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31005997456?profile=RESIZE_400xThe newly relaunched journal Visual Culture in Britain is offering two prizes. The Pete James Collection Prize 2026, is in collaboration with Birmingham City University which houses Pete's archive. Applicants are invited to spend time with the Pete James Collection at Birmingham City University.

The Peter James Collection Prize aims to support researchers at any career stage with access to the collection, staff mentorship and a prize of £1000 co-supported by the institution and the Journal of Visual Culture in Britain on behalf of Taylor & Francis. The successful applicant will be expected to submit a Visual Culture in Focus article (2,000-4,000-word) (see guidance here: Learn about Visual Culture in Britain) by Tuesday 1st September 2026. The money will be awarded on submission and acceptance of the article. This will then be published in the final issue of the year (December 2026). Applications for the 2026 prize is open until Monday 05th January 2026. The collection will be accessible between February and July 2026.

To celebrate the relaunch the JVCB has announced an essay prize for original research articles that build on the editorial vision of the journal. It encourages critical approaches that propose novel or expansive ways of rethinking the journal’s title - what does ‘visual culture in Britain’ look like today? - by engaging with visual culture’s past, present or future histories.

The competition aims to highlight and celebrate original research on any aspect of visual culture and is open to scholars at all career levels. Submissions are welcome from all regions but must be written in English. The essay, unpublished, will be between 6,000 and 8,000 words in length and follow the guidelines outlined on the journal webpage here.

The winner will receive:

  • Publication in Visual Culture in Britain following the peer-review process. Please note that any image costs will need to be covered by the prize winner.

  • £500 cash prize.

All entries will be considered for submission to the journal. Runners up will receive expert feedback and editorial support towards peer review and publication.

Entries must be submitted by Monday 27th April 2026 to vcbessayprize@gmail.com All entries will be reviewed and shortlisted by the editors against criteria of academic rigour, originality and advancement of visual culture methodologies. The shortlisted essays will then be submitted to a panel composed of members of our Advisory Board who will select the winner. Decisions will be communicated in June 2026. The winner will be published in our December 2026 issue.

Appearing three times a year, Visual Culture in Britain is dedicated to exploring the generative interrelations between visual culture, individuals, and societies in Britain, both historically and today. The journal publishes new peer-reviewed scholarship that investigates the forms, spaces, processes, and politics through which visual worlds/materials are made meaningful, and examines their effects within an expanded and unsettled concept of ‘Britishness’. Visual Culture in Britain is inclusive and interdisciplinary, welcoming submissions at any time, for original articles, features, special issues, and reviews. The editors are: Gary Bratchford, Birmingham City University, Sara Dominici, University of Westminster, and Victoria Horne, Northumbria University.

See more: Pete James Collection Prize 2026 and Eassy Prize and past articles and open access articles here

 

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The UK Department of Culture, Media and Sport has published museum visitor numbers to September 2025. This set is of particular interest as it includes the period when the museum had fully open with its Sound and Vision galleries from July 2025. The graph below shows the equivalent period (July-September) from 2019 and includes the covid lockdowns and period when the museum was closed for refurbishment.  

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31005985858?profile=RESIZE_400xWe invite proposals for conference papers, performances and workshops examining darkness and its intersections with photography, exploring all facets including but not limited to: technology and the black box; the darkroom and laboratory; artificial darkness; dark skies and landscape; mining and minerals; archaeology, the subterranean or underground, technologies of vision; race and identity, including the politics of visibility and invisibility; psyche and wellbeing; the body, interiority and its shadow; architecture after Tanizaki; contemporary politics and totalitarianism; incarceration and punishment; technological limit and failure; blackouts; scientific imaging and black holes. 

Darkness: A Photography Conference 
Organised by the Photography programme of the School of Digital Arts, Manchester School of Art.
19-20 March 2026
Call for papers, performances and workshops: Deadline 12 December 2025

Please send paper abstracts (of a maximum of 300 words), performance proposals (of 200 words plus 2-3 images or 2 minutes of footage) and workshop proposals (200 words, 2-3 images and a list of materials or media requirements) to Duncan Wooldridge at d.wooldridge@mmu.ac.uk by 5pm, 12th December 2025

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12313217098?profile=RESIZE_400xThe annual Kraszna-Krausz Book Awards celebrate excellence in photography and moving image publishing. They recognise individuals who have made an outstanding or original contribution to the literature, art or practice of photography or the moving image. Two winning titles are selected: one in the field of photography and one in the field of the moving image. The author/s or editor/s of each winning book receive a £5,000 cash prize.

Submissions are welcome from publishers, authors, collectives and individuals self-publishing their work. There is no entry fee.

