LONDON (NYT NEWS SERVICE).- In 1968, Sue Davies was working as a secretary at the Institute of Contemporary Arts in the British capital when a colleague got sick, and she found herself left to finish off a photography show they had been working on.
The exhibition, held the following year and focused on images of women, was a hit. Visitors lined up down the block to get in, and Davies asked the institutes founders if they would consider showing more photography. The response, she said, was not what she had wanted: They had only commissioned the last show, they told her, because they were offered the pictures for free.
That made Davies lose her temper, she later told The British Journal of Photography. So she made a decision: If museums didnt want photography in their spaces, she would start her own.
Three years later, in January 1971, Davies opened the Photographers' Gallery in a former tearoom in the West End of London. It was the citys first exhibition space dedicated to photography; its aim, Davies wrote in her original proposal, was to gain recognition for photography as an art form in its own right.
Fifty years later, the Photographers Gallery has succeeded it is now housed in a grander, five-story building and is celebrating its half-century with a series of exhibitions, called Light Years: the Photographers Gallery at 50, through Feb. 1, 2022.
David Brittain, a former editor of Creative Camera magazine who curated the anniversary shows, said that the gallery had put up the scaffolding for photography to be considered seriously in Britain.
Martin Parr, a photographer known for his humorous images of British life, echoed the sentiment. Here was somewhere you could feel part of a community, he said of the gallery. It became a place of pilgrimage, almost.
Oliver Chanarin, a winner in 2013 of the gallerys annual Deutsche Börse prize, said that the greatest success of the Photographers Gallery was, in a way, to make itself redundant, noting that it had paved the way for many other dedicated exhibition spaces and museum shows to open around Britain. (Another pioneer, Impressions, opened in York in 1972.)
Davies, who died in 2020, is widely praised for her pioneering role, but the project could easily have ended in disaster. Sue had to remortgage her home and went without a salary for 18 months, Brett Rogers, the gallerys director since 2005, said in a telephone interview. (In 1973, Davies told The New York Times, We suffer from a chronic lack of money.)
But the exhibitions she organized soon found an audience willing to pay a small entry fee.
The gallerys initial focus was on reportage, displaying socially conscious photographs shot for newspapers and magazines. Among those were the striking images of the residents of the Black House, a London hostel for young Black people, taken by Colin Jones and featured in a 1977 show.
Yet soon Davies was branching out, hosting a retrospective of work by fashion photographer David Bailey, and another of images by Floris M. Neusüss, a German photographer who made life-size portraits of his subjects.
In the 1980s, the gallery showed work by Black photographers, including the group D-Max, as well as more photography by women. In the 90s and beyond, thematic exhibitions explored issues such as photographys role in the age of computers and its use in surveillance. There have also been shows featuring star artists such as Catherine Opie, Taryn Simon and Wim Wenders.
The gallerys variety sometimes proved too much for traditionalists. In 1978, it held a show, called Fragments, of photo collages by John Stezaker. The artist recalled in a recent telephone interview that his cut-and-paste approach had gone down badly. I can remember the chairman of the patrons writing a several-page diatribe against me in the visitors book, hinting very strongly that Sue would lose her funding if she kept promoting this rubbish, he said.
Stezaker didnt exhibit at the Photographers Gallery again until 2012, when he won the Deutsche Börse prize. Sue felt as vindicated as I did, Stezaker said.
In the 1980s, the gallery received complaints of a different kind for its show of photographs from The Face, a youth culture magazine. According to Brittain, some photographers felt that the images glorified consumerism, undermining photographys true mission: to expose social ills. It showed the fault lines emerging between generations, he said.
Occasionally, the controversies were more serious in nature. In 2010, the gallery held an exhibition by Sally Mann, an American photographer who shoots portraits of her children, naked, and who has been accused of producing child pornography. After hearing about the show, London police investigated but decided that the images were not obscene. We defend it as art, and we always will, Rogers said.
Two years later, the Photographers Gallery moved out of its original premises, near Leicester Square. With two exhibition spaces on either side of a West End theater, accessible to each other only via the street, the original setup was awkward, Rogers said: When it rained, visitors got stuck, she noted, and only one of the spaces had restrooms.
The gallerys current home, in a redeveloped warehouse near Oxford Street, will next year become the anchor for a local council initiative called the Soho Photography Quarter, intended to rebrand and develop the surrounding area.
So what role is there for the gallery today, when photography is so accepted and admired that part of London will be renamed after the art form?
Chanarin said that the gallery was needed more than ever. Photography had become a more complex and layered medium thanks to smartphones and social media, he noted. Photographs now watch us and the choices we make, as much as we look at them, he added, pointing out that apps like Instagram log every image a user likes. Spaces like the Photographers' Gallery are needed to explain the changing context of photography, he said.
Rogers agreed that the gallerys role was vital in a time when everybody thinks theyre a photographer. The challenge for the institution, she added, was to say, Well, yes, but what makes a memorable photograph of the kind that lasts centuries?
Despite all the changes, that sounded a lot like Davies mission when she started the gallery 50 years ago: to bring exciting photography to the public and to make them want to come back for more.
This article originally appeared in
The New York Times.