Date: Fri 04-Sep-1998
Date: Fri 04-Sep-1998
Publication: Ant
Author: DONNAM
Quick Words:
Harry-Lunn-Photographer-Obit
Full Text:
Harry Lunn, Jr., Photography Dealer
PARIS, FRANCE -- Harry H. Lunn, Jr, died at his Paris home on August 21 after
suffering a heart attack a week earlier. The pioneering dealer in vintage
photography was 65. In addition to his home in Paris, he had residences in New
York and Normandy.
Born in Detroit in 1933, Mr Lunn studied economics at the University of
Michigan in Ann Arbor. Following college, he joined the Central Intelligence
Agency. He dealt privately in etching and lithographs in the early 1960s while
stationed at the United States Embassy in Paris.
Mr Lunn resigned from the CIA in 1967 and a year later opened a gallery in
Washington, D.C. He closed the gallery in 1983 to become a private dealer.
The specialist turned to photography in 1970 when the market was still in its
infancy. Before the 1970s, only a handful of fine arts dealers exhibited
photography: Alfred Stieglitz at his gallery 291 in the first decades of the
century; Julien Levy at his New York gallery in the 1930s and 1940s; Helen Gee
at her Greenwich Village coffee house, Limelight, in the 1950s; and Lee
Witkin, who opened a photography gallery in Manhattan in 1969. Sotheby's
instituted sales of photography in London in 1970 and in New York in 1975, and
Christie's followed thereafter.
In 1971, Mr Lunn exhibited Ansel Adams prints at his Washington gallery. Sales
totaled $10,000, and a 16-by-20-inch print brought $150. Earlier this year, a
16 by 20 inch print of Ansel Adams' "Moonlight Over Hernandez" achieved
$20,700 at Sotheby's.
The dealer helped create the market for Adams, as well as for Walker Evans,
Robert Frank, Diane Arbus, and Heinrich Kuhn. A student of Nineteenth Century
French photography, he was also interested in contemporary work by Robert
Mapplethorpe, Adres Serrano, Joe-Peter Witkin, and MerDermott and McGough.
Mr Lunn is survived by his wife, Myriam; two daughters, Alexandra and
Florence; and a son, Christophe, all of Paris.