  • Books must be published between 1 January and 31 December 2025
  • Books must be published, distributed or available to buy (including online) in the UK

Further details, terms and conditions, and the entry form for the 2026 Awards can be found here.

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31005984077?profile=RESIZE_400xWomen Photographers 1900–1975: A Legacy of Light celebrates the wide-ranging photographic practices of more than eighty women artists working between 1900 and 1975. Featuring prints, postcards, photobooks and magazines, the exhibition explores the role of photographers as image-makers, and the ways in which women artists create an image of themselves, of others, of the times – from images of the women’s suffrage movement at the turn of the twentieth century, through to the women’s liberation movement and beyond. From Melbourne to Tokyo, Paris to Buenos Aires, the exhibition showcases the works of trailblazing artists such as Berenice Abbott, Lola Álvarez Bravo, Claude Cahun and Marcel Moore, Imogen Cunningham, Mikki Ferrill, Sue Ford, Christine Godden, Ponch Hawkes, Annemarie Heinrich, Ruth Hollick, Florence Henri, Kati Horna, Germaine Krull, Tina Modotti, Lucia Moholy, Toyoko Tokiwa, Yamazawa Eiko and many more.

The exhibition reflects a recent collecting focus on celebrating the contributions of women artists of the early twentieth century in the NGV Photography Collection. Featuring portraiture, photojournalism, landscape photography, photomontage, experimental avant-garde imagery and more, Women Photographers 1900–1975: A Legacy of Light presents the diverse work of women photographers against the backdrop of significant social, political and cultural events.

Opening in November 2025, the exhibition coincides with the fifty-year anniversary of International Women’s Year 1975, which established the United Nations’ annual celebration of International Women’s Day.

Women Photographers 1900–1975: A Legacy of Light
until 3 May 2026
NGV, Melbourne, Australia

See: https://www.ngv.vic.gov.au/exhibition/women-photographers-1900-1975/

See: https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/gallery/2025/nov/30/women-photographers-1900-to-1975-a-legacy-of-light-in-pictures

Image: Gertrude KASEBIER, The gargoyle (c. 1900), platinum photograph, National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne, Purchased through The Art Foundation of Victoria with the assistance of the Herald & Weekly Times Limited, Fellow, 1979. PH27-1979

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31005983078?profile=RESIZE_400xAnne Brigman who exhibited with the Royal Photographic Society and has work in the RPS Collection is the subject of a new book. In 1902, after eight years of marriage, Anne Brigman saw a photography exhibition that changed her life. It awakened in her a passion as an artist -- an artist not just in photography but in the theater and in literature. She was awakened as a woman to levels of freedom and expression she had not enjoyed before. For her, this new calling was a fight and she was determined from the first to succeed in it. It wasn't long before her photographs of nude females posed in the Sierra Nevada Mountains were commanding attention internationally and in the influential photographic circles on the East Coast led by Alfred Stieglitz. Quickly she rose to a place among the highest ranks of those recognized as artistic photographers in the pictorialist period in photographic history. In 1910 she left her comfortable middle-class life and devoted herself completely to this life as an artist. And in this life she was constantly renewing herself. In her senior years she explored the gift for writing she had long known she had. She wrote poetry giving voice to the many beautiful photographs she had created over the years and combined these in two books of photographs and poems. Hers was a full, free life of artistic expression, a monument to the kind of freedom women across the society were longing for and finding in a variety of ways.

In her later years Brigman developed romantic relationships with other women. This is the first study of Brigman to document and discuss her sexuality and its influence on her photography and poetry.

James Rhem is an independent scholar in the history of photography. His previous books include Ralph Eugene Meatyard: The Family Album of Lucybelle Crater and Other Figurative Photographs (New York: D.A.P., 2002), the Photo Poche Ralph Eugene Meatyard (Paris: Editions Nathan, 2000), and the Phaidon 55 Aaron Siskind (London: Phaidon Press, 2003). He has written catalogue essays on Wynn Bullock (Chicago: Daiter Gallery, 2002) and articles on August Sander and William Eggleson for San Francisco Museum of Modern Art's photography newsletter, fotoforum Fall/Winter 2002-2004, as well as numerous reviews of photographic exhibitions for local and regional publications. He took a doctorate in English Literature from the University of Wisconsin-Madison in 1979 and is the founding Executive Editor of The National Teaching & Learning FORUM, a publication on college teaching that he created in 1990. His involvement with photography, which began as a teenager, is both aesthetic and technical. He has been an exhibiting photographer whose work has been shown in nationally juried exhibitions. At least one of his regional exhibitions included only photography created via antique processes.

