All Posts (18)

Sort by

12201089879?profile=originalQ: How do you define your work?

LH: Definitions are not for me to assign any real value to. I think of myself as a portrait photographer. That is to say, I      photograph people in the context of some aspect of their environment. Sometimes I’ll call myself a social documentarian.   And then, frequently, I’ll be at an event working directly alongside news photographers. Of course, the day after a     photograph is in a newspaper then, that photograph becomes a documentary photograph perhaps even with some     historic value.

Q: How do finance your work?

LH: I essentially earn my living from selling to collectors, museums and from grants from arts funding bodies and photographic    companies. I also get commissions from various organisations, for example, the UK Trades Union Congress asked me to   do the photography for a poster campaign they ran about low waged workers.

Q: What inspires you?

LH: I’m inspired to photograph directly from events in the world. I read as many as twenty - thirty different newspapers a month    from many countries. The web has made this much easier than ever so often spending a couple of days in a library as I used to do.

I’m not very prolific and can work on independent projects for many years. I’ve never been an adventurer and so, after     researching something, perhaps for a year or so, I decide that it’s important, then I’ll continue with it. I very well might be    wrong about its importance, but I’ve got to feel that something is important.12201090059?profile=original

A single photograph has to be lean, it can’t be about too much, but must link into that evasive “something” universal. There are   many photographers who may very well feel things deeply. We have to be able to transcend those feelings and     ultimately, make photographs with our intellect.

Q: Which of your photographs would you describe as your favourite?

LH: There is perhaps only a handful that I continue to like through the years. Quite frankly, my “favourite” images are those    coming from projects I’m currently working on. How I define ‘”favourite” is constantly changing.

Q: Are there photographers who have influenced tour work?

LH: There are many photographs I like, but not many “life - time’s work” of specific photographers. I live and I absorb things as do   other people, but I don’t feel influenced by any specific photographer.

 Still photography is not related to cinema in my opinion. It’s nearest relation is poetry in that both art forms have an extraordinary capacity to be very explicit about a very specific thing. So, I read poetry all the time.

Q: And what projects are you working on now?

LH: There are two and I’m beginning to develop a third.

 I’ve been documenting Londoners who are paid by the hour (waged) for more than seven years. Wars and the extreme     degradation of the environment certainly mark our time, but the fundamental characteristic of our period in history is the extraordinary migration of people throughout the world.

 According to the Population Division of the United Nations, virtually all population growth, expected in the world during the next 30 years, will be concentrated in urban areas. Also, in 2007 and for the first time in human history, the number of  town and city dwellers equalled the number of people living in the countryside. So, by now, there are certainly more people living in towns and cities than in the Earth’s rural areas.

Another phenomenon also marks our epoch. Throughout the industrialised world, the majority of adult women are now in    paid work and are working outside the home.

 The other long - term project I’ve been working on is about “industrial Cuba”. I started shooting it a couple of years ago and I’m really just at the very beginning. The Cuban government and the country’s people are withstanding economic and    frequent violent blows against it, primarily from United States governments of the last fifty - four years and now, the     imprisoned “Cuban 5” are in the forefront of defending Cuban independence and self determination.

 I’ve just begun researching a project about the political situation in northern Mali. I’ve been reading and having meetings    about Western Sahara, the Polisario and some sections of the Tuareg people.

Q: You are very busy! What else do you do?

LH: If I were just a photographer then I would stop being a photographer. I’m an active trade unionist and sit on various national    organisations including the Cuba Solidarity Campaign executive. I’m also secretary of the tenants’ association      where I live.

 Of course, we all have to think socially, but must learn to act politically. I’ve never been an adventurer with a camera or a    tourist. As a photographer, I want to tell the world what I think of it and, as an activist; I want to contribute to its social     change based upon human solidarity.

Q: When did you come to Britain?

LH: I emigrated in 1968 from New York during the Vietnam War and I’ve lived here ever since.

