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John Bulmer was a pioneer of colour photography in the early 1960’s working
    for the Sunday Times Magazine from the very first issue till the 1970’s
 
 He was brought up in Herefordshire, became a passionate photographer, and
    when he went to study  engineering at Cambridge continued taking
    photographs- first for the University newspaper Varsity and then for Image,
    a picture magazine that he co-founded.  He also started shooting
    stories on Cambridge for Queen Magazine, the Daily Express newspaper, and
    finally a story on the Night Climbers of Cambridge which sold to Life
    Magazine.
 
 This ended his career at Cambridge, and he went up to London where he was
    offered a job as photographer on the Daily Express.  At the time the
    Express was the foremost paper in Britain for photography, and did many
    assignments in association with Paris Match.
 
 He soon started shooting stories for Town Magazine, a new fashion magazine
    that became well known for good photography, using others such as Terrence
    Donovan, David Bailey and Don McCullin.  John Bulmer did many
    groundbreaking stories for them including; The Black Country, Nelson, The
    North, as well as overseas stories in South America, Africa, New Guinea and
    Indonesia.
 
 The Sunday Times then produced the first of the Colour Supplements, later
    copied by all the newspapers. John Bulmer shared the cover of the first
    issue with David Bailey- a picture of a footballer he took surrounded by
    pictures of Jean Shrimpton’s armpit!  This was a small start but John
    soon had a contract to shoot sixty pages a year, and travelled to nearly
    100 countries on their behalf.
 
 The writer Martin Harrison, in his book about photography in the 60’s “The
    Young Meteors” describes the start of the Colour Magazines:-
 
 “The switch to colour was, therefore, quite sudden and few photographers
    were prepared for it.
 
 John Bulmer was recognised immediately for having made the necessary
    adjustment and thinking specifically in terms of colour became one of the
    most prolific contributors of colour reportage to the Sunday Times Colour
    Section.
 
 Many of Bulmer’s most important assignments were abroad, but he was also
    acknowledged as an adroit recorder of provincial Britain. His reputation as
    a recorder of the industrial cityscape was probably gained at Town, where
    he was responsible for stories on Nelson, Lancashire, The Black Country,
    and The North is dead”
 
 His work was several times singled out for awards by the Design and Art
    Directors Club and he has had pictures shown at the Gallery of Modern Art
    in New York, the Photographers' Gallery in London, and the National Museum
    of Photography in Bradford
 
 By the early seventies the Sunday Times changed course, looking for stories
    on “Crime, Middle class living and Fashion” as described to Bulmer by the
    new editor.
 
 It was time for a change and John Bulmer moved sideways into making
    documentary films. He filmed a programme on the life of Van Gogh in the
    South of France, directed by Mai Zetterling, and went on to direct many
    films on travel and untouched tribes in the most inaccessible parts of the
    world. These were primarily shown on BBC, Nat Geo and Discovery Channel.
 
 He has now returned to Herefordshire to catalogue and show his huge
    collection of still photographs, many of which have never been seen.
    Philippe Vermès
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