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It is an absolute pleasure to share the news that my article ✨‘The Garret Photographic Studio’ How the Home Darkroom Facilitated Everyday Queer Image Making ✨is now live on the Eidolon Journal website!

This essay is published in conjunction with Eidolon Club Vol. 12: The People's Pictures which was an afternoon of talks on vernacular photography held on 27 March 2026 at Fyvie Hall, University of Westminster, organised by Eidolon Centre and Photoworks_UK in collaboration with the University of Westminster. Alongside the event, a call for papers was extended to university students, with selected work to be considered for publication in Eidolon Journal. My essay on the Reg and George Collection held at Amgueddfa Cymru – Museum Wales, was the selected contribution! ❤️

In the article, I discuss one of the case studies I have been focusing on as part of my PhD research. The Reg and George Collection is so rich with photographic material of which I have barely scratched the surface! Reg and George were a gay couple who ran B&B buisnesses in Wales from the early 1970s but prior to this they lived in Bournemouth where George worked as a professional photographer. His first itteration of the business - the Garret Photographic Studio - was a domestic/studio/darkroom space. In the article I discuss how the queered photographic domestic space facilitated image making during the criminalisation of homosexuality and the obscene publications act.

It has been such a pleasure to work with the Eidolon team and getting to write about queer photographic history 🥰 

‘The Garret Photographic Studio’. How the Home Darkroom Facilitated Everyday Queer Image Making
Molly Caenwyn

See: https://everydayphotography.org/journal/the-garret-photographic-studio

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In passing: Brian Homer (1945-2026)

The Birmingham-based documentary photographer, graphic designer and jazz researcher, Brian J Homer died on 10 July aged 79 years, after a short and sudden illness. Brian's work was always political (with a small p). With a large archive of work from the 1970s to the present he told Paul Hill for a piece in Amateur Photographer magazine "there was a social purpose to the documentation, but people are now fascinated by how places and people looked half a century ago". His work was prescient and remains relevant today.  

31193738658?profile=RESIZE_400x31193740478?profile=RESIZE_400xBrian co-founded and worked on Grapevine and Broadside Magazines in Birmingham between 1971 to 1979. Grapevine reached a peak of 3000 sales and ran from 1971 to 1975. In 1975 he edited Brum Book a guide book to Birmingham before co-founding another magazine similar to Grapevine -  Broadside - which ran from 1976 to 1979. Brian was part of the original Handsworth Self Portrait project with Derek Bishton and John Reardon in 1979, with whom he also co-founded Ten8 magazine which launched in 1978. Ten.8 provided a forum for West Midlands-based photographers to come together and share images and ideas. It was described by the Jamaican scholar Professor Stuart Hall as “the journal which has most systematically explored the relationship between how we represent the world photographically, the knowledge which these images produce and their implications for power and politics”. It was the subject of a special display at the Photographers' Gallery between 2024-2025.

Alongside his own documentary photography which documented Birmingham and elsewhere internationally from the 1970s these included the Grunwick dispute march in Birmingham in 1978 and Rock Against Racism march in London in 1978. He was commissioned by Peter James of the Library of Birmingham in 2013 to produce 1000 portraits which were shown on a large screen in the library. 

His archive is housed in the Art, Design and Media archive at Birmingham City University. It comprises of a full set of Grapevine and Broadside Magazines together with a copy of Brum Book. Brian co-founded, with Trevor Fisher, Grapevine a what's on and news magazine based in Birmingham. Run mainly by volunteers who did everything from writing, design and layout to distribution.  The archive for Handsworth Self Portrait was accepted in to the Bodleian Library, Oxford, in 2024. It includes notebooks, organisation and financial information, publicity posters, press cuttings, the original negatives and a very full set of more than 200 matched scans and prints.

