Tuesday, 10 June 2014

Tutor comment on 2nd attempt at critical review

It seems that things got lost 'In The Post' as my tutor says he emailed his report back to me on 25/28th May but I never received it.

When I emailed again to check what had happened he replied the following:

Hi Jennifer
Judging by your e-mails and phone call, I am wondering if my e-mail of last Wednesday week (28th May) reached you.  As I mentioned in it I have been unavailable for the last week and only just got back into the studio, my e-mails and phone.  

The basic substance of my e-mail as far as the essay is concerned was that it was something of an improvement but still missed the mark for me, however as the visual work is the main concern of the assessors I wouldn't spend much more time on it beyond perhaps making some further reference to it in your learning log.  As to the phone tutorial, I am available today (Thursday) between 3:30 and 6:00 and tomorrow between 6:00 and 7:00.  Otherwise Saturday afternoon (between 2:00 and 6:00) would be possible, Sunday is as yet unclear.  

Sorry that there seems to have been some sort of mess up
Regards

Not sure what else I can do but carry on getting everything ready for moderation.  


Critical Review 2nd Attempt


Subject: Emancipation of Women in the 20th Century with special regard to women photographers based on the topic from the proscribed list:

·      Representations of gender, race and ethnicity in photography

Terms of reference

This review will discuss how women have been able to liberate their lives from the drudgery of housework, childbirth and child rearing in the 20th century to develop their own careers but are still held back by conventions from the 19th century.  It will be written with particular regard to women photographers.

Background

The socio-economic climate with regard to women in the 19th and 20th century was focused on women who were expected to make an early marriage and rear children which was often shortened by this life style.  Women who were born into privileged families were often not much better educated and spent their adult lives running a household, supporting their husbands and rearing children.  Education came to the masses in the early 20th century when board schools were introduced.  Even so, priority was given to boys who were encouraged to go on to secondary and higher education as it was deemed unsuitable for women to be educated, as they would ‘get above their station in life’.  Women who were lucky enough to have siblings and husbands who were into science were able to engage in hobbies and work styles of their male relations. This allowed them to gain a form of education which enabled them to pursue ideas and experiences well out of their normal situations. 

Constance Fox Talbot (1811–1880), wife of Henry Fox Talbot, experimented with photography as early as 1839 under the tutelage of her husband who was to became known in later years as the first person to record a reprintable image. Julia Margaret Cameron, (1815-1879) only took up photography at the age of 48 after bringing up her family, and was famous for her portraits of Charles Darwin, Robert Browning and Alfred Lord Tennyson. 

Another Victorian woman photographer was Lady Clementina Hawarden (1822-1865) a noted portrait photographer of the 1860s. She first began to experiment with photography in 1857, taking stereoscopic landscape photographs before moving to large-format, stand-alone portraits.  Clementina married Cornwallis Maude, 4th Viscount Hawarden in 1845 and had 8 children.  She turned to photography in late 1857 or early 1858, then aged 35 whilst living with her family in Ireland. She moved to London in 1859 and this enabled her to set up a fashionable studio in South Kensington.

Many women and girls took advantage of the First World War when men were away fighting.  Women occupied various normally male only jobs and, when the war was over, refused to accept that they were unemployable.  After many battles with authority, in 1920, women over the age of 21 were allowed to vote in elections although it took many years to for them to be recognised as professionally qualified people and take up responsible jobs. The Royal Photographic Society was founded in 1853 but it took until 1958 for the first woman president, Professor Margaret F Harker, to be appointed.


Specific women photographers’ lives condensed from biographies mainly from http://en.wikipedia.org

