|
Walter Benington: Pictorial
Portraits
9 December 2006 - 17 June 2007
Room 31 case display

Philip Alexius de Lázló
by Walter Benington, 1928
Margaret Morris
by Walter Benington,
1918
|
Display
| In
the Collection: Walter Benington | In
the Collection: Ramsey & Muspratt
Early career
Born in Stockton-on-Tees, Walter
Benington (1872-1936) began his photographic career by developing
prints in the family bathroom. In 1891 he became apprenticed
to a firm of glass-plate engravers in Shoe Lane in the shadow
of St Paul's Cathedral. This iconic building became the subject
of many of his important early photographic studies.
He first exhibited with the pictorialist
photography group 'The Linked Ring' in 1896. This Photo-Secession
movement, which operated in Britain between 1892 and 1910 included
artist-photographers such as F.H. Evans, F. Holland Day and Alvin
Langdon Coburn. They argued for 'truth' rather than for only
beauty in photographic art. In 1902 Benington was elected to
the Linked Ring and became known as the 'Housetopper', after
his photographs of the urban views of London's skyline.
Benington was also a leading
figure in the short-lived London Secession in 1911 and exhibited
at the Photographic Salon, the Royal Photographic Society and
the London Salon as well as contributing to international exhibitions.
1909 onwards: life as a portrait
photographer
In 1909, Walter Benington turned
to portraiture opening his first studio in Conduit Street, London.
One of Benington's most celebrated early portraits is of the
sculptor Henri Gaudier-Brzeska taken in 1914, and used in Ezra
Pound's monograph on the artist (1916).
Following the First World War,
Benington continued his portrait work as a freelance photographer
for the firm, Elliott & Fry (active 1864-1963).
In 1919 Benington began a project
to photograph leading 'Oxbridge' personalities. A selection were
published in 1927 as Oxford Men of Note and Cambridge
Men of Note. Included from these portfolios are photogravure
portraits of economist John Maynard Keynes and Director of the
Fiitzwilliam Museum in Cambridge, Sir Sydney Cockerell.
His famous photograph of Albert
Einstein was taken in June 1921, when Einstein came to London,
at the invitation of Lord Haldane, to deliver an important lecture
on his theories of Relativity. Einstein's visit captured the
public imagination and The Sphere (18 June 1921) reproduced
Benington's informal double portrait of Einstein and Haldane
as its front cover with an inset of Einstein taken at the same
sitting.
In 1929 Benington moved to Oxford
to develop studios there on behalf of Elliott & Fry. The
premises were later used by Lettice Ramsey and Helen Muspratt
who worked as Ramsey & Muspratt. Benington continued to contribute
photographs to the London Salon until a year before his death
in 1936.
|