Q: What’s your photographic training?

LH: I trained as a sculptor. I had some student group shows and people said that I was “talented”. I was encouraged by my     teachers. I never believed them and in the arts, you’ve got to believe that you are talented. You may be wrong, but     you’ve got to believe it.

 While still sculpting, I’d borrow a photographer friend’s camera and using it felt very comfortable and natural from the very    beginning. I still remember when I first looked through a viewfinder and it was magical.

Q: What was it like when you first arrived in the UK?

LH: My concern was the Vietnam War and expressing solidarity with those people fighting the Americans. My partner, a Welsh    woman, had given birth to a girl, soon after coming to the UK and that was wonderful. I was also trying very hard to     discover how to become a photographer. There were an awful lot of new things going on - a new country, a new child    and a new craft. And, all in the context of the tumultuous times of the 60's and 70's.

 We didn’t succumb to eating cat food but it was a hard time. One day I just wandered into Norman Hall’s office at The Times. He was the then picture editor and you could simply knock on someone’s door in those days.

 As I had lied to many Fleet Street editors that I had a trunk full of my work coming from the States, I also pulled that one with Norman and he called me out. He wagged his finger in my face and told me to stop lying and to wait a minute and left the office. He came back in several bewildering minutes and gave me 650 rolls of film and told me that he didn’t wasn’t to see me for a year. I suppose there are still a few young photographers out there getting breaks, but it’s hard to imagine that sort of things happening today.

Well, I returned to see Hall exactly year to the day and he started using my work. Paris Match and Life also published my    photographs and I started having exhibitions and rapidly became a self - confident photographer.

Q: What were the events that propelled you into political activism?

LH: Beyond doubt it was the American Civil Rights Movement and the Second Wave of the Feminism and the Anti Vietnam War   Movements that grew out of the fight against legal racism and American apartheid called Jim Crow. When I was about    seventeen a friend took me to hear Malcolm X speak in Harlem. I was the only Caucasian in the hall and I heard     Malcolm X say some very reasonable things and I believed he was talking to me.

 Throughout all this intense activity and upheaval, I was still motivated by anger at what passed for civilisation but hardly    had any alternative to advocate. This came, as with generations before me, through my experiences in Ireland. I spent a   lot of time there, photographing primarily in the North, during the war, called The Troubles. Those years were truly a    “university of struggle” for me.

I saw and photographed very brave people who not only hated the status quo, but were collectively organising against it and had a very good idea of where they wanted to go. I already knew that change was necessary but was taught by the North of Ireland people that change was indeed possible.

Q: What do you feel about art school training today?

LH: Schools and colleges don’t exist in isolation and reflect the neo - liberal ideas that dominate our world. Teaching is imbued with notions of “all is ok in art”. Of course, learning all about handling and manipulating machines and materials to force    them to obey the will of the maker of something, is imperative. There is something very much more important that is lacking.

I was guest lecturing documentary photography students at an art college some years ago. Coincidentally, I was there when the American marines invaded Somalia. I asked the students for the name of the Somali capital city and only two people, among the thirty or so aspiring documentary photographers, could tell me.

 Many of those students were talented but couldn’t articulate why they wanted to be photographers - what they wanted to do with their newly acquired skills. Very understandably, their entire experience was derived from the post - modern and    neo-liberal world they were born into. This isolation and singular view was nurtured by the whole orientation of the     degree course and badly equipped the men and women to have anything to say about the world.

12201089896?profile=original

Q: What boundaries should a photographer be pushing forward?

LH: Most photography is used to illustrate copy. For example, go through any newspaper today and a photograph might be half or a third of the page and the photographer’s by-line frequently will be four point feint running up the side while the writer’s  name is in fourteen point and in bold. The incidental appreciation of photographs is something the journalist’s union, the NUJ, should be organising to change.

