Maxine Walker

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Maxine Walker (born 1962) is a British-Jamaican photographer and critic. Based in

racial stereotypes".[2]

Life

Maxine Walker was born in 1962 in Birmingham.[3]

Walker's 1987 series Auntie Lindie's House challenged the unmediated nature of documentary photography, replicating photographic conventions within a fictional context. Black Beauty, a 1980s series, and Untitled, a series for the 1995 Self Evident exhibition, both consisted of self-portraits.[2] Untitled contained a sequence of ten closely-cropped black and white photographs, in which Walker appeared to peel away successive layers of her surface skin.[4]

Walker has written various reviews and texts for art magazines and exhibition-related publication.

Camden Arts Centre, she co-edited and contributed to a short-lived journal of the same name. In 1999 she published a short artist's book in the series published by Autograph.[6]

Works

Exhibitions

Writing

References

  1. ^ Rianna Jade Parker (19 August 2019). "How British-Jamaican Photographer Maxine Walker Disrupted the Idea of an Approved Womanhood". frieze. Retrieved 15 February 2022.
  2. ^ a b "Staying Power: Photographs of Black British Experience". Victoria and Albert Museum. Retrieved 15 February 2022.
  3. .
  4. ^ a b "Maxine Walker: Untitled". Autograph. 2019.
  5. .
  6. .
  7. ^ "Intimate Distance: Five Female Artists". Retrieved 15 February 2022.
  8. ^ Martina Attille (November–December 1995). "Scared of you: Martina Attille on Self Evident". Women's Art Magazine. 67.
  9. ^ "Maxine Walker: Untitled". What's On: Birmingham. 25 February 2020. Retrieved 15 February 2022.

Further reading

  • Joy Gregory (1987). "Fantasy: Joy Gregory Speaking to Maxine Walker". Polareyes. 1: 18–19.
  • "Portfolio: Maxine Walker". Creative Camera. 8/9: 42–43. 1987.
  • Gilane Tawadros (Spring 1992). "Redrawing the Boundaries: the Documentary work of David Lewis and Maxine Walker". Ten.8. 2 (3): 86–92.

External links