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HomeContents > People > Photographers > Humphrey Spender

Names:
Born: John Humphrey Spender 
Pen: Lensman 
Dates:  1910 - 2005
Born:  UK, London, Hampstead
Active:  UK
Gender:  Male
 
  
British photographer and painter who photographed for ‘Picture Post‘ using the nickname ‘Lensman‘. In the 1930s he was involved in the ‘Mass Observation‘ project and took photographs for the ‘Worktown‘ project an early sociological experiment on working class life in Great Britain. During the Second World War he was an Official War Photographer.

Preparing biographies

 
Portraits 
  
If you have a portrait of this photographer or know of the whereabouts of one we would be most grateful. 
  
alan@luminous-lint.com
 
  
Family history 
  
If you are related to this photographer and interested in tracking down your extended family we can place a note here for you to help. It is free and you would be amazed who gets in touch. 
  
alan@luminous-lint.com
 
  
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Internet biographies

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Wikipedia has a biography of this photographer.Show on this siteGo to website
Getty Research, Los Angeles, USA has an ULAN (Union List of Artists Names Online) entry for this photographer. This is useful for checking names and they frequently provide a brief biography. Go to website
 

Printed biographies

The following books are useful starting points to obtain brief biographies but they are not substitutes for the monographs on individual photographers.

 
• Evans, Martin Marix (Executive ed.) 1995 Contemporary Photographers [Third Edition] (St. James Press - An International Thomson Publishing Company) [Expensive reference work but highly informative.] 
  
 

Quotations

The wit and wisdom.

 
"As time passes, social—documentary photographs gain interest, whereas the ‘beautiful photograph‘ … progressively losses interest, becomes boring."
"I was not ‘one of the most important prewar documentary photographers‘ — there were plenty of other people doing it. I‘ve been called ‘the father of documentary photography.‘ It‘s been said that I ‘gave the ordinary man his place in history.‘ Absolute rubbish."
"The most valid and proper use of a camera is [as] a means of recording aspects of human behavior."
 
  
 
  
 
  
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