( ) American photographer and artist

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(1883-1976) American photographer and artist Imogen Cunningham (1883-1976) American photographer and artist

Imogen Cunningham Text from Van Deren Coke, Photography: A Facet of Modernism Imogen Cunningham was raised in Seattle, Washington, where she made her first photographs in 1901. While attending the University of Washington in Seattle, she studied chemistry and took botany classes, for which she made lantern slides. From 1907 to 1909 she worked in Seattle at the studio of Edward S. Curtis, the photographer of American Indian life, from whom she learned the process of platinum printing. In 1909 she received a scholarship to study the chemistry of photography at the Technische Hochschule in Dresden, Germany, where she developed an inexpensive imitation platinum paper based on the use of lead salts. During her return trip to the United States in 1910, she met Alvin Langdon Coburn in London; in New York she met Alfred Stieglitz and Gertrude Kaesebier, whose work she found particularly inspiring. Cunningham opened her own studio in Seattle in the fall of 1910. In 1912 she had her first one-person show, at the Brooklyn Institute of Arts and Sciences, New York, in which she exhibited soft-focus Pictorialist studies of figures in the landscape. In 1915 she married the artist Roi Partridge; in 1917 they moved to San Francisco, where she opened a portrait studio. In the 1920s Cunningham began making sharply focused, close-up studies of plant forms and unconventional views of industrial structures and modern architecture. Concerned with light, form, and abstract pattern, these photographs established her as one of the pioneers of modernist photography on the West Coast. Edward Weston selected ten of these works for the historic Film und Foto exhibition held in Stuttgart, Germany, in 1929. Cunningham was a founding member of Group f.64 and participated in its important showing at the M. H. de Young Memorial Museum in San Francisco in 1932. It was there, in the same year, that she was given a one-person exhibition. Her work was also included in the landmark exhibition Photography 1839-1937 held at the Museum of Modern Art, New York, in 1937. In addition to plant forms, Cunningham also did portraiture. Having published her pictures of the dancer Martha Graham in Vanity Fair in 1932, Cunningham continued to work for the magazine in both New York and Hollywood until 1934. Throughout her long and productive career, portraiture continued to be an important subject. During the fifties she photographed the poets of the Beat Generation and in the sixties, the flower children of San Francisco's Haight Ashbury district. At the age of ninety-two Cunningham began her last major portrait project, a book of images primarily of people over ninety years old. Unfinished at the time of her death, the book, entitled After Ninety, was published posthumously in 1977 to coincide with an exhibition of these photographs at the Focus Gallery in San Francisco.

https://youtu.be/fuzP6Uiw78k Imogen Cunningham https://youtu.be/fuzP6Uiw78k by Alexandra Wilson Music: "Fire In My Heart" by Harlem Jade & Jax Vol. 4 (Google Play • AmazonMP3 • eMusic • iTunes)

Magnolia Blossom, 1925  Magnolia Blossom is considered by many to be Imogen's most renowned photograph.  

Two Callas, about 1925 Two Callas is considered one of Imogen's most striking photographs, with its flowing form and intimate details. This image was originally displayed in Stuttgart, Germany by request of Edward Weston.  Imogen's botanical work expressed by these photos of Calla Lilies and Magnolias were pivotal works that helped define Imogen as one of America's eminent photographers. 

Palm Plants 2, 1925  This image is from an early study of Date Palm plants.  Investigating the photographic possibilities of strong graphic structures, Imogen wrote "for fun I have turned to the unseen spots of nature and curious forms of all things."

Martha Graham 8, 1931 Imogen met Martha Graham in 1931 at a dinner party in Santa Barbara, California.  Agreeing to a photo session, Imogen took photographs of Martha Graham in Southern California.  Brilliantly lit by the sun and set against the backdrop of a dark, open barn door, Imogen produced ninety Graflex negatives of Martha Graham in one afternoon.  This photo session resulted in the first of a series Imogen had printed in Vanity Fair in the December, 1931 issue.

Martha Graham 19, 1931 Triangles again are evident in this double exposure of Martha Graham, who was one of Imogen’s favorite subjects.

Hands and Aloe Plicatilis, 1960 Imogen created many double exposure shots throughout her career. Her venue crossed botany and human form and her focus almost always incorporated triangles.

Group f/64 was a group of seven 20th- century San Francisco photographers who shared a common photographic style characterized by sharp-focused and carefully framed images seen through a particularly Western (U.S.) viewpoint. In part, they formed in opposition to the Pictorialist photographic style that had dominated much of the early 20th century, but moreover they wanted to promote a new Modernist aesthetic that was based on precisely exposed images of natural forms and found objects. The name referred to the smallest aperture available in large- format view cameras at the time and it signaled the group's conviction that photographs should celebrate rather than disguise the medium's unrivaled capacity to present the world "as it is."

Irene Bobby Libarry, 1976 Gelatin-Silver Print