Margaret Mitchell | |
---|---|
Born | 1968 (age 55–56) Stirling, Scotland |
Nationality | Scottish |
Education | Edinburgh Napier University Edinburgh College of Art |
Known for | Photography |
Awards | Sony World Photography Awards – 2nd place Professional Category, Contemporary Issues (2018) Royal Photographic Society IPE 160 – Gold Award Winner (2017) LensCulture Portrait Awards: Finalist Series (2017) |
Website | margaretmitchell |
Margaret Mitchell (born 1968) is a Scottish portrait and documentary photographer. [1] Her work has recurrent themes of childhood and youth, place and belonging. She works on short and long term personal projects [1] as well as editorially and on commissions. [2] [3] [4] [5] Her photography ranges from exploring communities, children and childhood as well as long-term documentation projects on issues of social inequality. Ideas around the paths that lives take have been explored in several series. [6] [7] [8] A book of her work, Passage, was published in 2021.
In 2018 Mitchell was awarded in the Sony World Photography Awards (2nd place Professional Category, Contemporary Issues) [9] [10] [11] with her long term series In This Place. In 2017 she was awarded Gold [12] in the Royal Photographic Society International Photography Exhibition IPE 160 for a series of environmental portraits from In This Place. Her work is held in the collection of the National Galleries of Scotland. [1] [13] Mitchell has exhibited at the Scottish National Portrait Gallery as part of When We Were Young | Photographs of Childhood [14] from the National Galleries of Scotland. She has also shown work in the Taylor Wessing Exhibition at the National Portrait Gallery.
Mitchell graduated from Edinburgh Napier University with a degree in Photography, Film and Television in 1994 [15] and has a Masters in Photography from Edinburgh College of Art (2000).
In 1994, Mitchell made the documentary work 'Family'. The series concentrated on the lives of Mitchell's sister and her children in the Raploch area in the town of Stirling, Scotland, an area which scores highly in the Scottish Index of Multiple Deprivation. [16] [13] Mitchell states that photography as social commentary is what drew her into being a photographer and how her work 'Family' was 'rooted in the stigmatisation of certain strands of society' [13]
In her early career, she also worked in areas of disability and representation, working within participatory arts practice and as a photography lecturer for over 10 years. [17] Her projects on childhood often contain a psychological aspect and she is quoted as saying she is "pulled by the personal, the experiential in people's lives and that often includes issues-based work". [18] Early portrait series include 'Tiree Schoolchildren', [19] 'Into The Village' [20] and later 'The Eastern Wood'. [7]
Mitchell’s series 'In This Place' (2015-17) updates the lives of the people in 'Family' (1994) in a story of social inequality alongside the importance of family ties and the experience of loss. The work documents the family's relationships against the backdrop of urban displacement and inequality that passes from generation to generation. This large documentary asks the viewer to consider how society operates and to see that choices are not equal for all people across the economic spectrum. It offers a broader commentary on social and domestic environment, opportunity and social inequality within Scotland and the UK. This work has been widely exhibited within awards, festivals and galleries. [1] [10] [12] [21] [22] [23] [24]
Other projects include The Guisers [25] [26] [27] which looks at the psychological and cultural aspects of children at Halloween in Scotland. This documentation of a centuries old tradition in Scotland explores the often complex reasoning behind the children's choices in Halloween costumes. [28]
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