31193738898?profile=RESIZE_400xFrom 1978 to 2015 Brain ran a design agency and was an active photographer documenting the jazz scene. He was a member of the Jazz Research Cluster at Royal Birmingham Conservatoire and was collaborating with Dr Pedro Cravinho on Everyday Jazz Life a project exploring jazz musicians lives. His work featured in numerous publications including Café Royal's Saltley 1978-79 and Everyday Jazz Lives (with Pedro Cravinho) and his own photozine Birmingham 2025.

See: Brian's website: https://www.brianhomer.com/

Ten8 magazine history from Derek Bishton: https://derekbishton.com/other-stuff/legacy-ten8/

Handsworth Self Portrait: https://handsworthselfportrait.co.uk/

BCU Archive: https://www.bcu.ac.uk/arts/art-and-design-archive/collections/brian-homer-collection

Images: (top) Brian shown centre, bearded, at the Gruncwick dispute in 1978 taken by Derek Bishton with Brian's camera; (left, top), the first issue of Ten8 magazine created by Brian Homer and Derek Bishton; (right) portrait from Handsworth Self Portrait; (left, below) Everyday Jazz Lives

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Made Together explores Amber Films’ place within the 1980s Workshop Movement, a short but important period in British film culture when collective, non-commercial and regionally rooted filmmaking was given national support.

Presented at Tyneside Cinema, the display looks at how Amber developed films through long-term relationships with communities, combining research, documentary observation, drama, local knowledge and trust. It focuses on four key works from the period: Keeping Time (1983), Seacoal (1985), Double Vision (1986) and In Fading Light (1989). Together, these films show Amber’s commitment to working with people and places over time, rather than arriving with a fixed story.

Through production stills, scripts, notes, flyers and archival material, the display traces a filmmaking practice shaped by class, labour, gender, regional identity and everyday life. It also reflects on the wider legacy of the Workshop Movement, which argued that film could be made differently: collaboratively, accountably, and from outside the usual centres of power.

Made Together - Amber Films & The Workshop Movement
until 30th August 2026,
Free, 1200-2000
The Gallery, Floor 3, Tyneside Cinema, 10 Pilgrim St, Newcastle upon Tyne, NE1 6QG
See: https://sidegallery.co.uk/whats-on/exhibitions/made-together
 
 
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Shoreditch, London, based visual arts charity Autograph has received the entire photographic estate of Jamaican-British photographer Armet Francis. This is a significant body of work that brings over 70,000 images into their permanent collection of photography. Spanning more than four decades, Francis’s work celebrates the resilience and survival of African diasporic communities. To mark the gift, Autograph is sharing a selection of rarely seen archival photographs in a new online display.

For over forty years, Armet Francis’ mission in photography has been to document the African diaspora. As a Jamaican-British photographer with an acute understanding of black consciousness, his life-affirming images celebrate the resilience and survival of African diasporic cultures. Francis is now recognised as a pioneering figure in the photographic canon, best known for his social documentary, advertising and fashion images.

Francis’ archive encapsulates fragmented experiences of Pan-African diasporic communities: his 1970s Brixton Market fashion shoots are playful and rare frames of black joy and celebration; his 2008 commemorative portraits of those who arrived on the HMT Empire Windrush in 1948 are critical interventions that gave names to the faces of those who journeyed on that historic voyage that changed Britain forever. The archive also contains his seminal series The Black Triangle which guided his photographic practice from 1969.

31189272271?profile=RESIZE_400xIn 2024 Francis was awarded a grant by independent charity Art360 to receive support in maintaining his archive of work – including inventory management, legal consultancy, photographic and film documentation. As a result of the Art360 project, the photographer has gifted his works to visual arts charity Autograph where it will be cared for as part of their collection of photography. This gift comprises over 70,000 images, including negatives, prints and archival material documenting Francis' career from the late 1960s onwards.

Francis was one of the founding signatories of Autograph in 1988, making this acquisition particualrly significant for the organisation. The charity is proud to have worked with the artist over many years across several artist commissions and his acclaimed solo exhibition Armet Francis: Beyond the Black Triangle at their London gallery in Shoreditch. Since 1988, Autograph’s mission has remained unchanged: to championed photography and the work of artists that explores issues of race, identity, representation, human rights and social justice.

