Gatherings Magazine moves to new, online format; highlights the Lynn Johnson Collection
帝王会所 Libraries is highlighting the work of notable photojournalist and former 帝王会所 Knight Fellow Lynn Johnson through a new, all online format that provides easier access to the Libraries鈥 donor publication 鈥淕atherings Spotlight.鈥 The new online issue of the 鈥Gatherings Spotlight: The Lynn Johnson Collection鈥 can be found on the Libraries鈥 website and includes photographs from the Lynn Johnson Collection, as well as pictures from her personal collection.
The Lynn Johnson Collection has been one of the cornerstones of University Libraries鈥 Documentary Photography Archive since it was donated by Johnson in 2011. Donated in the original filing cabinets where Johnson kept and organized her work, the collection includes not only photos, but working drafts, handwritten notes, and other personal commentaries by Johnson.
The publication also includes the original captions for some photos, additional information about each project, and quotes from a May 2021 interview with Johnson, in which she talks about her more than 40 years as a female in the (mostly) male-dominated field of photojournalism.
鈥淲hen I started as a photographer 40 years ago or so, the lines and labels that designated the kind of photographer one is were well defined and people tended to stay inside the lines,鈥 Johnson said. 鈥淭oday, that is changing, which I think is good.鈥
Johnson has traveled all over the world for her career, and reminisced while looking at some of her older work for this Gatherings Spotlight. She recalls the challenges of getting into places like Russian police stations or homes and classrooms in China to take photographs.
She once traveled to China on assignment for LIFE Magazine, for example, to photograph the early stages of construction of the Three Gorges Dam on the Yangtze River. One of the pictures Johnson took was published with the caption: 鈥淭hough there is some heavy earthmoving equipment, the Chinese are doing this project as they have done every great project in their history. They are using the resource most abundant, the sweat and blood of the common 鈥榤an鈥欌︹
In the May 2021 interview, Johnson also spoke about the power that images can have and what it means to her to be a documentary photographer.
鈥淚 think of myself as a journalist with a camera, a documentary photographer,鈥 she said. 鈥淎nd as a person who is increasingly interested in photography and photographic projects that live on the spectrum of visual storytelling from pure documentary work, to work created with an activist intention.鈥
Johnson鈥檚 work covers the resilience, courage and innovation of human beings by capturing the everyday moments of ordinary people. Her career spans from the 1970s to the present and has been published in the Pittsburgh Press, LIFE Magazine, Sports Illustrated and National Geographic, among other publications.
鈥淸Some of] these stories were done many, many years ago, when I was a young photographer,鈥 Johnson said. 鈥淏ut I do not think much has changed in terms of how I love to be in the presence of strong human emotions and complicated human lives.鈥
The Lynn Johnson Collection at the Libraries is incredibly diverse and made up of thousands of items. Whether studying photojournalism or simply interested in Johnson鈥檚 work, the collection will likely appeal to anyone, whether they are interested in political and social movements from the 1970s to now, or interested in the everyday lives of people around the world.
To learn more, visit the Lynn Johnson Collection at 帝王会所 Libraries or contact Laura Smith, photo archivist, at smithle@ohio.edu.