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Val Williams and Karen Shepherdson are working with Turner Contemporary to curate a major new exhibition examining the relationship between photographers, photography and the British seaside from the 1850s to the present. The exhibition will take place at Turner Contemporary, Margate, in 2019 before going on national tour.
As curators we are aware that a significant amount of British photography remains undiscovered and unseen. Hence, we are inviting submission of portfolios, archives and collections of photography which were made around the British seaside for consideration for inclusion in this major photographic show at Turner Contemporary.
Photography is not always a continuous career, and many photographers have produced bodies of works at certain times in in their lives, and then not returned to the medium. Such material is often rich in content and method. The curators will be very interested to see such work.
Archives too can be relatively hidden or unexplored, whether held by individuals, organisations, institutions or collections. With archivists’ time at a premium and resources scarce, such material has not always been made available for research. We would like to identify such collections in order to have the broadest possible picture of photography’s relationship with the British seaside.
If you have work of your own, which you might not think important but which relates in some way to our theme, we would like an opportunity to see it, for possible inclusion in the show. Or, if you know of archives that we may not have seen, please share your ideas with us.
Subject matter is unlimited, but must be, in some way directly related to British seaside culture and the ideas that it has engendered.
If you would like to contact us about your work prior to sending it in, please email either or both of us:
v.williams@lcc.arts.ac.uk
karen.shepherdson@canterbury.ac.uk
Themes include but are not limited to:
Architecture and gardens.
Seaside bohemia and the artist at the seaside
Places to stay: hotels/boarding houses, holiday camps and caravans
Seaside Snapshots
Fashion and youth culture
Migration and transience
Seaside entertainment: arcades, funfairs, circus, pier shows, comedy, pop.
Seaside spectacles: pageants, carnivals, galas and competitions.
The illicit, the sexual and the criminal
Seaside by night
Seaside studios
Life on the beach.
Landscape
Guidelines for Submission:
Please submit your portfolios of photographs by September 15th 2017, including no fewer than 5 and no more than 10 images. In the first instance work can be submitted electronically via WeTransfer https://www.wetransfer.com which offers 2GB of free file transfer). The image files should have a maximum of 5000px on the longest edge, be at 72ppi and sent as JPEGS. If you aren’t able to digitise your photos, please simply send us Xeroxs or prints.
Please include your name / address / telephone number in any correspondence plus a very brief (no more than 250 words) description of your work and some biographical information, image titles and dates.
Please send submissions to: resort@turnercontemporary.org
We don’t recommend that you send original prints, if you do please do not send anything unique, irreplaceable or valuable. If you are unsure then please contact us ahead of sending.
v.williams@lcc.arts.ac.uk
karen.shepherdson@canterbury.ac.uk
Companies, collections and archives can submit electronically or if they prefer contact the curators direct via the email addresses above with a brief summary of the collection and a link to any relevant websites if available.
Timeline:
Please send any work to us by:September 15th 2017
We will let you know if your work can be included in the exhibition by: November 27th 2017
If you have sent us material as prints or Xerox’ we will send these back to you by: December 18th 2017
About the curators:
Val Williams is a writer and curator, and Professor of the History and Culture of Photography at UAL and Director of the Photography and the Archive Research Centre (PARC) at the London College of Communication. She is a co Editor of the Journal of Photography and Culture. After founding Impression Gallery in York in the early 1970s, she worked as an independent curator and co- initiated the Shoreditch Biennale (1994 & 1998) and from 1999-2001 became curator of Exhibitions and Collections at the Hasselblad Center, Gothenburg, She has curated and co-curated exhibitions at the V&A, the National Media Museum, the Barbican Art Gallery and Tate Britain. Exhibition projects include How We Are: Britain photographed from 1850 (Tate Britain); Who’s Looking at the Family? (Barbican Art Gallery); Look at Me: Fashion and Photography in Britain (Konsthal, Rotterdam and touring); Early Photographs: Daniel Meadows (Library of Birmingham and touring); Warworks (V&A, London); The Dead, (National Media Museum, Bradford); Martin Parr: Retrospective (Barbican Art Gallery, London) Ken. To be destroyed (Schwules Museum, Berlin). Her publications include Martin Parr; Daniel Meadows: Edited Photographs and Anna Fox: Photographic Works 1983-2007, Ken. To be destroyed. In 2013, Val initiated the Moose on the Loose Biennale of Research, which included the exhibitions Life on the Road by Tom Hunter and Scar by Paul Lowe and which has now had two editions, with a third coming up in 2017.
