A Pioneering Photojournalist
Frances Benjamin Johnston (1864-1952)
[Theodore] Roosevelt Children
at Roll Call Inspection at White House
(Archie, left and Quentin, right), ca. 1901
Gelatin silver print
Prints & Photographs
Division
Gift/purchase from the Frances Benjamin Johnston estate, 1953 (46B.5)
Frances Benjamin Johnston (1864-1952)
Mechanical Drawing, Hampton Institute,
1899
Gelatin silver print
Prints & Photographs
Division
Gift/purchase from the Frances Benjamin Johnston estate, 1953
(46.6)
Frances Benjamin Johnston
Students working in print shop,
Tuskegee Institute, Ala.,
ca. 1902.
LC-USZ62-24346
Frances Benjamin Johnston
Tuskegee History Class
ca. 1902
LC-USZ62-64712
Photographic prints
Prints & Photographs
Division
(46.7, 46B.6)
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A talented artist and self-promoter of the first order, Frances
Benjamin Johnston made a place for herself and paved the way for
other women in the emerging field of photojournalism when she
began making portraits and photographs for magazines and newspapers
in 1889. She exhibited with the leading Pictorialist art photographers
between 1898 and 1901 but returned to magazine and news work until
about 1910, when then she turned to garden and architectural photography.
Using her parents' social connections and her own talent and
initiative, Johnston earned the title "The American Court Photographer"
by photographing the administrations of Presidents Harrison, Cleveland,
McKinley, Roosevelt, and Taft between 1889 and 1913. President
Theodore Roosevelt's children Quentin and Archie provided some
of her most appealing photo opportunities.
Photographs of The Hampton Institute for display in Paris at
the World's Exposition in 1900 form one of Johnston's most famous
photojournalism assignments. Forty of the 150 photographs she
produced in December 1899 appeared in the April 1900 issue of
The American Monthly, timed to coincide with the
opening of the Fair. "Mechanical Drawing" is one of the 150 images
that emphasize the importance of progressive education and vocational
training at the school.
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