31189273656?profile=RESIZE_400xA new online gallery brings together a selection of these photographs, many of which have rarely been seen in public. Together they offer an insight into Francis' lifelong commitment to documenting the communities across Africa, the Americas and Europe. The online gallery can be viewed at: autograph.org.uk/armet-francis

This acquisition highlights the charity’s ongoing commitment to preserve the legacy of practitioners, like Francis, who have recorded important diverse narratives that have contributed to the representation of Black British history. Autograph’s Director, Professor Mark Sealy, said: “Armet Francis forged a photographic practice as an act of historical resistance: a visual counter-archive confronting the enduring violence of the Atlantic Slave Trade and its afterlives in contemporary Black diasporic life. From his exhibition The Black Triangle at The Photographer’s Gallery in 1983 to the self-publication of the book, which carried the same title in 1985, Francis’s work emerged from and spoke directly to the radical tradition of Black Consciousness. His radicality is expansive, restless, and deeply interdisciplinary, driven by an urgent commitment to rupture dominant narratives and open new ways of seeing Black subjectivity. Moving across fashion, portraiture, and social documentary, Francis became foundational to the development of Autograph ABP, insisting on Black photography not as a marginal practice, but as a transformative cultural and political force. It is therefore with profound pride that we announce the archives of Armet Francis will be preserved and cared for in their rightful home, Autograph, where they will continue to provoke research, sharpen critical discourse, and inspire future generations.

Art360’s Head of Artists' Services, Daniel Rudd, said: “I’m delighted to see Armet Francis’s archive enter Autograph’s collection, ensuring that the work of one of the most important photographic voices of his generation is preserved, studied and shared with future audiences. It has been a privilege to support this project and to help secure a permanent home for such a significant body of work. This outcome reflects the vital role organisations such as Autograph play in safeguarding photographic heritage and would not have been possible without the dedication and expertise of archivist Clare Hewitt and artist Eileen Perrier. As part of DACS’s commitment to supporting artists and protecting their legacy, we are proud to have played a role in helping secure greater recognition of, and long-term access to, this remarkable archive.

Images: (top): Armet Francis, Fashion Shoot, Brixton Market, London , 1973. © Armet Francis. Collection of Autograph, London; (Centre):  Armet Francis, from the series Lambeth and Brixton Tube , 1994. © Armet Francis. Commissioned by Autograph, London; (lower): Armet Francis, Fashion shoot for 19 Magazine , c.1973. © Armet Francis. Collection of Autograph, London.

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Apropos George Shaw.

Robert Hunt reviewing the photography exhibited at the 1851 Great Exhibition in the Art Journal's Illustrated Catalogue of Industry of all Nations, observes: '...Some examples of forest scenery,and picturesque bits, selected with artistic taste from "the ancestral homes of England," are perfect studies for the artist to dwell upon...these are the productions of Mr Shaw of Birmingham who unites the skill of an artist with the experience gained by the long study of chemical science.' 

Does this exhibited work of his, I wonder, survive?

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BPH recently reported on a public artwork commission to commemorate the work of pioneering Birmingham photographer George Shaw. Run by Colmore Life a call opens today (Monday) for a public vote on the six shortlisted entries. The winning design will be installed on the glass panels at the Town Hall tram stop, creating a striking new piece of public art inspired by Shaw’s remarkable legacy. You can find more information about the open call and wider project here.

Each of the artists has taken a unique approach to interpreting George Shaw’s life, achievements and impact on Birmingham. Below, you can learn more about each artist, explore their proposed designs and read a short summary of their creative vision. The public vote will form part of the final decision, alongside the views of our selection panel:

  • Roo Kaur Dhissou – Artist
  • Jo Gane – Artist and Photographic Historian
  • Alexander Goodger – Director, Stourbridge Glass Museum
  • Mike Mounfield – Chief Technical Officer, Birmingham Colmore
  • Anna Sparham – Curator of Photographs, National Trust
  • Ian Sergeant – Senior Curator, Global Majority Collections, Birmingham Museums Trust

Voting will open on Monday 6 July and closes at 5pm on Monday 13 July.

