Contact

info@photographywest.com

Imogen Cunningham

Imogen Cunningham

1883 - 1976

In the last years of her life, Imogen Cunningham occupied the role of grande dame of American photography. She began photographing in 1901, some sixty-two years after the invent...

Imogen Cunningham

Biography

In the last years of her life, Imogen Cunningham occupied the role of grande dame of American photography. She began photographing in 1901, some sixty-two years after the invention of the medium, and continued to make and take photographs until shortly before her death in 1976. Her career was one of the longest in the history of photography.

Cunningham learned the platinum process while working for Edward S. Curtis in Seattle from 1907-1909. After studying in Germany, she opened a portrait studio in Seattle in 1910. Her early photographs were soft-focus and romantic, showering her friends, often nude, in allegorical tableaux. She was possibly the first woman to exhibit photographs of the male nude. With her husband, the etcher Roi Partridge, she moved to San Francisco in 1917. Her friendship and shared photographic concerns with Edward Weston, Ansel Adams, Willard Van Dyke and other Bay Area photographers, resulted in her becoming a founding member of Group f/64, formed in 1932 to champion “straight” photography.

While raising her three sons, between 1922-1929, Cunningham turned her camera close to home and created a series of plant studies that would become some of her most classic and famous photographs. Since she felt that her feminist vision separated her at a time when most photographers were male, Cunningham began formalizing her photographs through abstraction and tight cropping, demonstrating her understanding of modernism while simultaneously introducing a delicate eroticism to her imagery. After her divorce in 1934, she supported herself through portrait photography, commercial assignments and teaching.

Cunningham’s work was frequently irreverent, always perceptive, and often years ahead of its time. As Margery Mann noted, she had “that rarest of all qualities among photographers, a sense of humor” (Imogen Cunningham: Photographs, University of Washington Press, 1970). In her last years, Cunningham became something of a celebrity in San Francisco – a familiar figure, with her black cape and camera.

Cunningham was often sought out by young photographers, who asked for advice and theory. “There’s too much philosophizing about photography already these days,” she would say, shrugging her shoulders. “People will just have to look at my stuff and make up their own minds” (quoted in Imogen Cunningham: Photographs, University of Washington Press, 1970).

Imogen Cunningham’s photographs are included in countless museums and institutions in the United States and abroad.

Original Photographs

Your Collection

Wall is empty.