Doris Ulmann
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Doris Ulmann (May 29, 1882-August
28, 1934) was an American photographer, best known for her portraits of
the people of Appalachia made between 1928 and 1934.
Ulmann was a native of New York City, the daughter of Bernhard and
Gertrude (Mass) Ulmann. Educated in public school--at the Ethical Culture
Fieldston School, a socially liberal organization that championed
individual worth regardless of ethnic background or economic
condition--and Columbia University, she intended to become a teacher of
psychology. Her interest in photography was at first a hobby, but after
1918 she devoted herself to the art professionally. She was a member of
the Pictorial Photographers of America. Ulmann documented the rural people
of the South, particularly the mountain peoples of Appalachia and the
Gullahs of the Sea Islands, with a profound respect for her sitters and an
ethnographer's eye for culture. Ulmann was trained as a pictorialist and
graduated from the Clarence H. White School of Modern Photography. Other
students of the school who went on to become notable photographers include
Margaret Bourke-White, Anne Brigman, Dorothea Lange, Paul Outerbridge, and
Karl Struss. Her work was exhibited in various New York galleries, and
published in Theatre Arts Monthly, Mentor, Scribner's Magazine, and Survey
Graphic. Ulmann was married for a time to Dr. Charles H. Jaeger, a fellow
Pictorialist photographer and an orthopedic surgeon on the staff of
Columbia University Medical School and a likely connection for her 1920
Hoeber publication, The faculty of the College of Physicians & Surgeons,
Columbia University in the City of New York: twenty-four portraits This
was followed in 1922 by the publication of her Book of Portraits of the
Medical Faculty of the Johns Hopkins University; the 1925 A Portrait
Gallery of American Editors, and in 1933, Roll, Jordan Roll, the text by
Julia Peterkin. The fine art edition of Roll, Jordan Roll is considered to
be one of the most beautiful books ever produced.
In an interview with Dale Warren of Bookman, Doris Ulmann referred to her
particular interest in portraits. "The faces of men and women in the
street are probably as interesting as literary faces, but my particular
human angle leads me to men and women who write. I am not interested
exclusively in literary faces, because I have been more deeply moved by
some of my mountaineers than by any literary person. A face that has the
marks of having lived intensely, that expresses some phase of life, some
dominant quality or intellectual power, constitutes for me an interesting
face. For this reason the face of an older person, perhaps not beautiful
in the strictest sense, is usually more appealing than the face of a
younger person who has scarcely been touched by life."
Ulmann's early work includes a series of portraits of prominent
intellectuals, artists and writers: William Butler Yeats, John Dewey, Max
Eastman, Sinclair Lewis, Lewis Mumford, Joseph Wood Krutch, Martha Graham,
Anna Pavlova, Paul Robeson, and Lillian Gish. In 1932 Ulmann began her
most important series, assembling documentation of Appalachian folk arts
and crafts for Allen Eaton's landmark 1937 book, Handicrafts of the
Southern Highlands. From 1927, Ulmann was assisted on her rural travels by
John Jacob Niles, a musician and folklorist who collected ballads while
Ulmann photographed. In failing health, she suffered a collapse in August
of 1934 while working near Ashville, North Carolina and returned to New
York. Doris Ulmann died August 28, 1934.
Upon Ulmann's death, a foundation she had established took custody of her
images. Allen Eaton, John Jacob Niles, Olive Dame Campbell (of the John C.
Campbell Folk School in Brasstown, North Carolina), Ulmann's
brother-in-law Henry L. Necarsulmer, and Berea schoolteacher Helen Dingman
were named trustees. Samuel H. Lifshey, a New York commercial
photographer, developed the negatives Ulmann had exposed during her final
trip, and then made proof prints from the vast archive of more than 10,000
glass plate negatives. (Lifshey also developed the 2,000 exposed negatives
from Ulmann's last expedition, and produced the prints for Eaton's book.)
The proof prints were mounted into albums, which were annotated by John
Jacob Niles and Allen Eaton, chair of the foundation and another noted
folklorist, to indicate names of the sitters and dates of capture.
The primary repository of Ulmann's work is at the University of Oregon
Libraries' Special Collections. The Doris Ulmann collection, PH038,
includes 2,739 silver gelatin glass plate negatives, 304 original matted
prints, and 79 albums (containing over 10,000 Lifshey proof prints)
assembled by the Doris Ulmann Foundation between 1934 and 1937. The silver
gelatin glass plate negatives are the only known remaining Ulmann
negatives. Of the 304 matted photographs, approximately half are platinum
prints that were mounted and signed by Ulmann; the others are silver
gelatin prints developed by Lifshey. Additional collections can be found
at Berea College in Kentucky (primarily images taken in the vicinity of
Berea) and the New York Historical Society (primarily of prominent New
Yorkers). As art objects, her photographs are also part of many museum
collections including the Smithsonian and the J. Paul Getty Museum. Doris
Ulmann was an extremely private person and left no documentation other
than her images.