Otto Fein
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Otto Fein (1906–1966) was a bookbinder and photographer who worked at the Kulturwissenschaftliche Bibliothek Warburg in Germany and later in the United Kingdom after the original library migrated to London in 1933.[1] Fein sometimes used the name Hugo Otto Fein, for example in publications in which his images featured, such as the Warburg Institute Publications.[2] He died in 1966; his death was registered in Havering, London.[3]
Fein was born in 1906 in Germany. He began his working life in 1927 at the Kulturwissenschaftliche Bibliothek Warburg in Hamburg as a bookbinder. He was to stay with this organisation for the rest of his working life. This private library was founded by Aby Warburg (1886–1929), an art historian who was interested in the social and cultural context in which art was made. With the rise of the Nazi Party in Germany, Adolf Hitler came to power in 1933. Consequently, in that year, following an invitation of an ad hoc committee and supported by eminent philanthropists such as Lord Lee of Fareham, Samuel Courtauld and Warburg's family, what came to be called the Warburg Institute moved to London late in 1933.[4]