Read more about Val at
www.photographyresearchcentre.co.uk
Karen Shepherdson is Reader in Photography at Canterbury Christ Church University. She is Director of the South East Archive of Seaside (SEAS) Photography and co-directs the Centre for Research on Communities and Cultures both of which are located at CCCU. Karen has received a number of external funding awards for research and regularly creates partnerships for practice and exhibition. Karen has curated several festivals and exhibitions, including SALT: The Festival of the Sea & Environment (Folkestone, 2015); Reframing the Sunbeam Photographic Collection exhibition at the Sidney Cooper Gallery (2014) and in 2015 was commissioned by the British Arts & Humanities Research Council (AHRC) to produce the online gallery ‘Beyond the View: Reframing Early Seaside Photography’. She co-edited the four-volume Routledge major collection on Film Theory and co-authored Beyond the View: New Perspectives on Seaside Photography (2014). Karen’s research focuses on the seaside as site of photographic practice and her own photography repeatedly examines coastal communities and shoreline activities and she’s exhibited in the UK, Scandinavia and the USA.
Read more about Karen at
I recently spoke to Marilyn Stafford about her life in photography, and the background to some of the series of photographic works which are included in current exhibition ‘Stories in Pictures 1950-1960’ at Art Bermondsey Project Space until 9th July 2017.
Marilyn's internationally published work spans from 1948-1980 and covers a broad scope of subjects and periods of modern history. I hope you enjoy discovering her work at the links below:
The complete run of the Australian Photo Review from January 1894 to December 1956 has been digitised and made available by the State Library of New South Wales. The journal was the most influential in Australia throughout its history.
This title has been digitised and made fully searchable online as part of the State Library's Digital Excellence Program, a major initiative supported by the NSW Government.
See more and take a look: http://www.sl.nsw.gov.au/stories/australian-photo-review-now-online
Library and Archives Canada (LAC), in collaboration with the Atelier de Restauration et de Conservation des Photographies de la Ville de Paris, is pleased to pilot its first enhanced e-book, Lingua Franca: A Common Language for Conservators of Photographic Materials.
“Lingua Franca: a language that is adopted as a common language between speakers whose native languages are different.”
It contains bilingual definitions of photographic processes, condition issues, treatment options, preventative care and technical studies. It also provides commonly used terms briefly defined and illustrated with photographs, videos and interactive features such as links to collection items, podcasts, videos, blogs and Flickr albums.
Conservation professionals, teachers, students, and anyone interested in the field of photography can access it for free on iTunes or in HTML version on our website.
This English-French visual glossary of photo conservation terms contributes to LAC’s continued efforts to be at the leading edge of archival and library science and new technologies. If you have questions or comments about Lingua Franca, please email us.
Bibliothèque et Archives Canada publie son premier livre électronique enrichi
Bibliothèque et Archives Canada, en collaboration avec l’Atelier de restauration et de conservation des photographies de la Ville de Paris, est fier de publier Lingua franca : Un langage commun pour les restaurateurs de documents photographiques.
Une lingua franca est une langue véhiculaire employée par des locuteurs de langues maternelles différentes pour se comprendre.
Ce livre électronique enrichi fournit des définitions bilingues de nombreux procédés photographiques, états de conservation, traitements, techniques d’examen et soins préventifs. Il propose également des termes couramment utilisés, accompagnés de courtes définitions et d’exemples illustrés prenant la forme de photographies et d’éléments interactifs : liens vers des articles de la collection, baladodiffusions, vidéos, billets de blogue et albums Flickr.
Les professionnels de la restauration, les enseignants, les étudiants et les amateurs de photographie peuvent consulter le livre gratuitement sur iTunes ou en format HTML sur notre site Web.