 Photographers have to learn self confidence in that we have something to say and that image making has its own rich visual   language. I don’t think most documentary and news photographs are very good. I may like a specific image but, mostly, they are boring because they don’t offer insights into the subject photographed. It’s, “here’s a report of a demonstration and here’s a photograph of the report.” Photographers should start with, “what do I want to say about an event and how do I best do that!”

Q: What equipment do you use?

LH: Over the years I’ve standardised a lot. I only use Ilford HP 5 and ID 11. I use three Leicas, a M3, M2 and a MP. The MP and M2 have 35mm, 1.4 mm Summilux lenses on them. The MP with the 35 lens are what I use ninety - five percent of the    time. The M3 has a 90 mm, 2.8 Elmarit on it and I keep it in my pocket. I don’t even use it every year, but when I need it, it’s there. The M2 is a breakdown back up camera.

Interviewer: Pippa Jane Wielgos

© Copyright Pippa Jane Wielgos

10.09.2013.

Read more…

12201088669?profile=originalWhen Roger Fenton arrived in the Crimea in March 1855 to photograph the war that had been raging for 12 months, the major battles of the campaign had already been fought.  And yet, the images that he captured of exhausted troops and desolate landscapes would become some of the most significant visual accounts of conflict ever produced, giving birth to the genre of war photography.

The first exhibition of Fenton's Crimean works in London since 1856, Shadows of War: Roger Fenton's Photographs of the Crimea, 1855 explores how the photographer brought the stark realities of war into public consciousness for the first time, through more than 60 photographs from the Royal Collection. The exhibition also tells the story of the historically close relationship between the Royal Family and those who have served their country in battle, with contributions to the exhibition's multimedia guide by HRH The Duke of Sussex, photojournalist Sir Don McCullin and exhibition curator Sophie Gordon.

The Crimean War saw Britain, France, Sardinia and the Ottomon Empire allied against Russia's attempt to expand its influence into Ottoman territory.  The impact of the war on the Victorian public was immense.  Britain sent 98,000 men into the conflict, and thanks to improved communications and the presence of war correspondents, updates from the battlefield reached home in days rather than weeks.  The advent of photography meant that reports were no longer limited to unillustrated newspaper accounts or artistic depictions of battle, and the public was able to witness authentic images of war for the first time. 

Roger Fenton was already a respected photographer when he travelled to the Crimea, commissioned by the publishers Thomas Agnew & Sons to photograph people of interest for use as source material for a painting by the artist Thomas Barker.  Arriving several months after the major battle of Balaklava and the famous Charge of the Light Brigade, Fenton spent three months producing approximately 360 photographs, travelling and working in a mobile darkroom that he had converted from a wine merchant's van. The limitations of 19th-century photographic techniques, coupled with Victorian sensibilities, prevented Fenton from producing scenes of battle and death.  Instead, he evoked the destruction of war through portrayals of bleak terrains and haunted troops.  In his most famous photograph, Valley of the Shadow of Death (23 April 1855), he places the viewer at the bottom of a barren ravine littered with cannonballs, subtly referencing the earlier battles in which so many had lost their lives.

Fenton spent several weeks photographing the key figures of the war.  One of his best-known portraits, The Council of War (June 1855), shows the three commanders of the allied armies – Lord Raglan, Maréchal Pélissier and Omar Pasha – preparing for their successful assault on the Russian fortifications at Mamelon.  Lord Raglan died on 28 June 1855, shortly after the image was taken. 

In August 1855, Queen Victoria wrote in her journal that she had viewed some of Fenton's work, commenting that the portrait was 'one, most interesting, of poor Lord Raglan, Pélissier & Omar Pacha, sitting together on the morning, on which the Quarries were taken'. While the majority of Fenton's portraits depicted senior officers, his photographs also captured the conditions for troops on the frontline, from living and cooking facilities to the after-effects of battle.  One of his more disturbing images is Lord Balgonie (1855), which is the first visual record of someone suffering from 'shell shock'.  Balgonie was badly affected by the conflict and died in 1857 – his death at the time attributed to the war.  The image demonstrates Fenton's proficiency in creating powerful photographs without resorting to explicit imagery.

