Mary Ellen Mark (March 20, 1940 – May 25, 2015) was an American photographer known for her photojournalism, documentary photography, portraiture, and advertising photography. She photographed people who were "away from mainstream society and toward its more interesting, often troubled fringes".[1]
Mark was born and raised in Elkins Park, Pennsylvania.[3][4] and began photographing with a Box Brownie camera[5] at age nine. She attended Cheltenham High School,[4] where she was head cheerleader and exhibited a knack for painting and drawing.[3] She received a Bachelor of Fine Arts in painting and art history from the University of Pennsylvania in 1962.[5] After graduating, she worked briefly in the Philadelphia city planning department,[5] then returned for a master's degree in photojournalism at the Annenberg School for Communication at the University of Pennsylvania, which she received in 1964.[3] The following year, Mark received a Fulbright Scholarship to photograph in Turkey for a year,[3] from which she produced her first book, Passport (1974). While there, she traveled to photograph England, Germany, Greece, Italy, and Spain.[1]
In 1966[4] or 1967,[1] she moved to New York City, where over the next several years she photographed demonstrations in opposition to the Vietnam War, the women's liberation movement, transvestite culture, and Times Square, developing a sensibility, according to one writer, "away from mainstream society and toward its more interesting, often troubled fringes".[1] Her photography addressed social issues such as homelessness, loneliness, drug addiction, and prostitution. Children are a reoccurring subject throughout much of Mark's work.[6] She described her approach to her subjects: "I’ve always felt that children and teenagers are not "children," they’re small people. I look at them as little people and I either like them or I don’t like them. I also have an obsession with mental illness. And strange people who are outside the borders of society." Mark also said "I’d rather pull up things from another culture that are universal, that we can all relate to...There are prostitutes all over the world. I try to show their way of life."[7] and that "I feel an affinity for people who haven't had the best breaks in society. What I want to do more than anything is acknowledge their existence".[8] Mark was well known for establishing strong relationships with her subjects.[3] For Ward 81 (1979), she lived for six weeks with the patients in the women’s security ward of Oregon State Hospital, and for Falkland Road (1981), she spent three months befriending the prostitutes who worked on a single long street in Bombay.[3] Her project "Streets of the Lost" with writer Cheryl McCall, for Life,[9] produced her book Streetwise (1988) and was developed into the documentary film Streetwise,[2][7] directed by her husband Martin Bell and with a soundtrack by Tom Waits.
She published 21 books of photographs and contributed to publications that include Life, Rolling Stone, The New Yorker, New York Times, and Vanity Fair;.[3] Mark was transparent with the subjects of her photography about her intent to use what she saw in the world for her art, about which she has said "I just think it's important to be direct and honest with people about why you're photographing them and what you're doing. After all, you are taking some of their soul."[13]
Mark was a Documentary Competition Juror at the 2004 Sundance Film Festival.[14]
Mark and her husband Martin Bell worked on the documentary film Streetwise together. The film was based on Mark's photographic essay "Streets of the Lost" made on assignment for Life magazine with writer Cheryl McCall.
They also collaborated on other film projects in conjunction with Mark's photographic projects, including Twins, Prom, Indian Circus and Extraordinary Child.[18]
She was the associate producer and still photographer for the feature film American Heart (1992), starring Jeff Bridges and Edward Furlong, and directed by Martin Bell.[2] It depicts a gruff ex-convict who struggles to get his life back on track.[5]
Falkland Road: Prostitutes of Bombay: Photographs and Text. New York: Knopf, 1981. ISBN978-0-394-50987-7.
Photographs of Mother Teresa's Mission of Charity in Calcutta. Carmel, CA: Friends of Photography, 1985. ISBN978-0-933286-43-6. Introduction by David Featherston.
A Cry for Help: Stories of Homelessness and Hope. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1996. ISBN978-0-684-82593-9. Introduction by Andrew Cuomo, preface by Robert Coles, interviews reported by Victoria Kohn.
Mary Ellen Mark: American Odyssey. New York: Aperture, 1999. ISBN978-0-89381-880-7. Edited by Melissa Harris, afterword by Mark and with a poem each by Maya Angelou and La Shawndrea. Accompanied an exhibition by Philadelphia Museum of Art. "A broad survey of photographs taken across the United States from 1963–1999."[22]
Mary Ellen Mark 55. Phaidon 55 series. London: Phaidon, 2001. ISBN978-0-7148-4617-0. "A collection of both iconic and previously unpublished photographs."[22]
Mary Ellen Mark. Photo Poche series. Paris: Nathan, 2002. "Photographs taken between 1965 and 2001."[22]
Exposure: Mary Ellen Mark: The Iconic Photographs. London: Phaidon, 2005. Hardback, 2005. ISBN978-0-7148-4404-6. Paperback, 2006. ISBN978-0-7148-4626-2. A retrospective. Introductions by Weston Naef and Mark, extensive captions by Mark.
Undrabörn: Extraordinary Child. Reykjavík: National Museum of Iceland, 2007. ISBN978-9979-790-14-3. Foreword by Margaret Hallgrimsdottir, introduction by Mark, essay by Einar Falur Ingólfsson. Catalogue of an exhibition at the National Gallery of Photography, 8 September 2007 – 27 January 2008. Icelandic and English.
Uno sguardo dietro le quinte. Quarant'anni di fotografie sui set cinematografici. Phaidon, 2009. ISBN978-0-7148-5712-1.
Prom. Los Angeles: J. Paul Getty Museum, 2012. ISBN978-1-60606-108-4. "Images of high school students at their proms, photographed by Mary Ellen Mark at thirteen schools across the United States. The book includes a DVD of the film, also titled Prom, by filmmaker Martin Bell"[23]
Man and Beast: Photographs from Mexico and India. Austin: University of Texas, 2014. ISBN978-0-292-75611-3. With transcript of an interview with Mark by Melissa Harris.
Mary Ellen Mark on the Portrait and the Moment. The Photography Workshop Series. New York: Aperture, 2015. ISBN978-1-59711-316-8.