Anne Brigman's Songs: Her Life, Her Photographs, Her Poems
James Rhem
James Rhem & Associates, LLC, 2025
ISBN: 9798218657925
£73 (approx), 376 pages
See: https://itascabooks.com

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The Martin Parr Foundation is seeking to appoint two new Trustees to its board. Launched in 2017, the Foundation is a charity that supports emerging, established and overlooked photographers who have made and continue to make work focussed on the British Isles. It preserves a growing collection of significant photographic works and strives to make photography engaging and accessible for all.

The Foundation is seeking individuals with a passionate interest in photography, who can offer commitment, time, the ability to work collaboratively and an understanding of the principles of good governance. In addition, it is looking for candidates with significant experience in one or both of the following areas:

  • Business and/or finance
  • The photography industry

Further details, including timeline, term of appointment and how to apply are available via the MPF website.

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With the 2025 Routledge publication Conservation of Photographs: Significance, Use, and Care as a starting point, we are pleased to announce the following upcoming international program. Join leaders and allied professionals in a free online exploration of the evolving field of photograph conservation.

Co-Organized by the American Institute for Conservation, Photographic Materials Group (AIC PMG), and the International Council of Museums - Committee for Conservation, Photographic Materials Working Group (ICOM-CC PMWG), this session promises to be an engaging and far-reaching exchange among colleagues dedicated to the preservation and understanding of photographic heritage. 

Program Title: Conservation of Photographs: Significance, Use, Care, and Direction
Wednesday, December 3, 2025
Time: 08:00 EST / 13:00 GMT / 14:00 CET / 21:00 HKT
Duration: 2 hours
Registration will be free, see: https://www.icom-cc.org/en/news/conservation-of-photographs-significance-use-care-and-direction-icom-cc-photographic-materials-working-group
 

Image: The Met's dedicated photograph conservation lab in 2001, seen here before it was fully occupied. Pictured from left to right are Nora Kennedy, Erin Murphy, Adrienne Lundgren, and Nancy Reinhold. Image credit: Juan Trujillo.

Programme

Welcome

Dr. Richard Mulholland. Senior Lecturer, Northumbria University and ICOM-CC Photographic Materials Working Group Coordinator (UK)
Tatiana Cole. Conservator of Photographs, Harvard Art Museums and AIC Photographic Materials Group Chair (USA)

 Book Editors’ Remarks: Context and vision behind Conservation of Photographs: Significance, Use, and Care

Nora Kennedy. Sherman Fairchild Conservator in Charge, The Metropolitan Museum of Art (USA)
Bertrand Lavédrine. Full Professor, Muséum National d’Histoire Naturelle (France)
Debbie Hess Norris. Chair and Professor, Art Conservation Department, University of Delaware (USA)
Moderator: Luisa Casella. Independent Photograph Conservator (USA) 

Purpose and Value of Photograph Holdings Around the World - Now and in the Future

Soledad Abarca. Director, National Library of Chile (Chile)
Sérgio Burgi. Head Curator of Photography, Instituto Moreira Salles (Brazil)
Denise Bethel. Independent Advisor, Researcher, Writer, Lecturer (USA)
Moderator: Clara von Waldthausen. Director, MA Programme Conservation and Restoration of Cultural Heritage, University of Amsterdam (Netherlands)

Global Challenges, Education, and Building Capacity

Paul Ninson. Founder and Executive Director, Dikan (Ghana)
Estíbaliz Guzmán. Senior Conservator of Photographs, Centro Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia (Mexico)
Girikumar. Conservator in Private Practice (India)
Moderator: Dr. Richard Mulholland.Senior Lecturer, Northumbria University and ICOM-CC Photographic Materials Working Group Coordinator (UK)


Future Direction in the Field of Photograph Conservation

Rana Nasser Eddin. Director, Arab Image Foundation (Lebanon)
Fred Ritchin. Author, Educator, Editor, and Curator (USA)
Paul Messier. Photographic Print Research, Analysis and Consulting (USA)
Moderator: Marta García Celma. Senior Conservator, M+ Museum (Hong Kong)

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On February 7, 2026, the Nederlands Fotomuseum, the National Museum of Photography, will open its doors in the recently renovated Santos warehouse, a national monument located on Rotterdam's Rijnhaven. With over 6.5 million objects, the museum has one of the largest museum collections of photography in the world. In this monumental building, cultural heritage, architecture, and a contemporary museum presentation come together to create an international meeting place for photography.

30995956301?profile=RESIZE_400xNational Museum of Photography
The Nederlands Fotomuseum is the National Museum of Photography of the Netherlands: it collects, preserves, studies, and presents Dutch photographic heritage. The museum occupies a key position in Dutch photography. Photography was embraced early on in the Netherlands as an art form and as a means of capturing modern society. After the Second World War, a socially engaged style developed that became internationally influential, while contemporary photographers explore new artistic directions.