Fenton returned to Britain in July 1855, and in September his Crimean photographs went on display at the Water Colour Society on Pall Mall, the first of four London venues. The images raised awareness of the conditions endured by soldiers at a time when the wounded began to arrive home.  Queen Victoria, who had commissioned Fenton to produce portraits of the royal family in 1854, took a personal interest in the conflict and the welfare of the troops.  Keen that her concern was publicly known, she was the first British monarch to meet and support wounded soldiers in public, personally greeting troops at Buckingham Palace and during visits to hospitals.  She also instituted the Victoria Cross, which remains the highest award for gallantry in the British Armed Forces. On the exhibition's multimedia guide, recorded when the exhibition was first shown in Edinburgh in 2017, The Duke of Sussex speaks about how the photographs taken by Fenton and his contemporaries helped change attitudes towards those affected by their experiences on the battlefield.

Speaking about Fenton's image Lord Balgonie, the first visual record of someone suffering from 'shell shock', His Royal Highness says in the multimedia guide: 'There has always been a fascination about people returning from war, what they've been through and what they've seen.  The psychological impact of being on the battlefield is something that servicemen and women have had to deal with, but have often found it hard to talk about.  As a result of photographers like Roger Fenton and those who have followed him, the public have gained a better appreciation of these experiences and consequently, over the years this fascination has turned to appreciation and respect.'

Shadows of War: Roger Fenton's Photographs of the Crimea, 1855 is at The Queen's Gallery, Buckingham Palace, 9 November 2018 – 28 April 2019, with Russia: Royalty & the Romanovs.

The accompanying publication, Shadows of War: Roger Fenton's Photographs of the Crimea, 1855 by Sophie Gordon, is published by Royal Collection Trust, price £24.95 from Royal Collection Trust shops and www.royalcollection.org.uk/shop.

Visitor information and tickets for The Queen's Gallery, Buckingham Palace:  www.royalcollection.org.uk, T. +44 (0)30 3123 7301.

Below image: Roger Fenton, Queen Victoria and Prince Albert, 1854 Images for use in connection with the exhibition, Shadows of War: Roger Fenton's Photographs of the Crimea, 1855, The Queen's Gallery, Buckingham Palace, 9 November 2018 - 28 April 2019. Royal Collection Trust / (C) Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II 2018. 12201088863?profile=original

Read more…

12201085660?profile=originalBack in May the NLS / NGS advertised for a curator (see BPH here) for the newly acquired £1 million Mackinnon Collection. The newly appointed curator is Blake Milteer who has most recently been photography collections curator at the National Library of Scotland. Before that he had a number of curatorial and teaching posts in the United States. 

The latest issue of the National Library of Scotland's Discover magazine (Summer 2018)  includes a feature on the Mackinnon Collection (see BPH here). The Collection provides a visual record of how Scotland has changes physically, socially and economically since the 1840s. 

Discover is free from venues in Scotland or can be downloaded here.

Read more…

12201088057?profile=originalThe Scottish Society for the History of Photography has been delivering a remarkable series of events, lectures, articles and scholarly texts on the world of historic and contemporary photography since 1986.

This issue of Studies in Photography contributes to the continuing debates around photography and performance in their expanded fields and presents a number of case studies in a diverse and international range of work. This includes Greek funerary practices, Scottish Victorian portraiture, Belgian surrealist work, and the performative image surgery of the French artist ORLAN.

Contents include:

  • Photography and Performance
  • Photopoetry
  • ORLAN 
  • Paul Nougé
  • Writer’s Choice - Janice Galloway

The Summer 2018 edition is now out. Of particular note is Sara Stevenson's article on Marcus Sparling and Fenton. 

