Curator Joyce Agee in 1988 noted that, with feminist photography on the ascendant, the gallery's ambitions irritated some Australian women photographers; In the 1970s,
Micky Allan, the late
Carol Jerrems,
Ruth Maddison,
Sue Ford and
Ponch Hawkes, reacting against the technocratic and patriarchal American West Coast 'fine print' tradition then being promoted by The Photographers' Gallery in Melbourne, began to use photography as an intimate expression of their individual concerns. Nevertheless, Jerrems was amongst the first exhibitors at the Gallery, showing there four times before her premature death in 1980. Noted women's activist
Beatrice Faust, who reviewed many of the gallery's shows from 1976-88 in
The Age newspaper, was supportive in her critiques, and in September 1987 hosted the show
Beatrice Faust Curates: From Boubat to Fereday at the gallery featuring male and female photographers. Certainly women exhibiting were outnumbered by men in a ratio of nearly 10:1 until the 90s, after which they appear on a more equal footing (see below). The Gallery's concentration on American photography in its early years was not in isolation and was prompted as much by interest in international photography amongst Australians as by Heimerman's own contacts in the US, and paralleled international touring exhibitions of
Bill Brandt in 1971, and the French Foreign Ministry's major exhibition of
Henri Cartier-Bresson in 1974. Joyce Evans' Church Street also presented work by American's
Minor White,
Jerry Uelsmann,
Les Krims and others. In mid-1978, the gallery extended a call in the pages of the magazine
Light Vision to Australian photographers to submit work for a survey that was to be a traveling exhibition. The final selection, featured in the journal in a double number, 6 and 7, titled 'Special Australian Edition', issued October 1978 with two samples across double-page spreads of each of 21 photographers, many represented and selected by the Photographers Gallery, among them a number who were also 'Correspondents' for Light Vision at the time. Editor Jean-Marc Le Pechoux acknowledged the cooperative nature of the venture in his editorial, and in her introduction art historian and critic
Memory Holloway emphasised the breadth of the selection; "...a plurality of techniques, ideologies and styles; social documentary; pictorial, surreal landscapes; nudes; portraits; straight photography." Four of the 21 contributors were women, but the exercise marked a shift in the program toward a gender-inclusive representation of Australian photographers of diverse styles and often radical attitudes to picture-making and
photographic printing and presentation. Tony Perry, who reviewed shows there 1978-80, was complimentary of contributions by William Heimermann and the 'Photographers Gallery' to Australian Photography in his article 'Australia: looking for a photographic identity', as was
Peter Turner's interview with
Paul Cox in
Light Vision. In 1981,
The Age newspaper critic Geoff Strong, in reporting on the imminent closure of
Joyce Evans' Church Street gallery, noted that The Photographers' Gallery was also facing tough times during a recession, rising unemployment and a general downturn in the fortunes of art galleries; The status and purpose of the Photographers' Gallery over its long tenure continued to evolve. Critic Beatrice Faust, a supporter of the gallery since its inception, in
The Age in January 1990 observed; Nevertheless, the Gallery was to survive for another twenty years. ==Closure==