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Magnum suspends photographer David Alan Harvey for a year

Long-term member required to undergo anti-harassment training, while reinstatement is dependent on meeting “conditions attached”

Tom Seymour
5 November 2020
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David Alan Harvey Photo by Christopher Michel

David Alan Harvey Photo by Christopher Michel

The Magnum photographer David Alan Harvey has been suspended from the historic photography agency for a year and required to undergo “sensitivity and anti-harassment training among other requirements", the agency has announced.

Harvey’s reinstatement is dependent on him meeting “conditions attached”, the agency said in a statement.

The news comes after Magnum’s board pledged to hold an internal review, with the assistance of an independent investigator, in response to a confidential allegation made against Harvey from within the agency in August of this year. Harvey was temporarily suspended at the time. The Guardian newspaper alleged he had been suspended following an allegation of harassing a female colleague.

The allegation came in the wake of intense pressure and scrutiny on Magnum’s archive, which contained images by Harvey, and readily for sale, of what critics asserted may have been underage sex workers. The images were published by Magnum alongside keywords including ‘prostitute’ and ‘teenager’. Those images have since been deleted. An “in-depth review” of the archive was announced by Magnum president Olivia Arthur on 14 August. The review remains ongoing. Harvey did not respond to a request for comment.

The suspension—the first time a Magnum member has been suspended from the agency—was the result of a “breach of the bylaws and the code of conduct that all members adopted in 2018”, the agency said in a statement.

Despite vocal pressure from other photographers, Magnum has thus far resisted calls to make public the code of conduct their members abide by. After a query from The Art Newspaper as to why the agency has elected not to share the code publicly, despite pressure to do from numerous voices in the photography community, the agency declined to comment beyond its initial statement.

Daniella Zalcman, the respected Vietnamese-American documentary photographer and the founding member of Women in Photography, an online catalogue of more than 1000 working female photojournalists, tweeted in response to Magnum’s statement:

“Instead of hearing about the hasty band-aids Magnum is applying to this whole situation, I’d love to hear more about what the agency and its photographers DO stand for. I’d hope that list includes a deep recentering of racial justice and gender equality.”

Magnum have also announced the establishment of a speak-up hotline, which has been established with Safecall, an independent provider, in a bid to “improve transparency”. Magnum also stated the agency was further strengthening “policies regarding conduct and acceptable behaviour.” They declined a request to detail how such policies would specifically be strengthened.

Harvey, the 76-year-old photographer from San Francisco, based in New York, joined Magnum as an associate member in 1993 and became a full member in 1997. He is known in part as the founder and curator of Burn, a website showcasing the word of emerging photographers, first launched in 2008.

PhotographyMagnum
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