Become a Member
Life

Elsbeth Juda: Portrait of a role model

The photojournalist legendary creativity belies her suffocating early life

April 23, 2009 10:25
EJ Cat 0025

ByMaureen Lipman, Maureen Lipman

5 min read

When Elsbeth Juda and I arrived in Skibbereen, Ireland, in 2004, for the 60th birthday party of a mutual friend, it was after a gruelling delayed flight, a reroute through Dublin, a wait for a second plane to Cork, and a car journey. Asked whether she would prefer to rest, she replied no, she would like to take a walk around the loch — which, at 7pm at night, to my horror, we did. At the time, Elsbeth was 93 years old.

Now in her 98th year, she is busy curating her first exhibition of photojournalism from the period 1946 to 1965, when she was working for The Ambassador, a trade magazine promoting the best of British textiles and fancy goods abroad. The works are being shown at L’Equipement des Arts, a gallery in London’s West End.

When we meet there, she is dressed as usual in the finest of linens, her short white hair framing the kind of soft, clear skin that would grace a woman half her age. Her dazzling photos are stacked against the walls and she takes me on a tour of an epoch, remembering not only every famous name, from Norman Parkinson to Graham Sutherland, but also their wives, the models and even the factory managers she captured in Bradford textile mills.

The pictures, meant to convey the superior nature of British products to a global market, are never victims of product placement, managing instead to convey wit as well as worth and a myriad of detail. But she is dismissive of the importance of her work — “It’s just a job lot” — and is quietly worrying that the frames are perhaps too prominent for the delicacy of the photos.