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Jo Spence: Fairytales and Photography: Curated by the Jo Spence Memorial Library Archive (Birkbeck, University of London) and the Centre for British Photography

Past Exhibitions exhibition
26 January - 28 May 2023
Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: Jo Spence, Photo therapy: Double Shift / Double Crossed / Double Bind, 1984

Jo Spence

Photo therapy: Double Shift / Double Crossed / Double Bind, 1984
Four colour photographs mounted by the artist onto black cardboard.
40 x 30 cms 15 11/16 x 11 12/16 ins
12106
View on a Wall

Provenance

Jo Spence Memorial Archive
Richard Saltoun Gallery, London

Literature

Ribalta, George and Terry Dennett. Beyond the Perfect Image. Photography, Subjectivity, Antagonism.
Exhibition catalogue. Barcelona: MACBA, 2005, lower left image illus. p.351
Jo Spence, Putting myself in the picture: A political, personal, and photographic autobiography, 1986, p.149 (lower left image).

Exhibitions

Jo Spence: Work (Part 2), Studio Voltaire. London, 12 June - 11 August 2012.
Jo Spence : from Fairy Tales to Phototherapy. Photographs from the Hyman Collection, Arnolfini Bristol, (18th May 2020 - 20th June 2021) (this print)
1984 or 1985 Collaboration with Rosy Martin. Four colour photographs mounted by the artist on cardboard. Each photograph: 18.1 x 12.6 cms Total dimensions: 40 x 30 cms Rosy Martin...
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1984 or 1985

Collaboration with Rosy Martin.

Four colour photographs mounted by the artist on cardboard.

Each photograph: 18.1 x 12.6 cms
Total dimensions: 40 x 30 cms

Rosy Martin recalls that "Double Shift / Double Crossed / Double Bind is the preferred title for the whole phototherapy series which traced Jo's mother's life as a factory worker - then removing the evidence of her work (with swarfegan) - then being the mother who feeds her family (wearing an apron, cutting a loaf). See the Arena programme - we re-staged this for TV."

Writing on this photo therapy session Spence has explained: "In a photo therapy session with Rosy, I go back to a period in family history where I felt I had been abandoned. I try to imagine my mother, in playful mood, as a war-worker. What came to mind in the session is that at work she could enjoy the forbidden fag (my father banned her from smoking). I am surprised by the knowledge generated by this session, especially in relation to family health." (Jo Spence, Putting myself in the picture: A political, personal, and photographic autobiography, 1986, p.149)

We are grateful to Rosy Martin for her assistance in cataloguing this work.
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