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Edith Tudor-Hart: Quiet Radicalism

03 Feb 2013 - 29 Apr 2013

in-gallery, Exhibition


 

Open:

10am – 5pm, Tue – Sun

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Austrian born Edith Tudor-Hart (1908 – 1973) was a photographer, Communist-sympathiser and spy for the Soviet Union, who used photography as a tool to communicate her political ideas. She studied photography at the Bauhaus and fled Vienna in 1933 to escape persecution for Communist activities and her Jewish background.

Tudor-Hart’s exhibition takes place in the Archive Gallery alongside Mishka Henner’s exhibition, and is culled from Open Eye Gallery’s extraordinary holding of Tudor-Hart’s images in its permanent Archive. The exhibition focuses on several key periods in Tudor-Hart’s practice: Aerial and street-view scenes document political upheaval in Vienna prior to Tudor-Hart’s departure for England; the industrial landscapes and working life of Rhondda Valley’s coal mining community in South Wales; and the care and education of disabled children at the Fountain Hospital in London.

The exhibition encapsulates the social and political concerns at the centre of Tudor-Hart’s practice, playing tribute to an incredible and almost forgotten photographer whose work warrants serious reflection.

Scottish National Galleries are currently presenting In The Shadow of Tyranny, a major exhibition highlighting the work of Edith Tudor-Hart, until 26 May 2013.

 

Open:

10am – 5pm, Tue – Sun

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