State-of-the-art accommodation
The opening in the Santos warehouse heralds a new chapter for the most important centre for photography in the Netherlands. In the nine-story state-of-the-art building—one of the best-preserved historic warehouses in the country—visitors will not only have access to masterpieces from the national collection, but also a unique glimpse behind the scenes in the open storage rooms and restoration workshops. This new museum houses the Gallery of Honour of Dutch Photography, temporary exhibitions and educational spaces. It also has a library with the largest collection of photo books in Europe, a darkroom, open studio spaces, a café and a restaurant with a panoramic view of the Rotterdam skyline. The move to Santos was made possible thanks to a generous donation from the Droom en Daad Foundation.

Open storage areas and studios
The collection and the studio spaces are located in the heart of the building, spread over two floors. Glass walls allow visitors to take a look behind the scenes: the open depots display a selection from the archive, together with special and remarkable objects from the collection, while the visitor can also see specialists at work on restoration and conservation in the studios.
 
30995963054?profile=RESIZE_400xGallery of Honour: the heart of Dutch photography
The Gallery of Honour of Dutch Photography shows the development of photography in the Netherlands – from the invention of photography in 1839 to the current age. These rooms display 99 special photographs that have been chosen for their social and artistic impact and include masterpieces by Anton Corbijn, Dana Lixenberg, Violette Cornelius, Ed van der Elsken, Paul Huf, Rineke Dijkstra, and Erwin Olaf. The 100th work in the exhibition will be chosen by visitors. The display within the Gallery of Honour is undergoing a transformation tailored to the new building.
 

Opening exhibition: Rotterdam in Focus
Rotterdam in Focus: The City in Photographs 1843 – Now offers an impressive overview of photography of the city from 1843 to the present day. More than 300 photos unfold the development of photography over a period of some 180 years. They were taken by both professional and amateur photographers. Iconic photographers such as Hans Aarsman, Iwan Baan, Eva Besnyö, Henri Berssenbrugge, Johann Georg Hameter, Helena van der Kraan, Jannes Linders, Cas Oorthuys, Otto Snoek and others show how a changing Rotterdam constantly challenges us to find new ways of looking, observing, and photographing. The exhibition includes work from leading collections, including those of the Nederlands Fotomuseum, the Stadsarchief Rotterdam, the Dutch Royal Collections, and the Maria Austria Institute. The exhibition has been curated by guest curators Frits Gierstberg and Joop de Jong and will be on display until May 24, 2026. The book of the same name will be published by nai010.

30995960464?profile=RESIZE_400xOpening exhibition: Awakening in Blue
The exhibition Awakening in Blue: An Ode to Cyanotype celebrates the timeless beauty of one of the oldest and most recognisable photographic techniques: cyanotype. The deep blue medium is known for its artisanal character and its slow, direct working method. In addition to rare, early blueprints, the exhibition features work by fifteen contemporary artists. They breathe new life into this nineteenth-century technique, combining it with new media and a variety of materials. Their work explores current themes such as ecology, colonialism and the body as a living archive. The exhibition is designed by MAISON the FAUX, a Dutch interdisciplinary collective known for their groundbreaking work at the intersection of fashion, performance, and installation art. The exhibition runs until June 7, 2026.

Living room for photography
The ground floor will be an inviting meeting place with a café, library, museum shop and reception desk. Visitors are welcome here even without a ticket and can walk in freely. In this ‘living room for photography’, they can meet each other, have a drink, read, and watch the short film that Photographer of the Netherlands Marwan Magroun (Rotterdam, 1985) made especially for the reopening of the Nederlands Fotomuseum.
 

About the Santos warehouse
The monumental Santos warehouse was built between 1901 and 1902 by Rotterdam architects J.P. Stok Wzn and J.J. Kanters, and is one of the best-preserved and most beautiful examples of early 20th-century warehouse architecture. The building was originally designed as a storage facility for coffee from the Brazilian port city of Santos and has been listed as a national monument since 2000. The renovation and expansion of the building was carried out by the German architectural firm RENNER HAINKE WIRTH ZIRN ARCHITEKTEN in collaboration with Rotterdam-based WDJARCHITECTEN and realized by Burgy Bouwbedrijf.