Ce glossaire visuel français-anglais sur la restauration de photographies s’inscrit dans les efforts continus de Bibliothèque et Archives Canada pour rester à l’avant-garde des sciences et de la technologie en matière d’archivistique et de bibliothéconomie. Vous pouvez nous faire parvenir vos questions et vos commentaires concernant Lingua franca par courriel.
We are looking for a researcher to play a key role in a new research project to be run in collaboration with the National Science and Media Museum in Bradford. The research project will use a variety of different research methods – including action and participatory research – to explore the political geographies of the National Science and Media Museum and wider Science Museum Group and of the different communities who live in Bradford as a means of addressing the tensions facing inter/national museums in engaging their local audiences. The project’s research questions will be addressed through systemic action research allowing us to build a 'working picture' of the role the National Science and Media Museum currently plays and use this to identify blocks as well as pathways for productive change.
You will play a key role in working with the Principal Investigator (PI) to identify connections between the different strands of research, to support in the administration of the project and to act as editor for the project website. You will also develop your own strand of research within the overall research design. The role is based at the Leeds, but you will spend significant time at the National Science and Media Museum, and elsewhere in the city of Bradford.
With a PhD in museum and heritage studies or an allied field (or equivalent experience), you will have a strong understanding of current debates in the field and the sector as well as experience of taking part in collaborative/participatory projects. You will also possess excellent interpersonal and communication skills and will have the ability to write compelling interpretive content for a variety of audiences.
To explore the post further or for any queries you may have, please contact:
Dr Helen Graham, Project Principal Investigator
Tel: +44 (0)113 343 1224, email: H.Graham@leeds.ac.uk
Every so often a photography exhibition comes along which provides a new perspective on what may often be a familiar history of photography and re-excites one as a photo-historian. New Realities is one such show and, if you see no other photography exhibition over the summer, then this is the one not to miss.
Familiar photographs and styles of photography are re-contextualised within a beautifully designed physical space in Amsterdam's refurbished Rijksmuseum and the newly re-opened Philips Wing. Photographically-illustrated books and ephemera are given a rightful prominence (in special cases with glass that eliminates reflections and provide a 360 degree view of the object); and the application of photography is taken beyond science and documentation to its ephemeral use in advertising and mainly through the Steven F Joseph collection which the Rijksmuseum has acquired.
Using some 300 photographs, photographically-illustrated books and magazines with tipped-in photographs, New Realities tells a story of how photography was put to use after its announcement in 1839. Six themed rooms commence with an introductory room devoted solely to Anna Atkins' British Algae (1843-53). The book itself is displayed with appropriate reverence facing a wall which shows every plate contained within and sets the scene for the way photography changed the way people saw and recorded the world, people and places around them, and created a new art form.
Room 2 looks at portraiture from the paper prints of Talbot and Hill and Adamson and others to cased daguerreotypes, again beautifully displayed and lit, to the mass-appeal of the carte-de-visite. Room 3 is titled 'functional photography' and includes two copies of Reports by the Juries (1851) which used photography to record the exhibits from the Great Exhibition and a range of images which show how photography was used for recording and documenting the world both visible and invisible (x-rays) for science and medicine, to document collections and people and,how photography showed objects to be advertised to consumers in catalogues and the popular press.
Room 4 looks around the world through travel photography. It shows unique works such as a Girault de Prangey's daguerreotype, to Japanese hand-coloured views of Samurai and to popular stereocards displayed as objects in their own right and for viewing in two stereoscopes recreating their subject in 3D that so captivated the Victorians. Room 5 shows 'high art': how photography was used to support traditional artists through studies of models and, in turn, created high art in its own right, in the new medium.
Finally, room 6 looks at the snapshot photograph and the popularising of photography with early 'instant' photographs and the revolution capitalised by George Eastman with the introduction of the Kodak camera in 1888.
There are too many individual highlights to mention them all. For me Atkins' British Algae was one, Antonio Cavella's (c.1880, shown above) two portraits of North African men were new to me and seemed contemporary in the subject's gaze and the photographer's approach, and John Hall-Edwards' 18972 x-ray for advertising the Midland Tyre Company's non-collapsible tyre are simply three of so many.
