Overview
From a childhood spent in London’s rough East End to a half-century in New Zealand photographing winemakers and artists, children and kuia, Marti Friedlander has lived a life marked by adventure, travel, and its fair share of challenges. It is also a life that has been defined by the art of observation and capturing on film. In Self Portrait, the renowned photographer tells her story for the first time. As clear and unflinching in her prose as she is in her photography, Friedlander describes growing up in a London orphanage, being Jewish, working in a Kensington photography studio, marrying a New Zealander, the challenges of moving to a new country, and a life spent photographing the ordinary and the extraordinary, from balloons and beaches to politicians and protests. She also explains how, with a stranger’s eye, she captured the transformation of New Zealand life over the last half century. This is a rich meditation on one woman’s photographic journey through the 20th century.Author Biography
Marti Friedlander is one of the most acclaimed photographers in New Zealand. Her work has been featured in books such as Contemporary New Zealand Painters: Volume 1 A–M, Larks in Paradise: New Zealand Portraits, and Moko: The Art of Maori Tattooing. It has also been exhibited at the Photographer’s Gallery in London, the Waikato Art Museum in Hamilton, New Zealand, and the Auckland Art Gallery. She was made a Companion of the New Zealand Order of Merit in 1998.