Alice Burr


Alice Burr was a San Francisco-based photographer associated with the pictorialist movement.

Early life and education

In 1916, Burr studied at The Clarence H. White School of Photography in New York with White himself, whose 30-week course of study emphasized personal vision and style over any particular school or movement. Burr also attended the California School of Design, where she studied a range of studio arts, including painting, drawing, and printmaking, but it is not known whether she pursued this training prior to her course of study in New York.
In the 1920s and 1930s, Burr, her youngest sister Marian, and two female cousins traveled extensively across Europe, Asia, African continents and to Australia and Japan together.
She lived in the Burr family home on Vallejo Street in San Francisco until her death. Her studio, an Arts and Crafts-style structure built in 1916 solely for her use, was located on an adjacent property.

Work

Burr primarily made portraits and images of nature, and additionally captured scenes around San Francisco and during her many travels abroad. In her home studio, she experimented with the bromoil and autochrome processes.

Recognition

In her application to join the San Francisco Society of Women Artists, one of the oldest arts organizations in California, Burr noted that she had exhibited student work at the De Young Museum and at the San Diego Museum of Art.
In 1927, Burr was elected president of the California League of Women Voters.
Burr's accomplishments as a photographer were examined in the 1998 exhibition Alice Burr: A California Pictorialist Rediscovered held at the Davison Art Center at Wesleyan University, curated by Thomas Weston Fels with support from Jeanne Slate Overstreet and her late husband Alan Burr Overstreet, the artist's nephew. The exhibition, which traveled to the Albin O. Kuhn Library & Gallery at University of Maryland, California Historical Society and Santa Barbara Museum of Art, was accompanied by a catalog.

Collections

Burr's work is held in the following permanent collections: