Bertien van Manen
Gent, 1979
silver gelatin print
vintage print
printed in 1979
vintage print
printed in 1979
image: 17.5 x 25.5 cm
paper: 23.7 x 30.3 cm
frame: 36 x 43 cm
paper: 23.7 x 30.3 cm
frame: 36 x 43 cm
Copyright The Artist
Living at the premises of the factory. 'In 1975 Bertien van Manen embarked on a project of her own: photographing the living and working conditions of migrant women in the...
Living at the premises of the factory.
"In 1975 Bertien van Manen embarked on a project of her own: photographing the living and working conditions of migrant women in the Netherlands. it was her response to a recently published book devoted to male 'guest workers', titled 'A Seventh Mam', in which author John Berger and photographer Jean Mohr expressed the hope that somebody else would make a book about women. When Bertien thinks back on how complicated it was to photograph those women and to get permission form their husbands, she is convinced that a man would not have succeeded. There were advantages to being a woman, as it often turned out henceforth. " text by Hripsimé Visser from: 'Archive', Bertien van Manen, MACK, London, 2021
"In 1975 Bertien van Manen embarked on a project of her own: photographing the living and working conditions of migrant women in the Netherlands. it was her response to a recently published book devoted to male 'guest workers', titled 'A Seventh Mam', in which author John Berger and photographer Jean Mohr expressed the hope that somebody else would make a book about women. When Bertien thinks back on how complicated it was to photograph those women and to get permission form their husbands, she is convinced that a man would not have succeeded. There were advantages to being a woman, as it often turned out henceforth. " text by Hripsimé Visser from: 'Archive', Bertien van Manen, MACK, London, 2021