Photographing Baltimore's Working Class
Baltimore's A. Aubrey Bodine cast a romantic light on the city's dockworkers in painterly photographs
- By Abigail Tucker
- Smithsonian magazine, April 2010, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
Health problems, including diabetes and hypertension, shadowed Bodine’s later years, but he was undeterred. During one hospital stay, Williams writes, a night watchman discovered him on the roof in his bathrobe, shooting Baltimore’s moonlit skyline. During another, Bodine was found in the lobby, where some of his photographs were displayed. He set about autographing each one until a nurse telephoned the psychiatric ward. “I think one of your patients is down here,” she said, “pretending he’s Aubrey Bodine.”
On the last day of his life he went out to photograph a church spire, another favorite subject, but returned to the office empty-handed, telling editors that the light had “conked out” on him. He then retreated to the darkroom, where he collapsed. He died of a massive stroke.
Jennifer—who named her only child, a girl, Bodine—now spends her time cataloging her father’s endless prints: the record of where he was all those years.
Abigail Tucker is the magazine’s staff writer.
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Comments (2)
The Baltimore Sun has begun auctioning off their extensive collection of original prints made by Aubrey Bodine, and kept in the archive during his 50 year career at the Sun on eBay. A large majority of the prints are oversized and many of them, true to Bodine's perfectionist nature relentless attention to detail, have hand written notes on the back by Bodine directing the production department on the reproduction of his photos in the Sun.
Posted by Eric Amundson on August 4,2011 | 12:23 PM
Your article on photographer A. Aubrey Bodine began with the statement that he "captured the dignity of work in painterly tones." It failed to mention, however, that at least during some of the 1940s (my years as a Marylander and Sun reader), the "tone" of his work in the Sunday Baltimore Sun was brown. That unusual color of one section of the Sunday paper made it stand out from the many sections of black-and-white print and the bright colors of the comics. I have wondered if that section of higher-quality pictures was printed as "the rotogravure" in which photos of "the grandest lady in the Easter Parade" might have been found.
Posted by Milford Brown on May 4,2010 | 12:57 PM