Mary Olive Edis, later Edis-Galsworthy (3 September 1876 – 28 December 1955), was a British photographer and successful businesswoman who, throughout her career, owned several studios in London and Norfolk.
Known primarily for her studio portrait photography, Edis's sitters ranged from royalty to politicians, to influential women, and Norfolk fisherfolk. Edis was one of the first women to adopt the autochrome process professionally and became Britain's first official female war photographer in 1919.
Caroline "Carrie" Murray, daughter to Surgeon General John Murray, a well-known photographer in India, gave Edis her first camera and became the subject of Edis's first attempt at a photographic portrait in 1900. By 1905, Edis and her sister Katharine had opened a professional studio on Church Street, in Sheringham, North Norfolk. Katharine left the studio in 1907 when she married local doctor Robert Legat. Edis, however, continued to build the businesses and divided her time between studios in Sheringham and Notting Hill, London. Meanwhile, Katharine pursued her photography privately and continued to show considerable skill in both black and white and autochrome photography.
Edis married Edwin Galsworthy, a solicitor and director of Barclays, in 1928 at the age of 52, and became stepmother to his two adult children Margaret Eleanor and Gerald.
Edis took her first autochrome portrait in 1912 and became known for her colour photography. Edis patented her own Slide viewer, a device for viewing autochromes which allowed them to be backlit. Edis won a medal with her autochrome Portrait Study at the Royal Photographic Society's 1913 exhibition, and became a fellow of the Society the next year.
Edis was appointed an official war artist and photographed British Women's Services and the battlefields of France and Flanders between 1918 and 1919 for the Imperial War Museum. In 1920 she was commissioned to create advertising photographs for the Canadian Pacific Railway and her autochromes of this trip to Canada are believed to be some of the earliest colour photographs of that country.
Throughout her career Edis photographed many influential figures of early 20th century society. Notable examples include authors Thomas Hardy (1914) and George Bernard Shaw (1936); prime ministers H. H. Asquith (1917–18) and David Lloyd George (1917) and the future George VI (c.1920s). Edis photographed many prominent women at a time of great change for the role of women in British society including Elizabeth Garrett Anderson (1909), Nancy Astor (1920) and Emmeline Pankhurst (1920). As well as famous sitters, Edis produced many portraits of local working fisherman their families at her studios in North Norfolk. Working in fashionable seaside towns of Sheringham and Cromer, these fishermen became minor local celebrities in their own right.
Following her husband's death in 1948, Edis presented some of her portraits to the National Portrait Gallery, and many of her war photographs remain in the collection of the Imperial War Museum. In 2008 Cromer Museum acquired a collection of over 2,000 images which had been left by Edis to her assistant, Cyril Nunn, and now holds the largest collection of her work in the world. The first, solo, retrospective exhibition of her work was held at Norwich Castle Museum and Art Gallery in 2016–17.
==Gallery==
|
|