Details and vote here: https://colmorelife.co.uk/vote-for-your-favourite-george-shaw-artwork-proposal/

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31188581088?profile=RESIZE_400xLondon's Cinema Museum has a  once-in-a-generation opportunity to buy its premises, the historic Grade II listed Lambeth Workhouse. It needs to raise £500,000 in five months to seal the deal and end decades of insecurity - and potential eviction. The Museum is the UK’s only museum dedicated to the experience of cinema going and is volunteer-run with no public funding. 

The Cinema Museum in London's Kennington was founded by film enthusiasts and collectors Ronald Grant and Martin Humphries in 1984 and became a registered charity in 1986. Its collection showcases their vast private collection of cinema history, memorabilia, and vintage artefacts, collected - and rescued - over many decades. 

As the Museum notes its home is not just a building; it is a living piece of cultural history: 

  • The Chaplin Connection: Before he became a Hollywood icon, a young Charlie Chaplin lived and worked in the building when it was the Lambeth Workhouse.
  • A Treasure Trove of Cinema History: Inside these walls sits an unparalleled collection of art deco cinema seats, vintage projectors, ushers' uniforms, and classic film posters. The Chaplin family themselves call it "the nearest thing that Britain has to a Chaplin Museum"
  • A Community Hub: We are a vibrant cultural centre hosting regular independent screenings, local events, and educational tours and provide free and subsidised space to help local charities and initiatives.
  • A Supportive Effective Resource: our spaces and collections are not just for looking at - we use them to run projects that make a massive impact on people's lives, young and old. And we share them, with other charities and community groups, who are all part of making life better for everyone. 

To secure its buuilding and future the Cinema Museum has launched a Crowdfunder to secure the £500,000 needed - or would welcome a supportive benefactor...

See details here, lend your support, and share the call: https://www.crowdfunder.co.uk/p/the-cinema-museum-buy-our-home

See the Museum website: https://cinemamuseum.org.uk/

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A newly created charity has been established to preserve the legacies of Lee Miller, Roland Penrose and their associates.The Farleys House & Gallery Trust cares for Farleys, and the legacies of Lee Miller, Roland Penrose and their associates. The Trust's overview notes its onjectives 'to conserve and catalogue the lifestyle and holding of work by Lee Miller, Roland Penrose and their associates. To promote worldwide scholarship and dissemination of the lives and work of Lee Miller and Roland Penrose in a manner commensurate with the artistic and humanitarian principles of the artists. To establish and maintain buildings and land associated with Lee Miller and Roland Penrose.'

The new Trust was registered on 25 March and the trustees for the Farleys House & Gallery Trust are: Ami Bouhassane, Dr Patrick Elliott, Christine Erwood, Sarah Hopwood, Amanda Nevill CBE, Antony Penrose, and Eliza Penrose.

See: Charity Commission entry here
and website: https://www.farleyshouseandgallery.co.uk/about-farleys-house-gallery-trust/

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Sotheby's New York is to offer a prototype camerad, named the Phantom, and designed by Noel Pemberton Billing. P-B was the designer of the Compass camera made be Le Coultre. The Phantom never made it beyond the prototype stage and it was dated to c.. The camera was originally sold at Christie's South Kensington in January 2001 where it sold for £146,750, against an estimate of £8,000-12,000 - then a world record auction price for a camera. Sotheby's have an estimate on the camera of US$30,000-50,000.

The Phantom Photographic Unit was one of the last engineering projects Billing worked on before his death. It has clear antecedents in the Compass camera which was taken to its logical conclusion with all aspects of the camera being built in to a single box. The Phantom camera, although larger than the Compass is of a very similar design and layout.
The Phantom, for which there appears to be no published report in any contemporary photographic periodical, was designed between 1944 and 1946. It was made by W. Rollason & Sons of Finchley, London, It was intended to be manufactured and sold complete for £25 in 1948. The prototype was never fully completed and is not fully working.