The exhibition is a testament to the expertise and enthusiasm of Mattie Boom and Hans Rooseboom, curators of photography at the Rijksmuseum. They have produced a stimulating exhibition which reminds us how important photography was throughout the nineteenth century in a fresh way. At the same time it highlights the extent of the photography collections within the Rijksmuseum (some 150,000 images) and they have had the foresight to acquire less obvious collections of photography, such as that of Steven F Joseph, a collection that is likely to grow in importance in showing how photography was used to reach out to commercial and consumer markets.
The catalogue New Realities. Photography in the 19th Century is, like the exhibition, beautifully designed and features essays by the two curators, Saskia Asser, Steven F Joseph and Martin Jürgens. It is fully illustrated, footnoted and indexed. If you cannot see the exhibition, then buy the catalogue. If you get to see the exhibition, then the catalogue will add much to what you will have seen.
New Realities. Photography in the 19th Century
Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam, until 17 September 2017
See: https://www.rijksmuseum.nl/en/new-realities
Last year Britain on Film took a closer look at rural life across the UK, today the BFI announces Britain on Film: Coast and Sea, an online collection of over 600 newly digitised films, ranging from 1898 to 2000, from the BFI National Archive and the UK’s national and regional film and TV archives, spanning the whole of the UK, available (mostly) for free on BFI Player via an interactive map.
As we enter the summer holiday season, find inspiration here with over 160 films that paint a vivid portrait of the quintessential British holiday. Coast and Sea highlights include Playing on Beach (1903, BFI), Netting The Tide (1978, North West Film Archive at Manchester Metropolitan University), Rohilla Wrecked off Whitby (1914, BFI), The Homecoming (1967, South West Film and Television Archive), Cargo for Ardrossan (1939, BFI) and Private Life of the Gannets (1934, BFI).
Since Britain on Film’s launch, over 30 million people have accessed their country’s film heritage through BFI Player and social media channels. With this new collection over 7,500 films can now be seen online – 97% of which are free. By 2018, thanks to National Lottery funding and the support of the Esmée Fairbairn Foundation, 10,000 film and TV titles from 1895 to the present day will be newly digitised and available to view.
See more: player.bfi.org.uk/britain-on-film
One of Europe’s oldest and most important specialist photography galleries is celebrating a double anniversary throughout the summer of 2017. Impressions Gallery, originally established in 1972 in York, celebrates 10 years since its relocation to Bradford in 2007, as well as 45 years as a photography gallery and charity.
Impressions Gallery was founded at a time when photography was shunned by major museums. Impressions brought many photographers to the British public for the first time, notably the very first show by the then unknown Martin Parr and Daniel Meadows in 1972. From humble origins in a room above a shop in York, the gallery has gone from strength
to strength, playing an immeasurable role in championing photography in the UK. In the last 45 years, more than 630 artists have exhibited, including many well-known names such as Bill Brandt, Cecil Beaton, Dorothea Lange, and
Imogen Cunningham.
The gallery’s speciality is supporting both emerging and overlooked photographers to make major new work, helping Anna Fox, Helen Sear, Joy Gregory, Trish Morrissey and Peter Mitchell to achieve international acclaim. After outgrowing a succession of buildings in York, Impressions moved to Bradford at the invitation of Bradford Council, opening the first purpose built public funded photography gallery in the UK in August 2007.
The charity is now an Arts Council England National Portfolio Organisation, supported by Bradford Metropolitan District Council. While Impressions Gallery’s exhibitions are ever-changing, its mission as a charity remains the same: to help people understand the world through photography.
To celebrate its double anniversary, Impressions Gallery is premiering Field Work, the first retrospective of Bradford-born Liza Dracup, whose mesmerising images explore the natural history of the British Isles. The gallery is also presenting a summer of special events, including pop-up photo booths, a VIP party, and a unique exhibition in a secret Bradford historical gem. A family-friendly celebration will mark Saturday 19 August, the 10th anniversary of Impressions opening its doors in Bradford.
Anne McNeill, Director of Impressions Gallery since 2000, said “Impressions has always been visionary, and never afraid to take creative risks. More than ever, photography plays a huge part in our lives, and people continue to look
to Impressions to be captivated, informed and inspired. I’m delighted to be celebrating this important double anniversary, and would like to thank all the visitors, artists, funders and supporters who have been part of the Impressions story over the last 10 years in Bradford and 45 years in Yorkshire”.