Lee Miller (born Elizabeth 1907 – 1977) was born in Poughkeepsie, New York, of parents of German descent.  Her father Theodore often used Lee and her brothers as models in his amateur pictures.  She met the founder of Vogue in New York when she was 19 and was launched into her modeling career.  Over the next two years she was one of the most sought after models in New York but her choice of modeling assignments caused a scandal which effectively ended her career.
            In 1929 Lee moved to Paris with the intention of becoming an artist’s model and apprenticed herself to surrealist artist and photographer Man Ray, eventually becoming his model, co-collaborator, lover and muse.  Eventually Lee started her own photographic studio covering Man Ray’s commissions whilst he concentrated on his paintings.  She worked with Man Ray to rediscover photographic solarisation techniques and also became an active participant herself in the surrealist movement.  She left Man Ray in 1932 and returned to New York where she established a portrait and commercial studio with her brother Erik. 
            In 1934 she married Egyptian Aziz Eloui Bay and lived in Egypt where she continued her surrealist photography.  By 1937 she returned to Paris where she met Roland Penrose whom she later married.  By the outbreak of World War II Lee was living in London with Roland and embarked on a new career in photojournalism becoming the official war photographer for Vogue magazine in 1942.  She was accredited as official war correspondent for Conde Nast Publications and travelled to France less than a month after D-Day and recorded many significant events at the tail end of the war including the liberation of Paris, the battle for Alsace and the Nazi concentration camps at Buchenwald and Dachau.  Also during this time Lee covered stories in Vienna, post-war Hungary and the execution of Prime Minister Laszlo Bardossy.  She continued to work for Vogue for two years after the war ended.
            Lee married Roland in 1947, aged 40, when she discovered she was pregnant with their son Antony and lived in East Sussex from 1949.  During the 1950s-60s their farmhouse became an artistic Mecca to many famous artists including Man Ray, Henry Moore, Dorothea Tanning and Max Ernst.  Lee continued to work for Vogue occasionally but she gave up photography to concentrate on becoming a gourmet cook.
            After returning from the war Lee suffered from what would now be known as Post Traumatic Stress Disorder and suffered from severe bouts of clinical depression.  She died of cancer in 1977 aged 70.  Her work disappeared from view until her son Antony catalogued and showed her work to interested spectators in their farmhouse in East Sussex.

Fay Godwin (17 February 1931 – 27 May 2005) Fay was well known for her black and white photographs of the British countryside recording how the landscape was irreversibly changing during her lifetime.
            Fay married in 1961 (aged 30) and gave birth to two sons.  She made her way into photography by taking snaps of her family.  When she and her husband separated she was left to bring up her family alone and decided to become a professional photographer.  She gained experience by taking portraits of many literary figures in the 1970s and 80s in England using natural light in their own homes to use as publicity material. 
Fay published many books; mainly of countryside landscapes and she used her images to inform the general public of her sense of ecological crisis present at that time in England.
             

Martha Rosler (July 29 1943-) is an American photographer who was born in 1943 in Brooklyn, New York and studied in the States for a BA and MFA.  She spent her early years teaching in Germany and at Rugers University in New Brunswick in New Jersey.  She works in various media and questions the relationship of the corporation, the state and the family.  Using media information and the individual, she exposes the objectification of women. She considered herself a pioneer and used different media and combining them in innovative ways but she mainly used photo-text and photo-collages. 

Martha’s work mainly focuses on highlighting people coming together to discuss important issues as well as highlighting women’s everyday lives of ordinary experiences.  Some of her most famous works are pioneering videotapes spanning several decades dealing with the geo-political dilemma of dispossession and entitlement.  Martha’s pioneering work has been displayed domestically in the USA and in major cities around the world to high critical acclaim.



Anna-Lou "Annie" Leibovitz (born October 2, 1949) is considered on of America’s best portrait photographers, the rare female photographer in a man’s world.  Annie was born in Connecticut in 1949 and enrolled at the San Francisco Art Institute in 1967.  Great photographers such as Robert Frank and Henri Cartier-Bresson influenced her studies and on graduation she spent several years abroad building up her experience including working on a kibbutz in Israel in 1969.

When Anne returned to the States in 1970 she obtained a job at the Rolling Stone Magazine as a staff photographer and is quoted as saying “Sometimes I find the surface interesting.  To say that the mark of a good portrait is whether you get them or get the soul – I don’t think it’s possible all of the time”.  Annie published the book entitled ‘Women (1999) which was accompanied by an essay by friend and novelist Susan Sontag.  Each portrait in the book stands alone but viewed together have nothing more in common in that they are all women living in America at the end of the 20th century.  Her book is a reflection of contemporary American womanhood that mirrors both women’s accomplishments and the challenges they still face individually and as a group.  She demonstrates her abilities as her work can be shot in the studio and natural settings and in colour or black and white.

Annie waited until her early 50s to have a family finally giving birth to her daughter Sarah in 2001 when she was 52 years old.  Her twin girls (Susan and Samuelle) were born by surrogacy in 2005. Annie has suffered many setbacks including financial troubles and a troubled personal life but her work is still highly acclaimed as she captures arresting images of today’s celebrities. 


