Bill Jay Explained

Bill Jay
Birth Date:12 August 1940
Birth Place:Maidenhead, England
Occupation:Photographer and writer
Credits:, which produces label "Notable credit(s)"; or by
Works:, which produces label "Works"; or by
Label Name:, which produces label "Label(s)" -->
Website:billjayonphotography.com (archived 28 June 2011)

William Jay (12 August 1940 – 10 May 2009) was a photographer, writer on and advocate of photography, curator, magazine and picture editor, lecturer, public speaker and mentor.[1] [2] He was the first editor of "the immensely influential magazine" Creative Camera (1968–1969);[3] and founder and editor of Album (1970–1971). He is the author of more than 20 books on the history and criticism of photography, and roughly 400 essays, lectures and articles.[4] His own photographs have been widely published, including a solo exhibition at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. He is known for his portrait photographs of photographers.[5]

Life and work

Jay was born in Maidenhead, England, on 12 August 1940. He attended grammar school and completed two years at Berkshire College of Art.

Jay was editor of the hobbyist Camera Owner which he transformed into "the immensely influential magazine" Creative Camera (1968–1969);[6] [7] and founder and editor of Album (1970–1971), for all twelve issues. To supplement working on Creative Camera, for short periods he was European manager of Globe Photos, an international picture agency, and picture editor of The Daily Telegraph Magazine. He was the first Director of Photography at the Institute of Contemporary Arts (ICA) in London, in 1970 and founded and directed the Photo Study Centre there.

He joined the Royal Photographic Society in February 1972 and was visiting speaker and arranger of talks at the Society, as well as for local camera clubs and polytechnics throughout the UK.

In 1972 he moved to the United States to enroll at the University of New Mexico under Beaumont Newhall and Van Deren Coke. He graduated with an MA on the Victorian landscape photographer Francis Bedford. Afterward, he founded the Photographic Studies program at Arizona State University, where he was professor of art history and taught photography history and criticism for 25 years.

He gave hundreds of lectures on photography as a guest at colleges, universities, art schools and camera clubs in Britain, Europe and the United States.

Jay was twice married and divorced, and had three daughters, Juliet, Louise and Hannah. He retired in the late 1990s, leaving Mesa, Arizona, for Ocean Beach near San Diego, then to Sámara on the Nicoya peninsula, Costa Rica, in 2008. He died on 10 May 2009, aged 68. His archive is held at the Center for Creative Photography at the University of Arizona.

Publications

Films about Jay

Collections

Notes and References

  1. News: Bill Jay: Photographer who found a niche as an advocate of his art. 5 August 2009 . 2 January 2015 . Amanda . Hopkinson . .
  2. News: Tony Ray-Jones and Martin Parr: Photographing the English. 11 September 2013 . 2 January 2015 . Lucy . Davies . .
  3. Book: Jay . Bill . Hurn . David . On Being a Photographer: A Practical Guide . 1997 . Lenswork Publishing . 978-1888803068.
  4. News: 2018-05-08. Grant. Scott. The Photographic Life of Bill Jay. BBC News. 18 April 2018.
  5. Web site: Jay, Bill. 2 January 2015 . .
  6. Book: Brittain . David . Cahill . Clinton . Inside Photography: Ten Interviews with Editors . 2013 . . Stockport . 978-1-907893-46-9 . 21–32.
  7. News: 2018-05-08. Peter Turner. The Independent. 9 August 2005.