Nick Serota, Chair, Arts Council England, said “Impressions Gallery has long played a crucial part in the promotion of photography in Britain and beyond. The gallery’s exhibitions are always exciting, innovative and show the very best contemporary photography from the UK and further afield. I’m sure that the celebratory summer events will be a big hit with locals and visitors alike.”
Susan Hinchcliffe, Leader of Bradford Metropolitan District Council, said “Impressions has mounted
significant exhibitions, bringing artist of international renown to our city. The gallery has forged strong community links, and provides excellent experiences for both our residents and visitors”.
Martin Parr, international Magnum photographer, said “Impressions Gallery is as vital today as when it opened in 1972. I had my first show there, and many photographers have done the same. The policy of showing new work and emerging photographers remains central to the gallery”.
Impressions Gallery attracts around 50,000 visitors annually to its Bradford space in addition to those visiting its touring exhibitions. In York the Gallery saw around 30,000 visitors in its final year.
See more here: http://www.impressions-gallery.com/
Two years ago, in Spring 2015, we launched www.britishphotography.org to showcase our private collection of British photographs and to use the collection as an educational resource.
Since our first annual update in Spring 2016, we have continued to acquire pictures by photographers not previously in the collection. These include Shirley Baker, The Caravan Gallery, Juno Calypso, Maisie Cousins, Michael Kenna, Peter Mitchell, Paddy Summerfield and Gillian Wearing. We have also increased our existing collections of vintage photographs by Cecil Beaton, John Blakemore, Jane Bown, Bill Brandt, Christina Broom, Mat Collishaw, Thomas Joshua Cooper, John Davies, Anna Fox, Fay Godwin, Bert Hardy, Paul Hill, Susan Hiller, E.O. Hoppé, Colin Jones, Dafydd Jones, Neil Libbert, Roger Mayne, Raymond Moore, Graham Smith, Wolfgang Suschitzky and Homer Sykes.
The collection includes an equal number of pictures by male and female photographers. Where possible we continue to acquire substantial bodies of work and we are delighted to have recently made one of our most significant acquisitions: an important group of twenty seven vintage photographs from the Estate of Bill Brandt which, added to our existing works by Brandt, makes the collection one of the most significant in private hands.
We have also acquired a series of eighteen vintage photographs by Bert Hardy from his Picture Post years; over thirty vintage prints from the 1940s and 1950s by Wolfgang Suschitzky; a wide-ranging group of vintage exhibition prints of Manchester and Salford from the Estate of Shirley Baker; a moving group of pictures by Paddy Summerfield; twenty six photographs by a pioneer of colour photography, Peter Mitchell; thirty more works by Dafydd Jones depicting teenage parties in the 1980s; and seventy works by The Caravan Gallery that provide an overview of their work over the last fifteen years.
We have also continued the process of making the collection more accessible by increasing our online content and we have added hundreds more works to the website along with more detailed cataloguing, including a growing number of essays on bodies of work and on individual pictures. We have also lent pictures from the collection to several different museum shows, among them Creating the Countryside: 1600-2017, Compton Verney Art Gallery and Park, 2017 (works by Anna Fox, Paul Hill, Paul Reas, Jo Spence and Homer Sykes); Street View: photographs of Urban Life, Graves Gallery, Sheffield Museum, 2016-17( Colin Jones, Sirkka-Liisa Konttinen and Paul Reas); Heath at 100: A Life in Cartoons (Arundells, Salisbury, 2016-17 (Spitting Image puppet of Prime Minister, Edward Heath); View Ireland, Landskrona Museum, Sweden/Foto View, Ireland 2016 (Paul Seawright Sectarian Murders). We also have a large number of pictures promised to future museum shows in the United Kingdom, Europe and America.