See: https://pers.nederlandsfotomuseum.nl/en/

Images top to bottom): Nederlands Fotomuseum – front view © Photo Studio Hans Wilschut; Cas Oorthuys, Vondelingenweg, 1957-1958. Nederlands Fotomuseum © Cas Oorthuys/Nederlands Fotomuseum; D.N.A., 2007 From Flamboya, 2008 © Viviane Sassen (1972); Suzette Bousema, Future Relics 40, 2025 © Suzette Bousema

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30995703854?profile=RESIZE_400xColmore BID is shining a spotlight on one of its most overlooked innovators, unveiling a brand-new exhibition Birmingham’s Photographic Pioneer’ honouring George Shaw (1818-1904). Produced by artist Jo Gane and organised and funded by Colmore Business District (BID), the free, open to all exhibition explores Shaw’s pioneering contributions to photography, science and civic life, and aims to restore his rightful place among the city’s celebrated figures. The exhibition builds on initial work by Pete James. 

While Birmingham proudly commemorates icons like Boulton and Watt, Benjamin Zephaniah, Ozzy Osbourne and even the fictional Tommy Shelby, George Shaw’s legacy has remained largely unrecognised – until now. Born in Dudley and the son of a glass maker, Shaw was a patent agent, chemist, artist and educator who made Birmingham’s first daguerreotype photograph in 1839. Shaw’s influence extended far beyond photography, lecturing widely on chemistry and scientific advancements. He played a key role in the city’s educational institutions, helping to establish Birmingham’s first free public library. His work caught the attention of scientist Michael Faraday, where Shaw collaborated with metallurgist John Percy on groundbreaking photographic experiments.

Designed and arranged by Birmingham designer Stacey Barnfield, the exhibition is located at the West Midlands Metro Town Hall stop, outside Queens College Chambers, a key building where Shaw lectured and undertook his practice. It will showcase reproductions of rare daguerreotypes uncovered by the late Pete James, former curator of photographs at Birmingham Central Library. These images, now the subject of a practice-based PhD study by artist Jo Gane, offer a unique glimpse into Shaw’s artistic and scientific legacy. 

In partnership with the Colmore BID team, Gane has developed this exhibition to reconnect Birmingham with its innovative industrial and artistic past. She said: “It has been a privilege to research Shaw’s photographs and uncover the activities of his network in Birmingham that tells a fascinating story of art, science and industry.”

30996270054?profile=RESIZE_400xExhibition highlights include reproductions of rare daguerreotypes and calotype photographs by George Shaw, archival materials and artworks from Shaw’s collaborations with John Percy and Frederick Henry Henshaw, insight into Shaw’s role in major exhibitions including the 1851 Great Exhibition and displays exploring early photographic processes and Birmingham’s role in their development.

Melanie Williams, Colmore BID Board Director and lead of Outstanding Places said: “George Shaws’ story is a powerful reminder of Birmingham’s legacy as a city of innovation and creativity. We’re proud to deliver this exhibition which not only celebrates a largely unrecognised pioneer, but also invites the city to better reflect and respect its rich industrial and artistic heritage.”

Birmingham’s Photographic Pioneer’ honouring George Shaw (1818-1904)
on view through November/December 2025

Outdoors, by West Midlands Metro Town Hall stop, outside Queens College Chambers, Birmingham
Produced by Jo Gane, with Birmingham BID
For more information, visit https://colmorebusinessdistrict.com/projects/george-shaw/.  

Installation shots courtesy Jo Gane.

 

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30996351273?profile=RESIZE_400xA collection of original Blake and Edgar glass plates and photographs, approx. 30 in number,  are to be sold through auction at Peacocks Auction House, Bedford https://www.peacockauction.co.uk on 5 December 2025.  Blake and Edgar were prominent photographers in Bedford from c1870 and the collection includes many Victorian photographs of Bedford as well as an additional collection dating from the 1950/70s.

Antique Furniture and Collectors Items
5 December 2025 from 1030
See the auction catalogue here

 

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Housed in the extraordinary spaces of Palazzo Grifoni Budini Gattai, which for years hosted the Photothek of the Kunsthistorisches Institut in Florenz, the exhibition offers a critical and engaging reading of Florence through photographs by Italian-German artist and filmmaker Armin Linke, in dialogue with historical documentary photographs from the Photothek. The exhibition explores archives, museums and collections where works of art, documents, materials and knowledge have sedimented, forming and transforming the image of the city of Florence. The exhibition will be accompanied by a concept book that should appear in January 2026.

