Rebecca Bathory | |
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Born | Rebecca Parkes Sutton, London, United Kingdom |
Nationality | British |
Education | University for the Creative ArtsLondon College of FashionRoehampton University |
Known for | Photography |
Website | rebeccabathory |
Rebecca Lilith Bathory, previously briefly known asRebecca Litchfield, is a British photographer living in London.[1] Her photographic series includeSoviet Ghosts,[2][3][4]Return to Fukushima,[5] Dark Tourism,[6] andOrphans of Time.[7]
Bathory was born inSutton, London. She graduated fromUniversity for the Creative Arts with a first class degree in Graphic Design in June 2006. Between 2008 and 2010, she studied for a master's degree in Fashion Photography atThe London College of Fashion, for which she was awarded a distinction. She exhibited her final masters project,Edenias, at Mall Gallery in London.[8][failed verification]
In 2014, she was awarded a Techne scholarship for a research PhD degree at theUniversity of Roehampton to research the photography ofdark tourism photography.[citation needed] She gained a PhD in Social Anthropology July 2022.[citation needed]
As Rebecca Litchfield, she recorded many abandoned locations within 10 countries of the formerSoviet Union, including towns, factories, prisons, schools, monuments, hospitals, theatres, military complexes, asylums and death camps. Her bookSoviet Ghosts examines a society shrouded by theCold War.[9]
Bathory's second book explores the nuclear meltdown inFukushima. 2016 was the first time that residents of the town ofTomioka were given permission to return to their homes; Bathory was also given permission to photograph in the thirty-mile exclusion zone. Bathory produced never-before-seen images of the ghost town of Fukushima, providing a meditation on human failure and pondering what might be next for a nuclear future.[10]
In 2016 Bathory photographed her third bookDark Tourism, travelling around the world to 20 countries to visit 100 "dark tourist" sites in the UK, Germany, Austria, Czech Republic, Switzerland, France, Italy, Mexico, Vietnam, Cambodia, Thailand, Philippines, Japan, Poland, Slovakia, India, USA, Indonesia, Ukraine and Cuba. The phrase dark tourism conjures up images and ideas of destinations associated with death, suffering, tragedy and the macabre. Dark tourism is a very visual practice, like tourism in general. It involves seeing potentially tragic sites with one's own eyes, and in most cases, photographing it to prolong the moment.[6]
Bathory's fourth bookOrphans of Time was self-published, and contains 200 colour photos of abandoned buildings. Since 2012 she travelled around the world for five years, seeking out beautiful locations featuring decay.[7]