History of Science and Technology
Sotheby's New York
15 July 2026 from 1900 (BST)
Lot 23
See the Sotheby's description here: https://www.sothebys.com/en/buy/auction/2026/history-of-science-technology-2/phantom-photographic-unit

and the original Christie's description: https://www.christies.com/en/lot/lot-1985601

 
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Discover the evolution of fingerprinting over the last 125 years. On 1 July 1901, the Metropolitan Police formally opened its Fingerprint Bureau, placing fingerprint evidence at the centre of criminal investigation.

Learn how fingerprinting has evolved over the last 125 years, from the first murder case solved with fingerprint evidence, through to the technological advances of the present day. Explore the role of fingerprint evidence in solving crime and supporting victims and how new technologies and challenges have led to now innovations in the field.

Join Katie Ann Smith, Head of Museums, Heritage & Engagement at the Metropolitan Police Service, Lisa Hall, Fingerprint Consultant for the Metropolitan Police and Hollie Heard, Reporting Fingerprint Examiner, Metropolitan Police Service to mark the start of the 125th anniversary of the Met’s forensic services.

Leaving a mark: 125 Years of fingerprinting at the Met
Online, Wednesday, 15 July 2026 at 1930 (BST)
The National Archives
Register here

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Bonhams' Travel & Exploration auction includes the photography collection of Roger Ward (1945-2023). Born in New Zealand Roger lived much of his life in Europe, and began forming his remarkable collection of early photographs of Asia following his retirement from a highly successful career in book marketing – a profession that made him an internationally-known figure in publishing and bookselling. A scholarly collector, he read widely on the history of photography in Asia in general and China in particular which held a fascination for him. Condition was a key factor for him, unless the images were so rare and important that they were the only photographs that he was able to obtain.

Highlights of the collection are several panoramas of AmoyHong KongShanghai, and elsewhere, a scarce group of 1850s salt prints of Canton and vicinity, and early stereoviews.

Travel and Exploration including the Roger Ward Photography Collection
Online, 6-15 July 2026
Bonhams
See: https://www.bonhams.com/auction/32186/travel-and-exploration-including-the-roger-ward-photography-collection/?query=Roger+Ward

Image froma group of 19 early stereoviews of China by Pierre Joseph Rossier (13), Louis Legrand (3), Radiquet et fils (1), and others c1858-186

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30988784693?profile=RESIZE_400xThe sixth workshop of Museum Dialogues seeks to explore how the accommodation of a continuously expanding photographic field—now encompassing computational, networked and AIgenerated imagery—demands not only new collecting strategies and enhanced epistemic literacy but also a fundamental rethinking of value systems and institutional frameworks. Central to these discussions are pressing questions of representational ethics, intellectual property, originality and ownership in relation to AIgenerated images. How do such images challenge existing definitions of photography? How are labour and agency reconfigured in the era of AI?   

Speakers:
Craig Ames, Visual Artist, Researcher and Senior Lecturer, University of Sunderland, UK
Dr Alex Connock, Media and AI Specialist, UK 
Dr Areti Galani, Professor of Digital Heritage Practices, Newcastle University, UK

Museum Dialogues aims to transcend the disciplinary boundaries of art history, visual culture, photography, new media, museum and curating studies and bridge theory and practice. Bringing together academic researchers and practitioners, the programme has supported the exchange of innovative solutions, inquiries, and practical challenges relating to the exhibition, collection and interpretation of photography.

This workshop is supported by the University of Sunderland.