Armin Linke: The City as Archive. Florence
Curated by Hannah Baader and Costanza Caraffa

An exhibition by the
Kunsthistorisches Institut in Florenz – Max-Planck-Institut

12 November 2025–31 January 2026

Holiday closure
22 December 2025–1 January 2026

Palazzo Grifoni Budini Gattai
Via dei Servi 51
50122 Florence

Opening hours
Thursday 14–20, Friday 14–19, Saturday 14–19

Free admission

Contact:
cityasarchive@khi.fi.it

More on the KHI website

 

 

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In passing: Alistair Crawford (1945-2025)

30989169878?profile=RESIZE_400xThe European Society for the History of Photography has reported the death of Alistair Crawford after a long illness. In 1974 he became Lecturer in Graphic Art and Curator of Graphic Art at the University College of Wales, Aberystwyth, where he remained for 37 years. There he taught art practice: Printmaking, Book Illustration, Typography, Photography and in art history: Art in Wales, History Graphic, History of Photography, Museum & Art Gallery Studies.

Between 2004 and 2008 Alistair Crawford was the dedicated co-editor for the research journals of the European Society for the History of Photography (ESHPh) based in Vienna (Austria) such as PhotoResearcher, The Proceedings, The International Newsletter. In 2008 he contributed also to the anniversary book Jubilee 30 Years ESHPh, and Congress of Photography, in Vienna.

He was also an accomplished artist and writer. 

See: http://www.eshph.org/beispiel-seite/ and: https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2025/oct/31/alistair-crawford-obituary and http://www.alistaircrawford.co.uk/pdf.php?file=biography.pdf

Photo: Robert Greetham

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30988784693?profile=RESIZE_400xThis fourth Museum Dialogues workshop explores photography as a participatory medium that enables public interaction and the development of new social dynamics and relationships, extending beyond an institution’s physical space. 

Contributors share diverse approaches to using photography as a tool for civic engagement and activism, as well as methods to build photographic exhibitions and archives outside traditional institutional structures, giving agency to underrepresented communities, decentring mainstream narratives and driving social change. The discussion will address issues of ethics, ownership and guardianship, alongside institutional requirements for archiving co-created work produced through socially engaged practice.

Speakers:

Pål Henrik Ekern, Diversity Curator, Preus Museum, Norway
Tamsin Silvey, Cultural Programme Curator, Historic England, UK
Anthony Luvera, socially engaged artist, writer and educator, UK, in conversation with Carol McKay, writer and curator, 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.

Socially Engaged Photography within and outside of the Museum
Online, Wednesday 3 December 2025, 1300-1600 (GMT)

Free, register here: https://northeastphoto.net/project/museum-dialogues/workshop-4/

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30988615871?profile=RESIZE_400xTwo very significant large folio albums containing 96 albumen photographs from the collection of the Royal Society of Medicine are to be sold at Christie's, London, on 10 December. The albums contain twenty-two photographs of psychiatric patients made at the Surrey County Lunatic [sic] Asylum by High Welch Diamond, alongside other early photographs by Thomas Henry Hennah (1826-1876, 4 photographs), Dr Julius Pollock (1835-1890, 11 photographs), Mr Mullens of Jersey (probably the Jersey photographer Henry Mullins (1848-1874), one photograph), Charles Heisch (1820-1892, one photograph), Dr William Budd (1811-1880, 5 photographs), Dr Henry G. Wright (one photograph), and Dr C. T. Richardson (one photograph). The lot is estimated at a generously wide £100,000-200,000. Depending on the selling price and purchaser it is likely that it will require an export licence before it can leave the UK.  

In a statement to BPH the RSM stated: 'Proceeds will be directly invested into strengthening the RSM's offer, delivering clear benefits for their members: modernised spaces, enhanced digital platforms, and expanded learning opportunities. Items not yet online will be professionally digitised, ensuring lasting access to educate and inspire generations to come.' It did not respond to questions around the rationale for the sale or if any attempts were made to place the material with other appropriate institutions. 

The full lot description is reproduced below and can be seen here: https://www.christies.com/en/lot/lot-6564110?l 

DIAMOND, Dr Hugh Welch (1808–1886)
Twenty-two photographs of psychiatric patients at the Surrey County Lunatic Asylum [1850s]
The largest known group of Dr Hugh Welch Diamond’s pioneering photographs of psychiatric patients. Diamond stands as a foundational figure in the history of photography and was among the first to use photography as a clinical tool, stating in a paper delivered to the Royal Society of Medicine in 1856 that the ‘faithful likeness’ of the camera might aid diagnosis, teach observation, and even assist in cure by returning patients a coherent image of themselves. His striking portraits bring together the developing art of photography and the developing science of psychiatry.

30988616091?profile=RESIZE_400xDiamond trained as a doctor and, having distinguished himself as a physician during the outbreak of cholera in London in 1832, turned his focus to the problem of mental illness which he studied at London’s Bethlem Hospital. In 1848 Diamond was appointed as superintendent of the Surrey County Lunatic Asylum and it was here that he applied his photographic skills to his professional work as a physician and began to photograph his patients in simple poses against a plain background.

