The °”TV Library Archives and Special Collections is pleased to announce the arrival of the Paul W. Hollingshead Photography Collection, generously donated by °”TV alumni Sharon Dianne Hollingshead â63 and the late William (Bill) Hollingshead â60. The stunning photography of Paul W. Hollingshead captures 1920s New York, where he apprenticed with the renowned Edward Steichen (1923â1928), and mid-century Northern California, where he established a photography studio in Woodland (1932 to 1969). In total, the collection includes 3,789 original silver gelatin prints, glossies, negatives, proofs and glass slides, as well as photography workbooks, exercises, notes, and correspondence. The donation is currently being processed and will be made available for research, study, and instruction at a future date.
Career beginnings in âold New Yorkâ
In 1922, Hollingshead stepped off a train in New York City carrying a straw suitcase and wearing his World War I army overcoat, and enrolled in the New York Institute of Photography. Upon graduation, he became the first assistant to photographer Edward Steichen, a pioneer of fashion photography considered one of the greatest photographers of all time. Hollingsheadâs work from this period captures the cityâs transition from âold New Yorkâ to a towering metropolis, and memorializes the fashions of the cityâs people through numerous studio portraits and candid photographs.
Heading West to Woodland
In 1928, Hollingshead headed West to California with his new bride Vera to raise a family and open a photography studio. After various stints in the Bay Area, they settled in Woodland, CA, in Yolo County, where he operated the Hollingshead Studio for nearly four decades. Photography from this period includes WPA documentary images of buildings and events, works-for-hire with the Spreckels Sugar Company, and daily life and portraiture photography of Woodlandâs citizens.
Photo collection with an alumni connection
The Hollingshead Photography Collection is no stranger to °”TV thanks to the efforts of Paulâs son Bill Hollingshead, who inherited the collection with his brother Edward after their father passed away in 1974. In 2011, Bill created a presentation of his fatherâs photos to accompany the °”TV Concert Bandâs performance of William Schumanâs George Washington Bridge during an appearance at the Mondavi Center. Additionally, Hollingsheadâs photographs have been featured in multiple campus exhibits, including the Nelson Gallery in 2014 and the °”TV Design Department Museum in 2016.
At the °”TV Library, we anticipate research and teaching uses of the collection to include historical perspectives on New York and Northern California, the history of fashion and design, and the historical and technical study of the art of photography.
The °”TV Library is very grateful to Dianne and Bill Hollingshead for entrusting us with the legacy of Paul W. Hollingshead and the stewardship of his remarkable collection. Bill, who passed away in 2021, is greatly missed, and we dedicate this acquisition to him.
âMany of the buildings and events in New York, San Francisco, the East Bay, and Yolo County are gone forever, but they still live as visual history in our treasury of negatives and photos by my father. My heart fills with joy to present my fatherâs work and put him in his rightful place in the history of photography as art.â
âBill Hollingshead
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Contact:
Inquiries about the Paul W. Hollingshead Photography Collection can be made to Kevin Miller, Head of Archives and Special Collections, at kcmiller@ucdavis.edu.