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Frank
Meadow Sutcliffe

Untitled
(Whitby Harbor ~ Jet Works), Carbon Print, c. 1885
Artist's
Biography (1853 - 1941)
Frank Meadow Sutcliffe was born in 1853 in Headingly,
Leads, England. He became active in photography
around 1870, and established a studio in the Yorkshire
coastal town of Whitby, where he was very successful
as a carte de visite and portrait photographer.
He wrote extensively about photography and from
1908 until about 1930 had a column in the Yorkshire
Weekly Post and contributed several other articles
to magazines and newspapers, including Amateur Photography.
Sutcliffe was a distinguished photographer of his
day and was a founding member of The Linked Ring,
as well as an Honorary Fellow of RPS. The first
photographer to have a one-man show held by the
Camera Club in 1888, his work was frequently exhibited
and widely respected, as is demonstrated by the
sixty-two medals he received throughout his lifetime.
Sutcliffe experimented with many varieties of prints
- albumen, silver, carbon and platinum - and in
his later years also did experimental photography
for Kodak, using their hand-held camera.
Although he was successful as a commercial photographer,
Sutcliffe is best known for his personal landscape
and genre prints, which he took in Whitby. He was
influenced by P. H. Emerson and early realist French
painters. Sutcliffe focused on the small-town inhabitants
of Whitby - the fisherman, farmers, their wives
and their children at work and at play. He is especially
recognized as being able to capture people in a
natural, unposed state despite the fact that the
slow technique of wet plates that he often used
made it difficult to do so. For further information
on Sutcliffe see Frank Meadow Sutcliffe, published
by Aperture with text by Michael Hiley.
For
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