Friday, 29 July 2022

Lens ladies (5/5)









































A timely book to re-balance the important contribution that women gave to photography. Marie Robert in her front-of-book essay mentions Constance Talbot who helped her husband William Fox Talbot, one of the early pioneers and she probably helped to create one of the first photo images, but she's forgotten now. The new world of photography from about the middle of the eighteenth century was considered a male-dominated art yet the first few pages of this book reveal plenty of work by women. 

Anna Atkins, 1799-1871, produced the first photo book using the cyanotype process in 1843 (her 'Blue Prints' is still in print today) Julia Margaret Cameron, 1815-1878, was regarded at the time, as the leading photographer of Victorian celebrities, Signe Brander, 1869-1942, born in Finland took hundreds of photos of Helsinki, between 1907 and 1913. These are just three of the three hundred women photographers revealed in the book.  

I thought the format of the pages was excellent. Rather than produce an alphabetical listing the author's have let the birth date of each woman dictate the page sequence, this allows the various styles of work to be compared historically with photographers of the same period. Anna Atkins is the first entry and the last Iranian Newsha Tavakolian born in 1981. Each gets a page with a photo and a several hundred-word essay and nicely these are all written by women. To break up the book's format there are three Portfolio sections split between seventy additional photos. All the photos throughout the book have title and date captions.

Even though there are three hundred women photographers mentioned it's probably in the nature of this kind of publication that someone isn't included. I was surprised that Annie Leibovitz doesn't have a page, or Esther Bubley, Nina Leen and Sandy Skoglund.

This is an important book that will help anyone interested in photography to appreciate the creative contribution of so many women.




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