Workshop 6: The Impact of AI in Photographic and Museum Practices 
Friday 10 July 2026, 1–4pm (British Summer Time) on Zoom.
See more and register here: https://northeastphoto.net/project/museum-dialogues/workshop-6/

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31184626682?profile=RESIZE_400xThe John Rylands Library's special collections department has acquired 110 prints form the photography Dorothy Bohm (1924-2023). The work highlights the formative period Bohm spent in Manchester, developing her professional practice, and commemorates the 2010 exhibition of her work at Manchester Art Gallery. The collection includes:

  • Almost 100 black and white portrait photographs taken at Studio Alexander
  • Ephemera relating to Studio Alexander and Dorothy Bohm’s life in Manchester in the 1940s
  • 11 colour photographs taken in Manchester between 2008 and 2010
  • Ephemera relating to the retrospective exhibition of Dorothy’s work at Manchester Art Gallery in 2010
  • Original negatives of both bodies of work

Anne Anderton, Senior Special Collections Curator with responsibility for Visual Collections told BPH: 'It is a wonderful insight into Bohm’s formative period spent here in Manchester before she went on to a significant international career.  It is currently being catalogued but is open to researchers by application. Additionally, a good number of print volumes that were part of Dorothy Bohm’s personal library are now catalogued can be found in our library search.'

Born in 1924, Dorothy was sent to England in 1939 to escape the rise of Nazism. She first arrived in Sussex, later moving to Manchester, where her brother was studying. There she met Louis Bohm, a Polish student who would become her husband in 1945. Bohm studied photography at the Manchester Municipal College of Technology and after graduation, she worked for four years with photographer Samuel Cooper before opening her own portrait studio, Studio Alexander, on Market Street in Manchester in 1946. Her studio work supported her husband while he completed his PhD. In the years that followed, Bohm and her husband travelled extensively and she eventually sold the studio in 1958.

Anne also told BPH that the library had very recently acquired a magnificent set of Suffragette photographs which will be available shortly. 

See more detail here.

Image: © Estate of Dorothy Bohm.

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Foxed Editions is a new imprint dedicated to the rediscovery of the photobook as a historical form. Its focus is on works that have slipped out of circulation or have remained at the margins of photographic history—books that are rare, overlooked, or insufficiently understood, yet which expand or complicate established narratives. Foxed Editions aims to make important but difficult-to-access works available again, while establishing a programme that connects collecting, scholarship, and publishing.

The programme combines two strands. The first is the facsimile republication of significant early photobooks, produced with careful attention to the material qualities of the original: format, sequencing, and print processes. The second consists of newly developed titles that map underexplored territories, often drawing on long-term research projects, archives, and private collections.

Foxed Editions is guided by an editorial approach that privileges selection and context. Each title is chosen not only for its intrinsic quality but for the way it contributes to a broader understanding of photographic publishing—whether as an early experiment, a regional tradition, or a body of work shaped by specific historical conditions.

The imprint operates within the RRB Photobooks framework, which provides design, production, marketing, and distribution. Editorial direction and production are led by Rudi Thoemmes, Björn Andersson and Jessa Fairbrother, working in collaboration with a network of researchers, writers, and institutions.

Its forthcoming books include: Thomas Wiegand's 66 Photobooks from East Germany and Fred Judge's Camera Pictures of London at Night

Foxed Editions
Find out more and register for future updates here

 

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Fast Forward: Women in Photography announces the 7th edition of the Fast Forward conferencewhich is organized in partnership with A.J.K. Mass Communication Research Centre, Jamia Millia Islamia (Central University), New Delhi.

The research project Fast Forward: Women in Photography aims to explore the work and histories of women photographers, promote opportunities and question ideas dominating the field of photography by initiating thoughtful, new debates. Initiated in 2015 with a two-day conference at Tate Modern (UK), the project has become significant within the world of photography for examining the work of women photographers and for questioning the way that established canons have been formed. Between 2017 and 2025 the editions 2 to 6 of the Fast Forward conference took place in Lithuania, the UK, Greece, Croatia and Poland. 