Copies can be purchased here 

Read more…

12201085068?profile=originalDrawing on the BBC's rich archive, this documentary reveals the working practices, lives and opinions of some of the greatest photographers of the last 60 years. From Norman Parkinson to David Bailey, Eve Arnold to Jane Bown, Henri Cartier-Bresson to Martin Parr, for decades the BBC has drawn our attention to the creators of what has become the most ubiquitous contemporary art form.

Pioneering BBC programmes like Arena, Monitor and Omnibus have given unique insights into the careers of photography's leading practitioners. Through a selection of fascinating clips, this programme brings into focus the key genres - fashion, portraiture, documentary and landscape - and the characters behind the camera who have helped defined them.

BBC4: On Camera: Photographers at the BBC
Wednesday, 29 August 2018 at 2300, and then on the BBC iPlayer

Read more…

12201087284?profile=originalOrganised by Dr Stephen Putnam Hughes and Emily Stevenson, SOAS Anthropology Department, with support from the Economic and Social Research Council and the SOAS South Asia Institute, this one-day conference looks at the role of the postcard in representing peoples and places. Of particular note is the presentation by Professor Elizabeth Edwards, 'Little marks of ownership: museum postcards 1913-1939'. 

See the full programme and book here.

Read more…

12201086657?profile=originalTate's growing collection of Paper and Photographic artworks presents unique challenges for conservation and preservation, requiring innovative solutions.

You will lead the development of the team, supporting research and enhancing practice in standards of care. You will formulate a preservation strategy for the historic, modern and contemporary art works in our care and further the national and international profile of the team.

Our Conservation department brings excellence to the care of all Tate’s collections. As a member of the Conservation Management Team, you will work with the Head of Conservation in the strategic planning and leadership of the department. You will co-ordinate the delivery of Tate’s public programme and be responsible for the operational planning, management and development of a team of specialists.

Read more and apply by 21 September here.

Read more…

12201092080?profile=originalThe New York Public Library which holds a copy at Anna Atkins' British Algae is hold an an exhibition devoted to her from 19 October 2018-17 February 2019.  Anna Atkins (1799–1871) came of age in Victorian England, a fertile environment for learning and discovery. Guided by her father, a prominent scientist, Atkins was inspired to take up photography, and in 1843 began making cyanotypes—a photographic process invented just the year before—in an effort to visualize and distribute information about her collection of seaweeds. With great daring, creativity, and technical skill, she produced Photographs of British Algae: Cyanotype Impressions, the first book to be illustrated with photographs, and the first substantial application of photography to science. Ethereal, deeply hued, and astonishingly detailed, the resulting images led her and her friend Anne Dixon to expand their visual inquiry to flowering plants, feathers, and other subjects. This exhibition draws upon more than a decade of careful research and sets Atkins and her much-admired work in context, shedding new light on her productions and showcasing the distinctive beauty of the cyanotype process, which is still used by artists today.

Details of a symposium devoted to Atkins and her work will be announced shortly.

A companion exhibition looks at how Atkins's legacy lives on through the works of artists today in Anna Atkins Refracted: Contemporary Works, on view September 28, 2018–January 6, 2019

Read more here: https://www.nypl.org/events/exhibitions/blue-prints-pioneering-photographs-anna-atkins 

Image: Anna Atkins, "Halyseris polypodioides" from Part XII of Photographs of British Algae: Cyanotype Impressions, ca. 1849, cyanotype.

