- Alyson Hunter
Alyson Hunter (born 1948) is a
New Zealand photographer and print maker, resident inLondon , who, during the 1970s and 1980s, employed an unusual technique ofetching with a chemically modified photographic image. [http://www.museumoflondon.org.uk/English/Collections/OnlineResources/X20L/objects/record.htm?type=object&id=104090 "Photogravure using Kodak Photo Resist (KPR): For the glory of the Empire"] , Museum of London. Retrieved29 January 2008 .]Life
Alyson Hunter was born in New Zealand, where she studied at
Auckland University , then moving toLondon to study atChelsea College of Art and theRoyal College of Art . [http://www.alysonhunter.com/cv/short.cfm "Alyson Hunter: short CV"] , alysonhunter.com. Retrieved30 January 2008 .] With her husband, Hugh Stoneman, she was a director of Islington Studios and Islington Graphics Gallery. In the 1980s, she travelled and lectured on print making, with Adrian Frost, in America, Australia and New Zealand, where her daughter Amy Frost was born in 1981. She was Master Printer at the New York Printmaking Workshop, and, in 1981 and 1983, University of Davis, California, Visiting Professor. She lives with her daughter Amy, now a gallery manager, inNorth London .Work
In 1971 she started making prints with an unusual technique that combined etching and photography, whereby a printing plate is created from a photograph and the plate worked on to alter the contrast, making use of the K.P.R. (
Kodak Photo Resist) chemical: this is no longer available because of its toxicity. Her print, "For the Glory of the Empire", made using this process, juxtaposes two 19th century architectural features, theAlbert Memorial and theterraced house as contrasting features of the legacy of theBritish Empire . She made a set of four prints, using this technique, ofCamden Town ,London , and its residents; one of these uses the background ofCamden Lock behind a close-up of agypsy boy. [http://www.20thcenturylondon.org.uk/server.php?show=conObject.6198 "Gypsy Boy, Camden Lock - print; photogravure using Kodak Photo Resist (KPR)"] , Museum of London. Retrieved30 January 2008 .] These two works are in theMuseum of London . Three landscape etchings 1972–72, including ones of Kent Road andRomney Marsh , were acquired for the BritishGovernment Art Collection . [ [http://www.gac.culture.gov.uk/search/Artist.asp?maker_id=105951 "Government Art Collection"] ,Department for Culture, Media and Sport . Retrieved30 January 2008 .] She no longer used this photographic technique after 1987.In 1990, she moved away from printing into photography. Her portraits of photographers, Dan Farson and Harry Diamond, are in the collection of the
National Portrait Gallery . [ [http://www.npg.org.uk/live/search/person.asp?LinkID=mp19718&role=art "Alyson Hunter"] ,National Portrait Gallery . Retrieved30 January 2008 .]ee also
*
Alexis Hunter Notes and references
External links
* [http://www.alysonhunter.com Official web site]
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