The Digital era has prompted a new interest in archives, both material and virtual. Long-term preservation of analogue through digitization has been the most ubiquitous for both public and private archives. In many cases, material from family albums and personal collections now have public visibility in galleries, websites, multimedia projects and publications. Digitization has also inaugurated several online initiatives in which ordinary citizens scan photographs, documents and other ephemera and post these on the internet. 

Inspired by Arlette Farge’s pathbreaking book, The Allure of the Archives (1989) the seventh Fast Forward conference titled The Lure of the Archive: Photographs of the Home and Heart examines the burgeoning narrative sbeyond institutionalized archives through vernacular photography, family and personal collections and online archival platforms. Geoffrey Batchen has described the vernacular as “what has almost always been excluded from photography’s history: ordinary photographs, the ones made or bought (or sometimes bought and then made over) by everyday folk from 1839 until now, the photographs that preoccupy the home and the heart but rarely the museum or the academy.” (2000, 262)*

We are interested to discover how these most familiar and at times overlooked practices of photography have been used to reshape the very idea of the archive or to draw attention to its erasures and silences. We invite proposals from curators, artists, scholars, practitioners, students and others who critically engage with the vernacular to raise new questions about the past from the vantage point of the contemporary.

You are invited to submit a 500-word abstract to apply to make a presentation at the conference. 

Call For Papers: The 7th Fast Forward: Women in Photography conference 
The Lure of the Archive: Photographs of the Home and Heart
Conference dates: 3-4 February 2027

Deadline for abstract submission: 29 June 2026
Read the full call and suggested themes here: https://fastforward.photography/our-projects/call-for-papers-conference-7-in-new-delhi-india/

Images: Negative Jacket from Liberty Photo Flash, using Kodak Advertisement, Bhuj (Kutch), India c. 1950s. Source: From the personal collection of Rajendra Kuverba. Courtesy: Eastman Kodak Company / Manobina Roy: Portrait of Daughter Aparajita, Bombay, c.1960. Courtesy: Aparajita Sinha

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De Montfort University's Photographic History Research Centre has announced the theme and dates of its 2027 conference. It will take place over the 14-15 June 2027 with a theme of Photography and Privacy. A call for papers will be made shortly.

For PHRC news and information about forthcoming events, visit and follow its Centre's website and blog. Events and seminars are delivered online and, with the exception of the annual conference, are free to attend, although advance registration is required.

Image: Aindreas Scholz, Gil Pasternak and Beatriz Pichel at the 2026 PHRC annual conference which took place on the 15-16 June 2026. © Michael Pritchard.

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London's Warburg Institute has received a donation from Professor Elizabeth McGrath, in support of its Photographic Collection. The Warburg Institute's Photographic Collection was established by Aby Warburg in the late 1880s and contains around 400,000 photographs of sculptures, paintings, drawings, prints, tapestries, and other forms of imagery from the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. It also has an expanding online counterpart. 

See more here and https://warburg.sas.ac.uk/library-collections/photographic-collection

Image: Artefacts in the Warburg Institute Photographic Collection. Credit: the Warburg Institute.

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Blog: Dorothy Welding and Wilding

31180725891?profile=RESIZE_400xOne Hundred Heroines has blogged about the Australian society photographer Dorothy Welding (sic) (1894-1954) who deliberately modelled herself on the British photographer Dorothy Wilding with a simialr signature and studio logo. Welding was working in Sydney between 1931 and 1954. 

Read the blog here: https://hundredheroines.org/historical-heroines/dorothy-welding-1894-1954/

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Johnston Shearer of Aberdeen

I have a photograph of Fetheresso Castle, Stonehaven, dated 1856 and which may have been exhibited in the Photographic Society of Scotland exhibition in Edinburgh that year.

Taken by Johnston Shearer and a collodion photograph.

I can't find too much about him or if this photograph might be of any value / interest to a museum or other collection.

Any information would be gratefully received

 

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We cordially invite submissions for the conference 'Castles, Salons, and Darkrooms: Mapping the nobility’s impact on early photographic history in Central Europe (1840s–1860s),' to be held on 20 October 2026 in Prague. Submission deadline: 15 July 2026.

