Suzanne and Alan popped along to Dimbola last week for the preview of two new exhibitions. Ed
Having been stored in a Winchester farmhouse for forty years, the photographic archive of Austrian born, Lotte Meitner-Graf (1899-1973), can be seen for the first time for many years at Dimbola Museum and Galleries, Freshwater.
Although Lotte was unconventional and uncompromising, she never courted publicity, neither did she seek to gain from her art commercially.
Lotte set up her photography studio in Vienna initially before relocating to London in the 1930s. In 2014 work began to catalogue some of the 3,000+ examples of her work.
A treasure trove of celebrities of the day
This exhibition of black and white portraits is a treasure trove of celebrities of the day. Seen rarely by the public, some of the photographs featured in a low key show at the private Garrick Club some years ago.
Two of the subjects, actor John Laurie and musician Yehudi Menuhin were actually members of the Garrick Club. This exhibition was co-ordinated by photographer Tony Barrett with valuable input by Dimbola curator, Dr Rachel Tait and Dimbola warden, John Walker, with Lotte’s photographs being compare to those taken by Julia Margaret Cameron.
The Victorian Photographer
Also being shown at Dimbola at this time is an exhibition, based on his two Grandfathers, from Manchester based John Brewer, who calls himself the Victorian Photographer.
Utilising the 19th century technique known as wetplate collodion he has featured the skills and interests that made the two men who they were.
‘In Search of Lost Time’
Called ‘In Search of Lost Time’ each image represents a moment in time of his paternal grandfather, Joseph Brewer (1917-1995) and his maternal grandfather, Cecil William Thomas Arnett (1897-1977).
Joseph played football, later becoming a referee as well as being a keen indoors bowls player, fisherman and carpenter. Cecil was a fuchsia grower, woodworker, carpet layer, a cinematographer and amateur photographer as well as being a Freemason.
Dimbola Museum and Galleries is open 7 days a week 10am-5pm. The exhibitions run until Sunday 10th July 2016.