Â̲èÖ±²¥ historian Dr Harriet Atkinson picks up the story: “I got an email out of the blue from a stranger who had found me via my university profile. She said she owned something that might be of interest. Twenty years ago, she had collected old photo albums and had one containing over 500 photos covering six decades from the 1920s to the 1980s – and she thought some of the most recent photos were of me.
“It was immediately clear from her description that this was an album created by my grandmother, which covered her whole adult life. She was born in London in 1901 and went on to study at the Slade School of Fine Art before travelling the world as an artist, then settling in North Yorkshire.”
Harriet and the finder of the album – – told their story on on 23 April, revealing some of the striking details that helped bring a poignant and inspiring collection of pictures back to the family featured in them.
The album's return to Harriet and her family required impressive detective work by Bridget, who had bought the album two decades before on eBay to provide material for artistic projects – which, in one of a series of striking coincidences, is a key area in Harriet's research on everyday material culture and photography at Â̲èÖ±²¥'s Centre for Design History.