Paula Gately Tillman (born June 30, 1946)[1] is a photographer from Baltimore, Maryland best known for her 1980s and 1990s work documenting underground scenes and fringe personalities in New York and Atlanta.
In December 2018 Tillman released her first monograph, Fringe, New York and Atlanta, 1984 to 1997, that highlighted her photographic work from the 1980s and 1990s.[8] Her book also includes a short memoir. Five of the photographs from Fringe, New York and Atlanta, 1984 to 1997 were curated into A Look Back: 50 Years After Stonewall, July 12–August 11, 2019, at Fort Gansevoort, a gallery located in a renovated building (which was Nelson Sullivan's personal residence in the 1980s) in the Meatpacking District in New York City.[9]
From December 16, 2022 to January 21, 2023, Tillman exhibited a new body of work at the Creative Alliance in Baltimore, Maryland titled, New Generations: The Photography of Three Cities and Two Eras.[10] The work showcased her continued dedication to capturing creative influencers and the cultural landscape in which they exist, through digital color portraits of 20 contemporary Baltimore artists in their studios, ephemera and select film portraits from New York and Atlanta in the 80s and 90s.[11]
Personal life
Tillman is the widow of LeRoy E. Hoffberger,[12] attorney, art collector, author, and philanthropist.
Collections
Tillman's work is held in the following permanent collections: