspaper Lenin sparks. He died in 1941 at the Leningrad front.

Bulla's grandson and daughter, Valentina and Andrey Leonovich Kaminski, still live in St. Petersburg.

Awards

Bulla was awarded the Silver Medal for Courage on the St. George Ribbon for his service in the Russian-Japanese war.

Books

Further reading

References

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