Biography: Kate Mellor
Studio address:
11 a Nanholme Mill, Shaw Wood Rd, Todmorden, Lancs. OL14 6DA.
Kate Mellor is a British landscape photographer best known for
her series of panoramic images of the British coast; the exhibition
"Island: The Sea Front," which explores notions of territory,
is currently being toured by the Impressions Gallery, York. A
book of the exhibition "Island" has been published by
Dewi Lewis.
Working mainly on public commissions and for galleries she is
also the author of the series "Blue Shift," following
a water course, challenging residual beliefs about landscape,
and most recently "In the Steps of Robert Pinnacle",
a false narrative set in European spa towns, a commission for
Photo 98, the European Year of Photography and the Electronic
Image. Projects that she has been involved with include the exhibitions
"Wasteland" and "Regeneration" for the Untitled
(now Site) Gallery, Sheffield, and work for the Cardiology Unit
at the Leeds General Infirmary. Her work has been exhibited widely
in Britain, in the U.S. where she was selected for the "Discoveries"
exhibition at the most recent Houston Fotofest, and is permanently
sited in the British Council/Embassy building in Hong Kong. Recently
her work was exhibited at Lichtblick Downton in Cologne. In 1994
she received the Yorkshire and Humberside Arts major award for
photographic practice.
She was born in Stourport-on-Severn in Worcestershire in 1951
and educated at the Worcester Grammar School for Girls. She studied
Photography at Manchester Polytechnic School of Art, graduating
in 1974.
She has been photo-tutor at Bradford and Ilkley College and
at Cumbria College of Art, has been a visiting lecturer giving
tutorials, lectures and workshops at many other colleges and galleries,
and was a speaker at the last Changing Views of the Landscape
Conference. She is currently lecturing at the Electronic Imaging
and Media Communications course at Bradford University and for
the Photography degree course at Dewsbury College in Yorkshire.
She lives in the South Pennine uplands with
her family.
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