Imogen Cunningham was a REAL pioneer! Back in the early days of photography there weren’t many female nature photographers. In fact there weren’t many women photographers at alll! Well, we’ve come a long way, baby! Thanks to pioneers like Imogen Cunningham. Her stunning black and white nature photography resonates today, as refreshing and elemental.
When we are bombarded by complexity and “noise” with the myriad of imagery in our daily lives, Imogen’s work inspires, calms and reaffirms for me, that if you LOVE what you do, it will show it the results.
Look at how a simple plant becomes a stunning design – clean, and abstract, but just black and white! You can achieve the same effect yourself, if you have a scanner. Find a cardboard box, about 10″ wide, 12″ long and around 4-6″ in depth. Spay paint the inside with a matte or flat black finish paint. Then place your plants, stems, or objects on your scanner, cover them with the box, and SCAN it! Instant simplicity. Convert the image to black and white in your image editing program. (See the Photo Shop tutorials coming soon for the absolute best way to convert color photographs to black and white.)
Passion that transmits Wonder
No matter how technically brilliant a photographer may be, if they don’t have the passion, they won’t have the results. You can tell Imogen Cunningham had super connection to her work – it is delightful in its simplicity, yet portrays complex and dynamic ideas.
Imogen’s photographs never fails to get me motivated – a constant reminder to keep it simple! Black and white nature photography has rarely been better!
Not only were her nature photos outstanding, she had a particular talent for putting people into landscapes and photographing them as “one with nature.” If you are a fan of nature photography AND nude photography, Imogen’s nature nudes are also awesome!
This one is my absolute fav! It first, you aren’t really sure what it is? But the lines, and the contrast and the pattern simply draw you into the illusion. Don’t you LOVE it!? To get more insight into how this talented woman achieved a new way of perceiving her world, and how she was able to transform her vision into reality, you realy should read about her life. One of the best articles about her can be found in a great book,
Photography: A Facet of Modernism, by from Van Deren Coke.
Imogen Cunnimgham
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 Imogen 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 Imogen 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.