EDITH TUDOR-HART: Beyond the Spy
EDITH TUDOR-HART: Beyond the Spy

EDITH TUDOR-HART: Beyond the Spy

bauhaus faces


Gestern • 58 Min.

Generally known as “the spy with a camera,” this episode asks: What do we see when we stop looking for the spy and start looking at her photographs, collages, and publications? Edith Tudor-Hart has too often been seen through a story that is not primarily about her work, but about secrecy, politics, and the men around her. Several publications have linked her to the Cambridge Five, the group of British men who spied for the Soviet Union. It is a dramatic story. But it can easily overshadow everything else. Once we move past this stereotype, we see a remarkable photographer of social realities: poverty, housing, health, children’s welfare, women’s health, and the sharp inequalities of 1920s and 30s Austria and Britain. We see a Bauhaus student, a communist, a migrant, a mother, and an artist who understood photography as a tool of social critique and education.