“A rare complete picture of Cunningham’s oeuvre.”
—Alex Greenberger, ARTnews
“This retrospective . . . remind[s] us what a beloved, tough, industrious, and supremely independent photographer and person Cunningham was.”
~Richard B. Woodward, Collector Daily
“The scholarly research that informs the text offers many surprises.”
~Peggy Roalf, DART: Design Arts Daily
“Few women chose to become photographers at the beginning of the 20th century, yet Cunningham’s images—from female nudes to Hollywood portraits—smoothed the way for countless female artists that followed.”
~The Guardian
“With “Imogen Cunningham: A Retrospective” (Getty, 245 pages, $50), editor Paul Martineau means to fix Cunningham’s place in the firmament of great 20th-century American photographers. For over 70 years, Cunningham (1883-1976) innovated and excelled in many photographic genres. Her portraits, a reviewer in 1913 said, are “a portrayal of the sitter’s personality, spirituality—soul, if you will—which gives the beholder a sense of actual presence.” While homebound taking care of her three young boys she photographed the plants in her garden, and what was said about her portraits also applies to her photographs of flora. She is one of the few to take successful nudes of both women and men. The book includes her intense “Martha Graham, Dancer” (1931), her celebrated “Magnolia Blossom” (1925) and the still startling nude “Triangles” (1928).”
~William Meyers, Wall Street Journal
“This standout offering impresses on every page.”
~Publishers Weekly
“These days, high modernism can sometimes look as distant as a faraway star, a place of heedless optimism and tranquil contemplation. For that very reason, though, the images can be tonic, lowering one’s blood pressure as they induce concentration of sight. Imogen Cunningham took up a camera at the dawn of the 20th century, when few women were working in the field, and made pictures for nearly seven decades. She took every sort of photo; portraits, street scenes and landscapes all figure brilliantly in her body of work. What she did best, though, was to convey the sensual impact of harmonious forms, finding these especially in nudes, both male and female, and in the vegetable kingdom. Imogen Cunningham: A Retrospective, by Paul Martineau, displays her ecstatic studies of flowers—lilies, tuberoses, magnolias—seen in extreme close-up as if they were worlds in themselves, and juxtaposes them with languorous sprawled bodies that become dunes and arroyos. She can turn her eye with similar entrancement to ceramics, textiles, the organically flowing wire sculptures of Ruth Asawa, and even industrial structures. She has never been granted anywhere near the attention accorded her counterpart and contemporary Edward Weston, but revision is clearly in order.”
~Luc Sante, The New York Times Book Review
“Imogen Cunningham’s name may not come immediately to mind when you think about the great American photographers, but a new book, the catalog for a planned but temporarily postponed exhibition at LA’s J. Paul Getty Museum, could make you think again. . . . Paul Martineau’s Imogen Cunningham: A Retrospective (Getty) makes it very clear that she belongs in the photo pantheon alongside her Bay Area colleagues Edward Weston and Dorothea Lange.”
~Di Vince Aletti, Vogue Italia
“Does proper justice to her powerful and varied works.”
~Claire Guillot, M, le magazine du Monde
~Christopher Knight, Los Angeles Times