The Leica is unique in the history of twentieth-century design - in terms of longevity, if nothing else. Designed in 1914 by an engineer named Bernack, it went into mass production in 1925. The ten-year interval between design and production reflects the uncertainty of a period in which war was followed by a series of political and economic crises. As the first camera that allowed the photographer to take snapshots, the Leica ushered in the photo-journalism of the late 1920s, and with it a totally new way of seeing the world.
Conçu en 1914, le Leica est un objet unique dans l'histoire du design au regard de sa longévité. Objet génialement novateur, il a participé à la création d'une vision radicalement nouvelle du monde, celle du photo-journalisme.