Mariette Pathy Allen (Alexandria, 1940) is a photographer for the transgender, genderfluid, and intersex communities and a writer. She has published five books, Transformations: Cross-dressers and Those Who Love Them (1989), Masked Culture: The Greenwich Village Halloween Parade (1994), The Gender Frontier (2004),[1][2] TransCuba (2014)[3] and Transcendents: Spirit Mediums in Burma and Thailand (2017).[4] She is an activist for gender consciousness and reflects positivity towards underrepresented communities.

Mariette Pathy Allen
Born1940 (age 83–84) Alexandria, Egypt
Alma materVassar College University of Pennsylvania
OccupationPhotographer
Websitemariettepathyallen.com

Early life and education edit

Allen was born in Egypt to a wealthy Hungarian family who were involved in the shipping industry.[5] Her first cousin once removed is Mark Pathy.

Allen graduated from Vassar College and then attended the Graduate School of Fine Arts at the University of Pennsylvania where she received an MFA in Fine Arts and Painting.[6][7] She took a photography class off campus and switched her focus from painting to photography.[8]

Her background in painting has influenced her photographic work as she has used it to explore "color, space, and cultural juxtapositions".[9]

Career edit

She discovered that photography was like a passport into the world. This transition gave her the opportunity to meet new people while traveling all over the world. Ultimately, this sparked her career as a photographer where she photographed the transgender community for over 20 years.[1]

In 1978, Allen was staying in the same hotel with a group of cross-dressers celebrating Mardi Gras and was inspired to be begin photographing the intimate and often secretive lives of cross-dressers and transgender individuals. She grew into photojournalism and advocacy for the emergent transgender rights movement in the 1990s. She aims to photograph misunderstood communities in the "daylight of everyday life" and capture humanity with their families, in their careers, at their homes.[10]

Allen wrote Transformations: Crossdressers and Those Who Love Them in 1989.[11] This book depicts the lives of heterosexual, married men who cross dress. She includes black and white portrait and interviews of her subjects.[10]

In her second book The Gender Frontier (2003), Allen documents the transgender community through political movements and public demonstrations. In 2005, the book was awarded the Lambda Literary Award in the transgender category.[12]

Allen has contributed her work to magazines, books, photography exhibitions and documentaries all over the world. Allen's career highlights include being the photographer for Lee Grant's 1984 documentary What Sex Am I?, Southern Comfort (2001), and Rosa von Praunheim's The Transsexual Menace. Allen took the cover photo of Jamison Green's Becoming a Visible Man.[13] She was an associate producer for an A&E documentary The Transgender Revolution (1998). Her photography has been exhibited in the permanent collection at the Bibliothèque nationale de France, the Corcoran Gallery of Art in Washington D.C., the Brooklyn Museum of Art, Houston's Museum of Fine Arts, and the New York Public Library.[10] Allen is unofficially referred to as the "official photographer of the transgender community."[2]

Allen's life's work is being archived by the Duke University Library Archive of Documentary Arts.[14]

References edit

  1. ^ a b Boyd, Helen (September 9, 2015). "Five Questions with...Mariette Pathy Allen". EN|GENDER. Retrieved January 26, 2017.
  2. ^ a b Pathy Allen, Mariette (2007). "Momentum: A Photo Essay of the Transgender Community in the United States Over 30 Years, 1978–2007" (PDF). Sexuality Research and Social Policy. 4 (4): 92–105. doi:10.1525/srsp.2007.4.4.92. S2CID 189931365.[permanent dead link]
  3. ^ "TransCuba". Daylight Books. Retrieved 2018-02-27.
  4. ^ "Transcendents: Spirit Mediums in Burma and Thailand". Daylight Books. Retrieved 2018-02-27.
  5. ^ George Pathy, Headed Top Shipping Concern
  6. ^ Allen, Mariette Pathy (2016). "Mariette Pathy Allen". www.mariettepathyallen.com. Retrieved January 19, 2017.
  7. ^ Beete, Paulette (July 9, 2014). "Art Talk with Mariette Pathy Allen". National Endowment for the Arts. USA.gov. Retrieved January 19, 2017.
  8. ^ "Seeing transgender people through a different lens". The Herald Sun with Chapel-Hill Herald. December 4, 2016. ProQuest 1845682407.
  9. ^ "Bio". Mariette Pathy Allen. Retrieved 2019-03-08.
  10. ^ a b c Anderson-Minshall, Jacob (2009). "Mariette Pathy Allen". LGBTQ America Today: An Encyclopedia. 1: 41.
  11. ^ Rosenberg, David (3 May 2013). "Moving Portraits of the Transgender Community Over 35 Years". Slate Magazine. Retrieved 2019-04-03.
  12. ^ Cerna, Antonio Gonzalez (2005-07-09). "17th Annual Lambda Literary Awards". Lambda Literary. Retrieved 2017-06-02.
  13. ^ Allen, Mariette Pathy (2010-11-01). "Connecting body and mind: How transgender people changed their self-image". Women & Performance: A Journal of Feminist Theory. 20 (3): 267–283. doi:10.1080/0740770X.2010.529248. ISSN 0740-770X. S2CID 144841070.
  14. ^ "Guide to the Mariette Pathy Allen Photographs and Papers, 1968–2003". David M. Rubenstein Rare Book & Manuscript Library. Retrieved 2018-02-27.