Read more…

12201090261?profile=originalThe Royal Photographic Society has a long and distinguished history back to 1853. For much of its existence it has been the place where matters affecting photography’s technical development and its position as an artistic medium were debated and reported on. Its publications and membership are a key resource for anyone researching British photographic history.i

The Society has recently published a blog designed to help those researching its history, members and exhibitions. See more here: http://www.rps.org/blogs/2018/august/researching-the-society

Read more…

12201091853?profile=originalWe collectors of Mr. Wilson have much to celebrate this year with Professor Roger Taylor's just released new GW Wilson edition. Personally, my new acquisition of an album in the form of a book,containing 16 GWW views -- plus one other related to GWW's stereoscopic views -- P1180450.JPG delights me to no end. The views present , and some other circumstantial evidence, strongly suggest the 'book' belonged to a colleague of GWWs or a family member.I will write about this in detail later.

FOR NOW, PLEASE: Has anyone seen another example of this casing? Thank you very much. -- Edward McCann.

Read more…

Enquiry: Where in the World?

12201096269?profile=originalCan anyone help in locating where the image below was taken? It was found in a suitcase stuffed full of 5x3 film negatives, which was transferred to the Reach Central Archive, Watford at the end of 2017 when we moved the Surrey Advertiser Archive. From other negatives found in the suitcase we believe it is somewhere on the English South Coast taken in the late 1920s possibly early 1930s. Any thoughts?

12201096286?profile=original

Read more…

Photo reference library for sale

I am selling a large part of my photography reference library: Over 450 books and many more catalogues. Most titles are viewable on this attached xl spreadsheet doc  photo books xl document, giving author, title, size and indication of what it covers - there will be more items than appears on this list, journals, pamphlets etc

There are a large number of photography sale catalogues, from the 1970s onwards.... quite a few in the 90s and early 2000s will have notes etc - 

Contact me for details, price etc

12201094492?profile=original

12201095061?profile=original

12201094699?profile=original

12201096060?profile=original

Read more…

By working with photographs from the collections of museums and libraries, Michael Aird is testing whether historical photographs can become substantial evidence of Australian Aboriginal connections with land and place. He is studying images and combines archival research to contextualize how photographs can serve as more than illustrations, but they can also demonstrate historical continuities and change as well as connections to country over time. Who are the people featured in early photographs and what were the complex personal relationships between these individuals. Photographs can be used to ask research questions that may previously not been considered in native title claim research. This research methodology will question the value of photographs as historical documents, as well as how they are valued, and used by contemporary Aboriginal people as an important part of history and identity.

Michael Aird has worked in the area of Aboriginal arts and cultural heritage since 1985, graduating in 1990 with a Bachelor of Arts in Anthropology from the University of Queensland. Michael has worked in professional positions and as a freelance researcher, curator and publisher. In 1995 Michael was appointed Curator of Aboriginal Studies at the Queensland Museum, a position he held until 2000. His main research focus has been photographic history with a particular interest in native title and Aboriginal people of southeast Queensland. He has curated over 25 exhibitions, including curating Transforming Tindale at the State Library of Queensland in 2012, which was the first time photographs taken by Norman Tindale and Joseph Birdsell on their 1938 and 1939 expedition have been featured in a major exhibition. In 2014 he curated the Captured: Early Brisbane Photographers and Their Aboriginal Subjects exhibition at the Museum of Brisbane. In 1996 he established Keeaira Press an independent publishing house and has produced over 35 books. Much of what Keeaira Press has published focus on art and photography, which reflects Michael’s interest in recording aspects of urban Aboriginal history and culture. Michael is currently the Director of the University of Queensland Anthropology Museum and an ARC Research Fellow. 

RAI RESEARCH SEMINAR

SEMINAR SERIES AT THE ROYAL ANTHROPOLOGICAL INSTITUTE

From illustration to evidence in native title: the potential of photographs

Michael Aird, Director of the University of Queensland Anthropology Museum

Wednesday 12 September at 5.30 pm

This event is free, but tickets must be booked. To book tickets please go to https://michaelarid.eventbrite.co.uk

Location : Royal Anthropological Institute
50 Fitzroy Street
London
W1T 5BT
United Kingdom
http://www.therai.org.uk

Read more…

Blog Topics by Tags

Monthly Archives