Helen Gee (1919–2004) was an American photography gallery owner, co-owner of the Limelight in New York City, New York from 1954 to 1961.[1][2] It was New York City's first important post-war photography gallery, pioneering sales of photographs as art.
In the late 1970s, Gee worked as a photography curator, lecturer and writer.
Life and work
Gee was born Helen Charlotte Wimmer on April 29, 1919[3] in Jersey City, New Jersey, to father Peter who had been trained as a church decorator before he migrated from Austro-Hungary. Gee's mother Marie (née Ludwig) died during her infancy, and her widower brought up Helen and her older siblings Ella and Henry alone. Rebelling against her father's new wife who had Nazi sympathies,[4] at fifteen she moved to New York City to finish high school and enrol in WPA art classes through which she met, and moved in with, established modernist painter, Yun Gee (1906-1963).[5][6] They married seven years later in 1942 and had a daughter, artist Li-lan in 1943,[7] and were subsequently divorced in 1947[1][6] after Yun Gee's incarceration due to his mental illness.[4] She later married Kevin Sullivan, but that ended in divorce.[1]
In the 1950s, she attended shows curated by Edward Steichen at the Museum of Modern Art, which inspired her interest in photography.[1] After finding work as a photo restorer in the late 1940s,[4] Gee taught herself specialist transparencyretouching for commercial and advertising photographers and was able to establish herself in a good apartment and to send Li-lan to private school.[1] Helen Gee bought a Rolleiflex at the suggestion of client Paul Radkai,[8] and enrolled in photography classes with Alexey Brodovitch, then Lisette Model and finally Sid Grossman.[4] With that experience she decided to open a gallery instead of becoming a photographer, and with her own finance she founded and managed the Limelight Gallery in 1954,[9] and in 1956 she traveled briefly to Spain and France with Li-lan after the two had won a television competition.[4][10]
Limelight Gallery 1954-61
In May 1954 Gee opened New York City's first important post-war photography gallery.[8] With initial assistance of her sister Ella and brother in-law,[citation needed] she took a ten-year lease at a very low $225 a month on a building on Seventh Avenue South and Barrow Street.[2] Limelight's 20 by 25 foot gallery space, its walls white and the floor black,[8] was supported by a coffee shop seating 150 patrons with revenue from the sale of food and drink in a dining separated from the gallery by a red partition.[10] With most prints selling for between $25 and $60 each (equivalent to $200-$500 in 2019), takings from the gallery sales rarely met expenses as photography was not considered a collectible art form until the 1970s.[11][12] Nevertheless, the group show Great Photographs sold nearly half of its 45 pictures on exhibition.[8] Gee took 25% commission, and sales up to the gallery's closure totalled about $5,000.[8] Limelight provided many of its exhibitors with their first show, or their first show in New York. The exhibitions attracted regular reviews from John "Jack" Deschin in the New York Times, and less often from "John Adam Knight" (Pierre de Rohan) in the New York Post, Mabel Scacheri of the New York World-Telegram and George Wright in The Village Voice.[4] The latter publication held the first three Obie Awards ceremonies in the café.[2]
Although the gallery closed in 1961 due to financial and union pressure,[4] it had pioneered sales of photographs as art, showing the works of prominent contemporary and historic photographers.[2][10]
Limelight exhibition chronology
In her gallery Helen Gee organised and presented these sixty-one exhibitions:[10]
1977 Helen Gee and the Limelight: A Pioneering Photography Gallery of the Fifties, Carlton Gallery, New York, February 12-March 8, 1977.[20]
2001 Helen Gee and the Limelight: The Birth of the Photography Gallery, 1954-1961 Stephen Daiter Gallery, Chicago.
2007 Limelight Gallery and Coffeehouse, 1954-61, Triple Candie Gallery, 500 West 148th Street, New York, New York, Feb 8 - March 18, 2007.[21]
Limelight: A Memoir
In 1997, Gee published her autobiography, itself titled Limelight: A Memoir,[4][2][22] reissued in 2016 by Aperture with an introduction by Denise Bethel (formerly Chair of Photographs and Americas, Sotheby's New York). Covering mostly her creation and running of Limelight Gallery, the book provides contemporary insights—and gossip—about the society of Greenwich Village of the period, into the lives and personalities of a number of important photographers including Lisette Model and Robert Frank, notes the effect of McCarthyism on artists' output,[23] and provides a balanced appraisal of Edward Steichen's The Family of Man which launched at the Museum of Modern Art the year following Limelight's opening, and increased attention to the medium.
Having committed all her own funds to the gallery and still in debt,[4] Gee sold and closed Limelight on January 31, 1961, after a show of the work of Julia Margaret Cameron. The new owners continued showing photographs for a short period and, failing to attract reviews, soon discontinued them and in turn sold up in less than a year.
Her marriage to Sullivan ended in divorce around this time,[10] but Gee continued to reside and work in Greenwich Village as an independent art agent and as a dealer for both United States and international clients in prints, sculpture, and paintings, and specialising in erotic Japanese Shunga prints.[10]
From May 3–31, 1969 she made a trip to Kyoto, Japan. In 1969 she sponsored a Vietnamese foster child, Nguyen Thi My Le through the Foster Parents Plan Inc., with whom she corresponded until 1972, the letters being translated by the organisation.[10] She again visited Japan in 1975 as a guest of Tokyo Shimbun, a newspaper that sponsored the Yasuo Kuniyoshi exhibit, and she returned in 1986. She also visited China during April 5–26, 1976 touring with the US-China People's Friendship Association.[10]
Limelight: a Greenwich Village Photography Gallery and Coffeehouse in the 1950s. New York: Aperture, 2016. ISBN9781597113687. With an introduction by Denise Bethel.
Gee, H. (1991). 'Limelight: Remembering Gene Smith'. In American Art, 5(4), 10–19.
Stourdzé, S., Gee, H., Coleman, A. D., & Levinstein, L. (2000). Leon Levinstein. Paris: Scheer.
^ abWarren, Lynne (2006), Encyclopedia of twentieth-century photography, Routledge, p. 589, ISBN978-1-57958-393-4
^Peres, Michael R (2013), Focal encyclopedia of photography : digital imaging, theory and applications, history, and science (4th. / Michael R. Peres, editor-in-chief ed.), Focal Press, ISBN978-1-136-10613-2
^Gross, Frederick (2012), Diane Arbus's 1960s : auguries of experience, University of Minnesota Press, ISBN978-0-8166-7011-6
^Bonanos, Christopher (2018), Flash : the making of Weegee the Famous (First ed.), Henry Holt and Company, p. 272, ISBN978-1-62779-306-3
^Porter, Eliot; Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York, N.Y.) (1979), Intimate landscapes : photographs, Metropolitan Museum of Art : Dutton, p. 132, ISBN978-0-87099-210-0
^Boubat, Bernard; Boubat, Edouard, 1923-; Anhoury, Geneviève (2004), Édouard Boubat : the monograph, Harry N. Abrams, ISBN978-0-8109-5610-0{{citation}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
^Shamis, Bob; Kozloff, Max; Levinstein, Leon, 1910-1988; National Gallery of Canada (1995), The moment of exposure : Leon Levinstein, National Gallery of Canada, p. 27, ISBN978-0-88884-640-2{{citation}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
^Gee, Helen; University of Arizona. Center for Creative Photography; International Center of Photography (1980), Photography of the fifties : an American perspective, Center for Creative Photography, University of Arizona, ISBN978-0-938262-07-7