Diamond had made his first photograph in April 1839, just three months after William Henry Fox Talbot had announced his negative-positive process. In the 1840s Diamond befriended one of his patients, Frederick Scott Archer, and introduced him to the calotype process, and as a result of their friendship and shared interest in photography Diamond became one of the first people to use Archer’s collodion process which resulted in higher quality images from glass plate negatives.

Diamond published many articles on photography and, in 1853, became a founder member of the Photographic Society. Between 1852 and 1859 Diamond exhibited over 70 of his photographs in exhibitions across Britain, and although many were landscapes and other subjects, he also exhibited his clinical photographs including: ‘Types of Insanity’ (Society of Arts, London, 1852), ‘Phases of the Insane’ (Dundee Royal Infirmary Fund, 1854), ‘Phases of the Insane’ (London Photographic Society, 1854), ‘Melancholy’ (London Photographic Society, 1855), ‘Portraits of the Insane’ (Norwich Photographic Society, 1856), ‘Studies of Insane Persons’ (London Photographic Society, 1857), and ‘Illustrations of Mental Disease’ (London Photographic Society, 1859). Diamond’s portraits were also reproduced as lithographs to accompany John Conolly’s article Case Studies from the Physiognomy of Insanity published in the ‘Medical Times and Gazette’ in 1858.

Diamond was well known in photographic circles and received many visitors while working in Surrey including Lewis Carroll and Reginald Southey who visited Diamond in January 1856, ‘as Carroll records in his diary: ‘“Southey came over to spend the day in photography, but we went instead to Dr Diamond of the Surrey Lunatic Asylum: he gave me two [photographs] he has done lately, an excellent full length of Uncle Skeffington and a boy of King’s College, Frank Foster.” Carroll’s recollection shows how the rise of photography was linked to psychiatry through the figure of Hugh Welch Diamond, whose work, alongside that of Guillaume-Benjamin Duchenne de Boulogne, was a significant influence on Darwin’s work on The Expression of Emotion (1872)’ (Kohlt, Franziska E., The Stupidest Tea-Party in All My Life’: Lewis Carroll and Victorian Psychiatric Practice, Journal of Victorian Culture, 2016, Vol. 21, No. 2, 147–167).

In Diamond’s paper presented to the Royal Society of Medicine in 1856, he described the portraits of his patients: ‘The Photographer catches in a moment the permanent cloud, or the passing storm or sunshine of the soul, and thus enables the metaphysician to witness and trace out the connexion between the visible and the invisible in one important branch of his researches into the Philosophy of the human mind’ (On the Application of Photography to the Physiognomic and Mental Phenoma of Insanity, May 22, 1856). Diamond was thus among the first to understand photography not only as a technical innovation, but as a tool for psychological insight.

22 albumen prints (each approximately 180 x 138mm., 4 oval shaped and one with trimmed corners), on 3 card mounts numbered ‘I’ and ‘II’ and ‘III’, the first two mounts of 9 photographs each in modern frames for exhibition purposes, the 4 photographs on mount ‘III’ mounted with other photographs in the folio volume 'Royal Med. Chi. Society. Photographs. A. Medical &c.'

30988616683?profile=RESIZE_400xTogether with 74 albumen prints by other photographers in 2 large folio albums compiled by the Royal Medical and Chirurgical Society in the 1860s. The other named photographers are Thomas Henry Hennah (1826-1876, 4 photographs), Dr Julius Pollock (1835-1890, 11 photographs), Mr Mullens of Jersey (probably the Jersey photographer Henry Mullins (1848-1874), one photograph), Charles Heisch (1820-1892, one photograph), Dr William Budd (1811-1880, 5 photographs), Dr Henry G. Wright (one photograph), and Dr C. T. Richardson (one photograph). Provenance: Royal Medical and Chirurgical Society, London (these 2 albums compiled circa 1862 by Dr Henry G. Wright, a Fellow of the Society)

2 volumes, large folio (657 x 500mm), 96 albumen prints (various sizes from 86 x 58mm to 234 x 334mm), on 18 thick card mounts (numbered I-XI and I-VII), mounted recto only, dark green half morocco, green cloth boards, upper covers titled in gilt (one volume rebacked and re-cornered)

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Dear all, It is a pleasure and an honour to announce the opening of the exhibition Retratadas. Estudios de mujeres (Portrayed. Women in the Studio), which I had the joy of curating. The show is hosted by the National Museum of Romanticism in Madrid, under the Spanish Ministry of Culture, and will remain on view until 25 January 2026.

Bringing together 152 photographs and objects that reflect Spanish visual and material culture from the 1850s to the 1870s, the exhibition offers a new reading of the photographic studio as a space for women’s artistic expression and self-creation. Most of the works come from public and private Spanish collections—including my own, presented here for the first time—and are arranged around the idea of the boudoir, a kind of room of one’s own that once formed part of many nineteenth-century studios, conceived as an intimate space for women before the sitting area.

Developed in parallel with the book Retratadas. Fotografía, género y modernidad en el siglo XIX español (Cátedra, 2025), the exhibition invites us to reconsider the place of women in the history of photography, a field long focused on the figure of the photographer rather than that of the sitter. It seeks to reveal how women—whether as photographers, sitters, creators, collectors, or viewers—played an active role in the technical, commercial, and artistic evolution of the medium.

You are warmly invited to explore the Exhibition Retratadas. Estudios de mujeres (Portrayed. Women in the Studio) National Museum of Romanticism in Madrid, which includes the full list of works and several contextual essays.

I very much look forward to welcoming you in Madrid.

 Exhibition Retratadas. Estudios de mujeres (Portrayed. Women in the Studio) National Museum of Romanticism in Madrid

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Stéphany Onfray

Doctora en Historia del Arte

https://stephanyonfray.wordpress.com

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 
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This exhibition explores the history of 19th century photographic studios in Drogheda, Ireland and the carte-de-visites process in particular. The images are from the photographic historian, Orla Fitzpatrick's collection. 

A small fanzine/booklet (designed by Niall McCormack of hitone design) is available through cailleach books

https://www.cailleachbooks.ie/products/paraphrase-1-cartomania

Co-curated by Fitzpatrick with Michelle Lalor, the exhibition also includes a video piece by Conor McMahon with music by Tara Boath Mooney and Diarmuid MacDiarmad.

The exhibition runs at the Kiosk, Louth, and Orla Fitzpatrick will be giving a lecture on the history of these studios on Thursday 13th September at Barlow House, Narrow Street West at 7pm. 

 

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30985602886?profile=RESIZE_400xTaking place on 2 December is an illustrated lecture discussing the life and influence of Hungarian emigré Andor Kraszna-Krausz (AKK). The talk, which will present new research is being given by Dr Michael Pritchard. It is hosted by the Kraszna-Krausz Foundation in partnership with the Liszt Institute - the Hungarian Cultural Cemtre - and will be followed by a drinks reception. 

Born in Hungary, Andor Kraszna-Krausz (AKK) studied in Germany and moved to Berlin, working as an influential editor and reviewer on photography and film publications, amongst other activities. He moved to Britain in 1937 and set up Focal Press, which he built up to become the world’s leading photography publisher. By the time AKK retired in 1978, over 1200 titles had been produced and more fifty million books sold, in multiple languages. AKK was a cultured man with interests ranging from motor cars to antiques, literature, and his dogs.

AKK left his archive to the, then, National Museum of Photography, Film and Television, now the National Science and Media Museum, Bradford, and established the Kraszna-Krausz Foundation and book awards for photography and the moving image. As part of a commission to celebrate the Kraszna-Krausz Foundation’s fortieth anniversary, Dr Michael Pritchard undertook new research, and this talk presents new insights into AKK’s life and work and discusses his legacy.

Dr Michael Pritchard holds a PhD in history of photography and has been an active photography historian for many years. During his career at Christie’s, he worked on the Kodak Historical Collection readying it for public access at the British Library, and was a director of the Royal Photographic Society (RPS) from 2011 to 2024. He now consults on photography and its history for institutions, photographers, and collections. He edits the British Photo History blog and The PhotoHistorian and is currently researching a history of British photography and the RPS.

Since 1985, the Kraszna-Krausz Foundation has sponsored the now annual Book Awards, the UK’s leading prizes celebrating excellence in photography and moving image publishing. The Awards recognise individuals who have made an outstanding original or lasting contribution to literature concerning photography or the moving image (including film, television, and new media). In addition to the Awards, the Foundation organises a range of events, including talks and symposia, and provides grants in support of publishing relating to photography and the moving image.

Teaching the World Photography: Andor Kraszna-Krausz (1904-1989)
2 December 2025 at 1830
Hosted by the Kraszna-Krausz Foundation in parternship with the Liszt Institute
Delivered by Dr Michael Pritchard
Free, but registration required
Liszt Institute, 17-19 Cockspur St, London SW1Y 5BL, London
See: https://culture.hu/uk/london/events/teaching-the-world-photography:-andor-kraszna-krausz-%281904-1989%29

Image: Andor Krszna-Krausz with Contax camera / Kraszna-Krausz Archve / NSMM. 

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