Selfportrait as New Woman Blessed Art Thou Among Women
"Why Have There Been No Peachy Women Photographers?" a lecture by Dr. Francine Weiss at the Griffin Museum of Photography on May 9, 2015
Guest Blog by Suzanne Revy
It could probably best exist described as dumb luck that the photographs of Vivian Maier were non lost forever. With an interest in historic preservation, John Maloof purchased the contents of Maier'southward storage locker at sale, hoping to find historic photographs of northwest Chicago for a book he was writing in 2007. Though non relevant for that project, Maloof eventually scanned and shared the images of Chicago that Maier made in the 1950's and 60's through an online blog and Flikr, where in 2009 they gained widespread attention.
With this anecdote nearly Vivian Maier, Dr. Francine Weiss launched into the part that women have played in photography at the Griffin Museum of Photography this past weekend. Her provocative championship, "Why Have There Been No Neat Women Photographers? " is a riff on Linda Nochlin's important essay published in 1971 which asked the same question of artists and injected feminist theory into the rarified, paternalistic air that pervaded the history of art. In her talk, Dr. Weiss described the often difficult job of finding and researching the work of women who were making or assisting in the production of photography in the mid-19th century.
At its inception, photography was non viewed equally a medium that could be every bit broadly expressive equally painting or sculpture, just past the mid and late 19th century, photographic portrait studios were flourishing in Europe and North America. Among the practitioners making Daguerrotypes in the 1840's to the early 1860's were several women whose presence was integral to the successes of the early portrait studios. Nancy Southworth-Hawes, for example, was the sister of Albert Southworth, and she married his partner Josiah Hawes, and worked in their Boston based Southworth & Hawes studio that was agile from 1840 to 1863, and in French republic, André-Adolphe-Eugène Disderi (1819-1889) worked in full partnership with his married woman, Geneviève Elizabeth Francart in a studio they opened in Brest. In fact, he left her fully in charge of that studio when he opened another in Nîmes. Somewhen, they ran the largest portrait studio in Paris, and patented the small format technique that produced portraits quickly and inexpensively that became known as cartes-des-visites, which were popular as calling cards through the 1860's. For the well-nigh part, however, women employed at portrait studios were given the task of hand painting the portraits and assembling the small leather cases that housed these fragile objects.
At that place were a few intrepid women photographers who made work beyond the confines of the portrait studio in the 1840'due south, but much of their work is lost to us today. Equally Dr. Weiss explained, the but surviving work made past early on women photographers was that of practitioners who valued and understood their own piece of work every bit being significant, who had the back up of family who saved that work, and whose work was discovered, studied, exhibited and nerveless. Anna Atkins (1799-1871), for example, grew up learning scientific discipline from her father, and became a botanist. She made camera-less cyanotype prints of algae, and is idea to have been the start person to publish a book of photographic prints. Though motivated by science, many of her arrangements became aesthetic in their execution, and her piece of work holds an important place in the canon of photography. For some women, privileged socioeconomic status immune their pursuit of photography. Julia Margaret Cameron (1815-1879) was given a camera by her children at the age of 48, and created revolutionary close-up portraits, likewise as allegorical and Biblical tableaux employing family and friends who were some of Victorian England's about interesting minds. Lady Georgina Mary Filmer (1838-1903) created photo collages from pictures she fabricated of her many acquaintances in the upper echelons of Victorian Society.
The introduction of the Kodak Brownie Camera in 1888 opened photography to many amateurs and, in response, professional person photographers established Camera Clubs to pursue photography that was technically and artistically more sophisticated than the Brownie snapshot. Gertrude Käsebier (1852-1934) and Sarah Choate Sears (1858-1935) became established members of the pictorial camera club scene, Käsebier in New York, and Choate in Boston in the 1890's into the 1900'south. Choate grew up in a wealthy Brahmin family, and was friendly with several painters including Mary Cassatt and John Singer Sargent. She and her daughter were, in fact, the subject of several Sergent paintings, but when he saw the photograph she had made of her daughter, Sergent declared, "how can an unfortunate painter hope to rival a photo past a mother? Absolute truth combined with absolute feeling!" Käsebier pursued photography well into the 1920's, and mentored younger photographers, including Laura Gilpin and Imogene Cunningham.
As the latitude of the medium expanded beyond portraits and fine art, the 20th century saw the establishment of photojournalism as one of the nigh influential and widely viewed aspects of photography. I of the get-go photojournalists was Frances Benjamin Johnston (1864-1952) who worked every bit the White House photographer through five administrations, was commissioned to make "celebrity portraits" for magazines, travelled widely through her thirties photographing coal miners, iron and factory workers, and was an abet for women pursuing photography and business organisation. Early in her career, she co-curated an exhibition of pictures past twenty-eight women photographers that was displayed at the 1900 Exposition Universelle in Paris.
Dr. Weiss touched on photography's political role in the 1920'due south and thirty'south with the work of German photographers Germaine Krull (1897-1985) and Hannah Höch (1889-1978) whose graphic pictures and collages incorporated the avant garde modernism of the time with purposeful propaganda of political activism, while in the The states photographers such every bit Dorothea Lange (1895-1965) and Margaret Bourke-White (1904-1971) employed the traditionally straight documentary photograph to shine a calorie-free on the deep economic divisions of the Low.
All the women Dr. Weiss presented showed a deep delivery to their work as photographers and artists, simply the story of Vivian Maier is, peradventure, the almost prophetic. Without the resources of fourth dimension, money or familial support to complete work that was clearly made from a deep well of passion, Maier came very close to remaining undiscovered. How many more are there like her? There can be no dubiousness that artists marginalized by economics, gender and race accept been silenced or dismissed through most of history. While highly revered art constitute in history books tin certainly be regarded as smashing, information technology ultimately represents a frustratingly narrow view of human inventiveness and expression. Dorsum in 1971, Linda Nochlin urged artists to create the institutions in which true greatness is a claiming open to all who are willing to accept the risk. Did her call to action prevail? Part Two of Dr. Weiss' lecture will reveal what happened adjacent to great women in photography, on Lord's day, May 17th at the Griffin Museum at 4pm. For more than information and directions, go to: http://griffinmuseum.org/
To acquire about Linda Nochlin's 1971 essay, go to: http://www.artnews.com/2007/11/01/top-ten-artnews-stories-exposing-the-hidden-he/
Feature Image: Photographer Vivian Maier in an undated self-portrait (courtesy John Maloof and Howard Greenberg Gallery, NYC).
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