When we sent out our first newsletter last April we described the dire situation for institutions in the United Kingdom: Birmingham Library had closed its inspiring photography department; The National Media Museum in Bradford had announced the end of its commitment to photography; the fate of the Media Space at the Science Museum was uncertain; and Tate Britain remains without a curator of British Photography. However, since then there have been some significant reasons for optimism. Despite funding issues wonderful exhibitions and festivals continue to be staged across the country. The transfer of the Royal Photographic Society’s holdings from the Media Museum to the Victoria and Albert Museum, although enormously controversial, has led the V&A to raise its game with plans for a vastly expanded role for photography with enlarged exhibition spaces and a new study centre. Meanwhile, the advent of Photo London at Somerset House, as a vibrant and energetic celebration of photography, has been a game-changer. Now in its third year, it has helped put London on the map alongside Paris and New York. It is hoped that these initiatives flourish and that they will encourage others to follow their lead.
More information on the Hyman Collection can be found at: www.britishphotography.org
Claire and James Hyman
These three bodies of work from the late 1970s provide a unique insight into Scotlandʼs remote landscape, islands and people. Glyn Satterleyʼs series presents a document of life in the neglected area of Caithness and Sutherland at a time when the myth was much banded about that the oil industry brought wealth and prosperity to the whole of Scotland. Chick Chalmers ʻOrkneyʼ project and Tom Kiddʼs ʻShetlandʼ both present fascinating photographic insights of these island archipelago's at a time of change with the effects of the oil industry on the traditional life of these cultures. Candid and sympathetic, the images show that Scotlandʼs Far North managed to take its place in the modern world without losing too many of the customs and traditions which give these places their special character and ethos.
All three bodies of work appeared in a series by Paul Harris Publishing, an enterprising photography publisher based in Edinburgh at the time. These were Chick Chalmers 'Life in the Orkney Islands' (1979), Tom Kidd 'Life in Shetland' (1980), and Glyn Satterley 'Life in Caithness and Sutherland' (1983). It is from that basis that Street Level has revisited these projects to re-evaluate those times and places from the vantage point of the present. For the project, we have worked with Tom and Glyn in scanning and editing the original negs, and producing the prints in the exhibition. The works of Chick Chalmers in the exhibition are the original vintage prints made by the photographer and applying his distinct and detailed approach to the printing process.
Street Level Photoworks, 24 June - 27 August
Street Level present this unique exhibition at Paisley Museum. 'Clydeside 1974-76' covers a vast geographical area from Elvanfoot to Stepps, Paisley to Greenock, as well as many rural districts where people worked in farming, forestry, fishing and tourism. This Clydeside was one of the two or three most intensely industrialised regions of Europe and during the mid 70’s was experiencing acute economic decline.
For this exhibition, Herman revisited his original project which, until the recent opening at Street Level, was not seen since it was first exhibited at the Third Eye Centre, Glasgow, in 1976 and in the pages of the London based photojournal Camerawork. For Street Level, he hand printed a new set of 78 Black and White silver gelatine prints. Many of Herman’s work was in the collection of the Scottish Arts Council, now dispersed to various holdings, including Glasgow Museums and Paisley Art Gallery and Museum.
A set is also now held in the collection of the National Galleries of Scotland.
Paisley Museum
High Street
Paisley PA1 2BA
t: 0300 300 1210
17th June - 20th August
You will provide professional leadership for IWM’s internationally important collection of historic photographs, which is recognised as one of the most significant photographic collections in Great Britain, unique in its scale, depth and scope. The IWM’s holdings currently comprise several million analogue and born digital images, taken by professional and amateur photographers of many nationalities from 1850 - present, along with associated documentation and artefacts. The core focus of the collection are those conflicts involving British and Commonwealth countries from 1914 to the present day. The collection tells the story of these conflicts from the viewpoints of both combatants and civilians from Britain, her allies and opponents. In addition, under Public Records legislation, IWM is the designated Place of Deposit for official photographs relevant to the Museum’s remit. It is also the custodian of the photographic record of the Museum itself. The post holder will work with IWM’s historical teams to acquire new material for the collection, to research and document holdings to achieve a greater understanding of the collection to increase its benefit to both IWM, our audience and researchers.
As IWM’s most senior specialist in photography, you will at all times demonstrate and develop a high level of knowledge and a breadth of expertise about the collection based on extensive research and experience. You will use this to drive the development and documentation of the collection, and support its commercial exploitation, public programme, research and the work of other teams and departments.
You will promote the use of the photographic collection, both within IWM and externally. You will steer the strategic development of IWM’s photographic collection through liaison across Narrative and Content and IWM as a whole.
