Alice Austen was introduced to photography
when she was 10 years old by her Uncle Oswald, who brought
home an early-model dry plate camera from one of his many
trips abroad. Alice showed immediate and natural ability.
Through experimentation she taught herself how to operate
the complex camera mechanism, judge exposure, develop the
heavy glass plates, and make prints. By the time she was
18 in 1884, she was not only technically skilled but artistically
accomplished as well.
Alice was active, social, and well traveled.
Everywhere she went, she took her camera equipment, which
sometimes weighed as much as fifty pounds and often filled
a steamer trunk. As a result of her desire to photograph
so much of her life and the world around her, her range
of subjects was extensive. In her lifetime, she created
images on approximately 8,000 glass plates, of which more
than 3,000 survive.
Alice remained an amateur photographer at
heart, though she sold some of her work. She took pictures
for the love of it-and so she had more freedom to express
herself than professional Victorian women photographers.
Her straightforward style anticipated documentary photography.
At the same time, she used composition, pose, costuming,
and satire to convey her point of view.
Alice Austen's work is significant because
of its high quality, its range, and its level of expression
that together form a beautiful visual window on 19th century
America.