A significant portion of the earliest photographic heritage in Central Europe originates from aristocratic collections. Within photographic historiography, however, the role of the nobility has long been overlooked. Scholars have predominantly focused on photographic practitioners, treating the aristocracy as merely passive consumers of photographic technologies, services, and publications. Yet, as specialized studies suggest, the interest of the nobility and its extensive networks of contacts exerted a decisive influence on the expansion of the photographic field, both on institutional and personal levels, particularly within the Habsburg Monarchy.

This conference aims to invert the traditional perspective by focusing on members of the nobility as key agents who co-constituted the conditions for the development of photographic culture and the dissemination of photographic knowledge in Central Europe. The nobility’s active role took several shapes: acting as photographic collectors, patrons, and promoters of the earliest commercial photo studios; initiating specific photographic projects and publications; and participating as aristocratic amateur photographers.

Concurrently, particular attention is paid to the role of ‘go-betweens’ who enabled and enhanced the nobility’s access to this novel technology and its products. These intermediaries played a decisive role in transferring specialized knowledge between the photographic sphere and the aristocratic world in both directions. Furthermore, they instrumentally facilitated the transmission of photographic technology and expertise across national borders. This group included not only members of the aristocracy receptive to external technological innovations, but also the photographers and photographic enthusiasts granted access to the lower nobility and the strictly closed world of the high Austrian aristocracy. Alongside diplomats, these intermediaries often comprised personal physicians, estate administrators, ministerial officials, scientists and university professors, military officers, private tutors, and keepers of aristocratic collections. Leveraging personal contacts, intellectual and cultural capital, as well as robust institutional backgrounds, these individuals disrupted the rigid social boundaries of the aristocracy, thereby contributing to the reconfiguration of early photographic knowledge.

The conference seeks to explore both individual actors and the diverse contexts in which photography was deployed or distributed across Central Europe and beyond during its first decades, courtesy of the nobility. These contexts include, for example:

  • Personal and familial representation
  • Diplomacy, military, and maritime affairs
  • Education and travel
  • Estate management and economic development
  • Collecting, fine art, and print culture
  • The private sphere of aristocratic life

We welcome both case studies focusing on specific patrons, commissioners, or intermediaries of photographic knowledge, as well as papers tracking the trajectories, mechanisms, and communication channels fostered by the nobility that contributed to the development of early photography. Proposals may address, but are not limited to, the following questions:

  • What were the primary motivations behind the nobility’s engagement with photography during the 1840s–1860s?
  • Were economic capital and leisure time truly the primary determinants of aristocratic interest in photography during this period, as is frequently asserted in scholarly literature?
  • Did photography reinforce the insularity and exclusivity of the aristocracy, or did it conversely help dismantle strict social boundaries and gradually ‘bourgeoisify’ the lifestyle of high society?
  • What were the structural characteristics and formation processes of the earliest photographic collections assembled by the nobility?
  • In what ways and to what extent was the prolific photographic culture of the British and French royal courts reflected in the practices of the Central European nobility?
  • In what ways can the study of aristocratic networks map the transnational and cross-border circulation of photographic knowledge, despite the scarcity of preserved photographic collections?
  • To what extent, and in what manner, might the nobility’s interest in photography have aligned with their political aspirations?

Submission Guidelines: We invite scholars from various fields engaging with nineteenth-century photography and aristocratic history to submit proposals for 20-minute presentations. Please submit an abstract of up to 300 words accompanied by a brief biographical note to Dr Petra Trnková at trnkova@udu.cas.cz by 15 July 2026.

Important Dates

Submission Deadline: 15 July 2026

Notification of Acceptance: 31 July 2026

Conference Date: 20 October 2026

Organizers: Dr Libor Jůn, Dr Francesca Strobino, Mgr. Denisa Tichá, Dr Petra Trnková

 For any enquiries, please contact Dr Petra Trnková at trnkova@udu.cas.cz.

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