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I’ll never retire, I prefer to be taking pictures

February 15, 2016 10:55
Vivid: Bohm’s work, New Mexico, 1970s.

ByNaomi Firsht, Naomi Firsht

7 min read

Dorothy Bohm has a fascination with light. And looking into her sharp, light blue eyes you get the impression that she sees things as clearly at the age of 91 as she ever did. So it comes as no surprise to learn that this much-exhibited photographer is still taking photos and has just published another book of her work, About Women.

I meet Bohm in her Hampstead home where we sit surrounded by beautiful things - objets d'art and walls covered in artwork, some of it her own - framed photographs from a career that spans seven decades. While rummaging through old photos she points to two paintings hanging in the bedroom that hold particular significance for her. They are both still lifes of flowers painted by her father, who discovered a creative streak when he arrived in Britain after Bohm and her late husband rescued her parents from a post-war life of poverty in Riga.

Bohm herself arrived in Britain aged 14 after her father managed to get her a visa allowing her to escape Nazi-ruled Memel (now known as Klaipeda), Lithuania, in 1939. Born in Konigsberg, East Prussia (now Kaliningrad, Russia) in 1924, Bohm and her family had moved to Lithuania in 1932 as the Nazis' power increased.

"I arrived on the eve of my 15th birthday. A traumatic experience because I had watched what Nazis were doing and the whole family was under great threat. After all these years it is still traumatic for me to remember those days," says Bohm in a voice still softly accented. She is keen to tell me her story and that of her family, which is an incredible one, and she tells it with impressive lucidity. Although she admits certain memories have been blocked from her mind. "They have been pushed away," she says, gesturing with her hand.