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Made in Manchester, she photographed the world

Dorothy Bohm is famous for images taken in a huge variety of countries, in a huge variety of styles

April 22, 2010 11:30
Performers at the 1984 Venice Carnival

ByAmanda Hopkinson, Amanda Hopkinson

2 min read

Between her early photographic beginnings at the Studio Alexander in Manchester in the 1940s and her triumphant return to the city's Art Gallery this month, Dorothy Bohm has caught a world in her lens. She does not focus on the extremes of war and suffering, however, or succumb to the soothing calm of pictorial landscapes and cosy travel shots. Instead, her observed world lies in details of form, shape and light; in human relationships, both glancing and intimate, often of the kind most easily overlooked; and in the unobtrusively unexpected, something that may be just around any corner, there to engage an attentive eye.

Bohm's 60-year career as a photographer has been marked by its variation. In her earliest studio work, she dared to use colour and include smiles in her poses, contrasting with her "paintings in black-and-white", casual portraits taken outdoors, using natural light.

In the 1950s she conducted more dramatic experiments with natural and man-made environments, while in the '90s she used mannequins and models as a substitute for human beings and torn posters became "walls and windows".

Now, as her daughter, art historian Monica Bohm-Duchen, points out in her essay for the catalogue accompanying the Manchester Art Gallery exhibition, she is experimenting again, alternating photographs of youthful sitters with shots of angled abstractions on an architectural scale, and taking classical still lives, often arranged on window sills at her Hampstead home.