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Joanne Leonard: Vintage Photographs and Early Collages

Posted on June 05, 2025 - By HackelBury
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Joanne Leonard: Vintage Photographs and Early Collages
Joanne Leonard: Vintage Photographs and Early Collages

29th May – 8th July 2025


“Artists are not turning inwards to preserve, or even indulge in the pleasures of their medium/ media. They are expanding the very capacities of their mediums and media both to formulate meaning and to affect us by each artist’s aesthetic process.” Griselda Pollock

HackelBury proudly presents the first UK solo exhibition by acclaimed artist, Joanne Leonard. Vintage Photographs and Early Collages features photographs from the 1960s and 1970s and unique early collage pieces from the 1970s and 1980s. This retrospective offers an intimate look into Leonard’s artistic evolution and her innovative approach to visual storytelling.

“I’m much inspired by looking at medieval works - particularly diptychs and triptychs – these forms are sometimes hinged and have doors that fold over the artwork – then open to reveal the imagery inside…. a suggestion of time and story unfolding.” JL

Known for her evocative and deeply personal imagery, which she describes as ‘intimate documentary,’ Leonard’s work from this era captures a profound sense of time and place. Blending documentary photography with poetic, dreamlike compositions, she draws inspiration from intimate family scenes, the realities of motherhood, and the political and social unrest of the time. The works on display offer an unfiltered glimpse into life as she experienced it. Her early collages, incorporating found imagery, handwritten text, and layered textures, reflect an experimental approach which challenges conventional artistic boundaries.


Joanne Leonard

Another Morning, 1971 © Joanne Leonard, Courtesy HackelBury Fine Art, London



Joanne Leonard

Sonia, 1966 © Joanne Leonard, Courtesy HackelBury Fine Art, London


“One could say that collage allows a dialog, conversation, or push and pull – a layering of the past onto images from the present, a representation of dreams and even nightmares with collage layered onto scenes made in the light of day.” JL

Leonard’s practice provides a striking glimpse into the social and cultural landscapes of the mid-20th century, portraying moments of everyday life with a deeply humanistic perspective. Underpinned by a feminist ideology, she recognises overlooked intimate and personal moments within women’s lives.

Inspired by the work of Mary Cassatt and Käthe Kollwitz, Leonard’s focus on the objects and artifacts of women’s lives is applied to both her early black and white photography, and to her photo collage and mixed media work, to create a distinct visual language.

“In artwork I’d come to know growing up, if there was a focus on women it was most often as subjects of the male gaze – nude studies were most often made by men. These did not reflect the daily lives of women – or the world from the women’s own perspectives.” JL


Joanne Leonard

Julia and the Window of Vulnerability (Variation with Lamppost), 1983) © Joanne Leonard, Courtesy HackelBury Fine Art, London


About Joanne Leonard
Joanne Leonard is an American artist renowned for her transformative and expansive conceptual photographic practice. This later developed into new forms of photo-collage to explore the overlooked spaces, conditions and moments within women’s working and parenting lives. In her series Dreams and Nightmares, she addresses heterosexual desire and its tragedies as well as images of the strange and often disturbing beauty of modern domestic appliances and kitchen spaces. Leonard’s work was hailed by American feminist critic Lucy Lippard in her collection From the Center (1976). Leonard is also widely studied for intermedial work, text and images in Being in Pictures: An Intimate Photo Memoir (2008).

Leonard’s photographs have been collected by and featured in exhibitions at major museums, including; San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, Whitney Museum of American Art, Museum of Modern Art and Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, the International Center of Photography, New York and the Harry Ransom Center, Austin, Texas. Her work was shown in the group exhibition Medium & Memory, curated by Griselda Pollock at HackelBury in 2023 and work has recently been acquired by the Victoria & Albert Museum, London. Her work is currently on show at the ICP in New York and the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art.

In addition to her celebrated artistic practice, Leonard has cultivated a distinguished record as both scholar and educator. Leonard is one of the few photographers and women artists published in Janson’s History of Art. She completed thirty-one years on the faculty at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, earning the title of Diane M. Kirkpatrick and Griselda Pollock Distinguished University Professor in 2004. During her tenure, Leonard was Director of the Program in Visual Culture at the Institute for Research on Women and Gender for three years and received the John H. D’arms Faculty Award for Distinguished Graduate Mentoring in the Humanities in 2001. She retired in 2009 after dedicating forty years of her life to teaching as a college professor.


Joanne Leonard

Winged Ones, 1985 © Joanne Leonard, Courtesy HackelBury Fine Art, London


About HackelBury
HackelBury was founded twenty-six years ago by Marcus Bury and Sascha Hackel. The gallery is committed to championing artists working with the visual arts who push the boundaries of their medium to create meaningful and contemplative work.

The London based gallery initially showcased classic photography from the 20th century including Henri Cartier- Bresson, Berenice Abbott, Malick Sidibe, and Sebastião Salgado. The transition from traditional photography to more conceptual work was as intuitive as it was organic, beginning with artists such as William Klein, Pascal Kern, Doug and Mike Starn, Garry Fabian Miller, Katja Liebmann, Ian McKeever, Stephen Inggs and Bill Armstrong. In recent years the gallery has taken on emerging artists such as Oli Kellett, Nadezda Nikolova, Alys Tomlinson, Coral Woodbury and Sharon Walters.

Each artist, whether emerging or established, creates work defined by a depth of thought and breadth and consistency of approach. The small group of artists with whom HackelBury work, represent a diversity of practice yet share an artistic integrity which the gallery is fully committed to supporting in the long-term.


Joanne Leonard

Julia Sleeping, 1977 © Joanne Leonard, Courtesy HackelBury Fine Art, London



Joanne Leonard

Barb's Wedding © Joanne Leonard, Courtesy HackelBury Fine Art, London


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