You will also play a leading role in creating a working culture that is responsive, collaborative and committed, and an environment that welcomes curiosity and creativity. Finally, you will champion the Change programme and the opportunities it brings with it, both for IWM in its operations and activities and for our audiences.
Key duties
You will be expected to work independently as well as across different teams in order to contribute to and deliver the priorities of IWM - using your knowledge, skills, talent and potential to the best of your ability.
You will focus at all times on delivering excellent customer service, ensure value for money at all times while being professional, courteous and demonstrating the behaviours and attributes expected of all IWM employees. You will also adhere to all corporate standards, and use corporate systems as directed to ensure consistency of service, brand and operational standards.
You will drive the delivery and development of all services within your department, and contribute to the development of other areas as required. You will also adhere to all corporate standards, and use corporate systems as directed to ensure consistency of service, brand and operational standards
You will be an experienced specialist in your area and take on broad responsibilities, working across departments effectively, with individuals, partner organisations and volunteers.
You should be able to lead, manage and motivate your staff, partners and volunteers in order to get the best out of them.
You will play a key role and in the development of corporate and departmental strategy and initiatives.
You will be expected to comply with corporate standards, and use corporate systems, processes and procedures– and undertake any necessary training as directed.
In addition, your duties will include:
1. To lead on the research, interpretation and development of the IWM photographic collection and to advise on its appropriate interpretative use and presentation.
2. To meet regularly with, coach, support and advise relevant curatorial specialists across the department, to ensure the quality of their work as regards their specialism, to identify training needs, and to contribute to their appraisals.
3. To work with curators, Heads of historical teams, the Head of Collections and Curatorial Development and the Department of Collections Management to develop the enhanced interpretation of the photographic collection and to assist with the development of its documentation and digitisation.
4. To play a leading role in meetings and discussions with IWM colleagues and representatives from TNA and MOD relating to IWM’s status as a Place of Deposit under the Public Records Act, with particular emphasis on the archiving and use of born digital official photographs.
5. In collaboration with Collections Management, to agree and advise curatorial teams on approaches to and standards for interpretation and cataloguing of the collection and ensure that these are upheld across IWM.
6. To liaise with Collections Management regarding the photographic collection, and to inform IWM practice by establishing peer-to-peer relationships with individuals and organisations that set and provide guidance on collections development, collections care and curatorial standards.
7. To develop academic research projects and meaningful partnerships that enrich understanding of our photographic collection.
8. To put forward imaginative ideas for exhibitions and other elements of the public programme or events at external partner organisations
9. To respond to requests from across IWM for knowledge and skills, co-ordinating, delegating and apportioning resource accordingly to support the Assistant Director (Narrative and Content), Head of Collections and Curatorial Development and work with the Heads of historical teams in identifying strategic priorities and development of corporate plans.
10. To facilitate among curators across IWM an understanding of our photographic holdings, their unique qualities, their place within the material culture of conflict, and their potential for reaching our audiences.
11. To identify development opportunities for photograph curators in order to ensure the expertise and knowledge of specialist curators is maintained in the organisation.
12. To support the Heads of historical teams in creation and development of content for galleries and exhibitions, as well as Learning, Development, Press, Publishing, Media, Marketing and Commercial outputs and activities
13. To develop academic research projects and meaningful partnerships that enrich our understanding of our collection.
14. To facilitate access to our collection, knowledge and skills to the public and to colleagues across IWM.
15. To apply excellent communication skills in working with audiences and stakeholders, both internal and external, and with other specialists in historical photographs.
16. To work at all times as a team member, consulting with colleagues and sharing knowledge and information.
17. To ensure that all areas of activity deliver IWM brand values and comply with corporate priorities, standards and systems at all times.
18. Representation of IWM on external professional and academic boards and at conferences, workshops and seminars
19. To identify and implement learning and development needs of both yourself and specialist curators of photographs across IWM’s historical teams.
20. Providing media interviews and giving tours and presentations to stakeholders and VIP visitors
See more and apply by the 21 June closing date here:
Photographs by pioneering Swanage photographer, Helen Muspratt, whose studio opened in Swanage in 1928 are the subject of Face, Shape and Angle. The photography of Helen Muspratt at the Fine Doundation Gallery, Durston Castle, from 20 June 2017. Muspratt's work includes her portraiture of Paul Nash and Eileen Agar.
