Born in New
York and living in Paris since 1971, Jane
Evelyn Atwood is one
of the world’s leading photojournalists. In 1976, Atwood bought her
first camera and began taking pictures of a group of street
prostitutes in Paris. It was partly on the strength of these
photographs that Atwood received the first W. Eugene Smith Award, in
1980, for another story she had just started work on: blind children.
Prior to this, she had never published a photo.
In the ensuing
years, Atwood has pursued a number of carefully chosen projects-among
them an 18-month reportage of one regiment of the Foreign Legion,
following the soldiers to Beirut and Chad; a four-and-a-half-month
story on the first person with AIDS in France to allow himself to be
photographed for publication in the press (Atwood stayed with him
until his death); and a four-year study of landmine victims that took
her to Cambodia, Angola, Kosovo, Mozambique and Afghanistan-always
with the same personal and passionate approach.
Jane Evelyn
Atwood’s work reflects a deep involvement with her subjects over
long periods of time. Fascinated by people and by the idea of
exclusion, she has managed to penetrate worlds that most of us do not
know, or choose to ignore. She limits her stories to those which
truly compel her, devoting to each subject the time necessary-in some
cases, years-to explore it in depth. In 1989 she started to
photograph incarcerated women, eventually managing to gain access to
some of the world's worst penitentiaries and jails, including death
row. This monumental ten-year undertaking- encompassing forty prisons
in nine countries of Europe and Eastern Europe, and the United
States-remains the definitive photographic work on women in prison to
date. It was published as a book in both English and French in 2000
and continues to be exhibited internationally.
Atwood’s
particularity as a photographer lies in her in-depth approach, but
she has also covered such news events as the Kobe earthquake of 1995,
the World Trade Center attacks on September 11, 2001, and the
Democratic National Convention in 2004.
Jane Evelyn
Atwood describes her method of work as "obsessive". She
does not move on to a new subject until she feels she has completely
understood the one at hand and her own relation to it, and until she
believes that her pictures reflect this understanding.
Atwood is the
author of six books. In addition, her work has been included in
numerous group projects ranging from books in the A Day In The
Life series to Robert Delpire's Pauvres de Nous
(PhotoPoche Société, Actes Sud), and has been exhibited worldwide
in solo exhibitions as well as group shows. She has published in, and
worked for, LIFE Magazine, The New York Times Magazine, Stern,
Géo, Paris Match, The Independent, Telegraph, Libération, VSD,
Marie-Claire and Elle, among others. In addition, she has
worked on assignment for institutions, government ministries and
international humanitarian organizations, including Doctors
Without Borders, Handicap International and Action Against
Hunger.
The work of
Jane Evelyn Atwood appears in public and private collections and has
received many honors since the W. Eugene Smith Award in 1980. Among
these are the Paris Match Grand Prix du Photojournalisme (1990),
Leica's Oskar Barnack Award (1997), and an Alfred Eisenstaedt Award
(1998). Most recently, in 2005, Atwood received the Charles Flint
Kellogg Award in Arts and Letters from Bard College, thus joining a
company of such previous laureates as Edward Saïd, Isaac Bashevis
Singer and E.L. Doctorow.
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