1900s-2000s

Many people believe that women truly became free when the contraceptive pill was made available to all women.  This allowed them to have control of their reproductive cycles and plan when they wanted to have children.

I came to photography late in life as I had my two sons by the time I was in my early 20s.  I started again in my late 20s but really studied it and earned a living from the mid 1980s.  During the 1980s and 1990s, I worked for British Airways as a communications manager and later as a professional photographer at Heathrow Airport. I had to work twice as hard as any man to prove my worth.  The airport photographers who did corporate photography for Heathrow based airlines and airport companies were, primarily men.  When I first started taking professional photographs I was the person they called when no one else was available and when I left the airport in the late 1990s I was often the first person contacted for photographic sessions.  I had to be friendly and approachable with the more successful airport-based photographers to ensure they would pass on my name if they were unable to take on a commission.

It was always a case of being more imaginative, faster worker and able to come up with the results quicker than anyone else to ensure that I was chosen above the rest.  One woman photographer I worked with at the airport, who I felt, was thorough and came up with good results, was criticized for being too slow.  She took her time setting up her image but took too long.  I came in with a quicker eye for detail and got some interesting commissions.  This was before the age of digital photography so everything was on film and took time to process.  The quicker the pictures were shown to the client the more likely it was that they would use you again.

Current situation
The Google top 100 photographers in 20th century lists only 13 women and the first woman in list is Diane Arbus at number 7 and Cindy Sherman comes in at number 13.    

Naomi Rosenblum, in her Introduction in the Women Photographers at the National Geographic comments “In a photograph taken in 1967 and inscribed ‘greatest photographic team in the world,25 properly suited men are gathered around the desk of National Geographic (NG) Editor, Melville Bell Grosvenor.  The image suggests that the universal language of the photograph upon which this publication depends was solely a contribution of the male eye and mind.  Such a conclusion would be misleading as women photographers had already been making images NG for more than 50 years.

Men seem to be able to do both, single mindedly travelling the world to pursue their careers, leaving their families at home until they return.  Women still have to make the choice of marrying, having a family and working to pay the mortgage then having a career later in life, or having a career in their early adult life and putting off marriage and a family until their late 30s, early 40s or even their 50s today.  Some girls / women have their family early in their lives and then go on to pursue their careers in later life.  This puts them at a disadvantage to women who have single mindedly followed their careers from leaving school as the job market is flooded with youngsters determined to make their way as photographers.

Women who have a career and family have to be very organised or have someone organising them.  Mumsnet website conducted a study on working mothers, according to the Daily Mail newspaper dated 14 April 2014, where only 13% of working mothers actually feel guilty about going to work.  With over 900 replies to their survey almost half of the responders (48%) said they were happier having a paid job rather than being a stay at home mum.  Of those who replied 33% said they would prefer to work and felt that staying at home made them feel undervalued.


At least the girls / women in the UK can expect to be educated in relative safety.  Not like Malala Yousafzai who was shot in the head by Taliban gunmen in Pakistan in October 2012.  All Malala wanted to do was to have an education and was brave enough to speak out for girls like herself.  She now lives in Britain, as she would very likely be murdered if she returned to Pakistan.

In an interesting turn of events this month (April 2014), the presidential elections in Afghanistan had a woman running for vice-president.  Habiba Sarabi is the most prominent woman running in the Afghan election, which will choose a successor to President Hamid Karzai. Sarabi once served as Afghanistan's first female governor, and she is now seeking to become Afghanistan's first female vice-president.  Here, in a country where 10 years ago women were barely allowed to leave their homes there is a democracy forming that is recognised in the western world.


Summary / Conclusions
Some things have changed for the better in that women are now expected to receive compulsory education up until their 18th birthday.  Whether they want to pursue further or higher education is now up to their own expectations and financial situation.  Grants and bursaries are available for those who want to go into higher education.

Women, and women photographers in particular, still have to make a decision as to whether they want to follow their dreams and make a name in their chosen career and wait to have a family or choose a lesser job, marriage, family and paying off the mortgage first.  Some women choose the option to have a marriage and a family early in their lives and then develop their chosen career when their families are adults and able to fend for themselves.  Whilst all women think things have changed, it seems that history repeats itself and we go round and round the Zeus’ Ixiom wheel repeating the same pattern of life in perpetuity.