Exhibition Dates: Tues 20 June – Tues 11 July 11am – 4pm
Fine Foundation Gallery, Durlston Castle
Europeana.eu enables people to explore the digital resources of Europe's galleries, museums, libraries, archives and audiovisual collections. Explore the history of photography in 2,301,790 items from European collections. See the photography collections here: http://www.europeana.eu/portal/en/collections/photography
Photographic collections are found in libraries, archives and museums all over the world. Their sensitivity to environmental conditions, and the speed with which images can deteriorate present special challenges. This one day training session is led by Susie Clark, accredited photographic conservator. It is aimed at those with responsibility for the care of photographic collections regardless of institutional context.
The day provides an introduction to understanding and identifying photographic processes and their vulnerability, information on common conservation problems and solutions, and the preservation measures that can be taken to prolong the life and accessibility of photographic collections. Contact with real examples of different photographic processes is an important feature of this training session which is therefore limited to only 16 places. At the end of the day participants will be able to: identify historic photographic processes explain how damage is caused implement appropriate preservation measures commission conservation work.
See more here: https://www.westdean.org.uk/study/short-courses/courses/bl29-preserving-historic-photographs
Curious item was bought at some auction - a card tube (about an inch in diameter) sent on August 1907 from Cambridge photographers Messrs. Stearn to a Leeds address (image 1). The tube contained a rolled document that appeared to be photograph. It was saved by careful wetting and it showed a group of fancy dressed persons. They seem an opera or theatre actors (image 2). The question is - can they be identified as a group and (at least some of them) as individuals ? Where could I turn for possible more information ?
Any reply welcome.
Do Not Bend: The Photographic Life of Bill Jay will be shown as an initial series of screenings and panel discussions by the end of this year. You can follow the progress of the film at www.donotbendfilm.com and https://www.facebook.com/DoNotBendFILM/
Pat Stewart, the Tiller girl in the polka dot dress, who was famously captured by Bert Hardy in Blackpool, has died aged 83 years. Hardy's photograph was a Picture Post front cover in 1951. The picture was taken by Hardy on a Brownie camera to show that great photographs were created by the photographer rather than the camera. Stewart had to assert her claim to be the subject. She will be buried in the dress that made her famous.
A Victorian Society is a book about early photography and photographers, told against the backdrop of life in what was to become the most productive cotton spinning town in the world. In 1867, when photography was still in its infancy, a group of photographers from Oldham and District met at the Hare and Hounds Inn, Yorkshire Street, and founded the Oldham Photographic Society and some of these men would provide the early photographic studios in the town.
The photographic portrait had been accessible only to the wealthy but now it was beginning to be affordable by all but the poorest in society. One evening each week, the early photographers of Oldham met to share knowledge and to collect photographs in their album, which has mostly lain unseen in the society's archives for over 100 years.
A Victorian Society has more than 300 black and white photographs and illustrations, many of which are published here for the first time. The book first traces the early days of photography through the lives of the pioneers, in France and Britain, whose work led to the creation of the permanent photographic image, paving the way for all professional and amateur photography. After the Lancashire cotton famine, the late 1860s marked the beginning of the most exciting period of Oldham's history.
The author examines the rise of the town to become one of the most important cotton spinning and textile engineering towns in the world and follows its progress through phenomenal growth to eventual decline. The Victorian age was the 'Age of Invention' and the Oldham Photographic Society reflects that through its early members, many of whom rose to prominence in the world of photography, commerce and manufacturing, some of their businesses achieving national and international importance. Using genealogy sources and historic publications, the author researched the lives of many of the society's Victorian members and brings them together in a social group not studied before. Their stories give a real insight into their origins, successes, rise to fortune, failures and personal tragedies. The book concludes with a guide on how to date old photographs.
A Victorian Society: Oldham Photographic Society the First 150 Years
Christine Waddell
£15, 326 pages
Available on Amazon at: https://www.amazon.co.uk/Victorian-Society-Oldham-Photographic-First/dp/1545379858/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1496599954&sr=1-1&keywords=a+victorian+society