Edith Tudor-Hart: In the Shadow of Tyranny

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Edith Tudor-Hart
In the Shadow of Tyranny

Edited by National Galleries of Scotland, Edinburgh, Duncan Forbes, Wien Museum, Wien, Texts by Duncan Forbes, Anton Holzer, Roberta McGrath, graphic design by Marc Naroska
English
2013. 152 pp., 120 ills. in duotone
24.80 x 28.50 cm

ISBN 978-3-7757-3567-4

Retrospective publication dealing with the works of one of the most important documentary photographers of the 1930s

Insights into the unusual life of an intrepid artist

The committed realism of working-class photography in the 1930s met the political developments of the time with an enlightening impetus. Among the first ranks of these socially motivated photographers, such as Paul Strand or Tina Modotti, was the Viennese photographer Edith Tudor-Hart (1908-1973), who had close ties to the communist party. The Jewish photographer took an introductory course at the Bauhaus in Dessau, and in 1933, she married an Englishman who supported the labor movement. The couple fled to Great Britain, where she became posthumously infamous for supplying recruits to the group of Soviet spies known as the Cambridge Five, until the ring was broken up in the 1960s.

For her sensitive black-and-white photographs Tudor-Hart used a medium-format camera, shooting pictures from the hip, which allowed her to communicate freely with her models while working. This volume features her unpretentious, documentary-style photographs on social themes, which were taken in Vienna, London, Wales, and Scotland.