A TRIP to Durlston Castle is highly recommended for anyone interested in history, pioneering women and photography.

The castle is putting on an exhibition of pioneering photographer and ‘Woman of the 20th Century’, Helen Muspratt.

Pioneering Swanage photographer Helen was chosen as one of the ‘Women of our Century’ by the BBC.

The show of her work is on until July 11.

The exhibition has been curated by her daughter, Jessica Sutcliffe, offering an insight into Helen’s life, work and local connections.

Helen’s studio opened in Swanage in 1928 and she became one of the most eminent portrait photographers of the 20th century, making portraits of many notable figures including Paul Nash, surrealist painter, war artist, photographer and writer and Aileen Agar, also painter and photographer associated with the Surrealist movement.

Helen's experiments with solarisation and multiple exposures were influenced by the work of Man Ray, while her political convictions led her to produce documentary records of the Soviet Union in 1936 and the desperate situation of the unemployed of the Welsh coalfields in 1937.

Her fascination with the face and attention to shape and angle lies at the heart of her work.

Daughter Jessica said: “The 1930s were a time of huge experimentation and innovation, but women were almost invisible in the post-war landscape of British photography. I realised my mother’s story had to be told and I hope this exhibition will do justice to her life and work.”

Ali Tuckey, who manages the Fine Foundation Gallery at Durlston, said: “The exhibition will be a fascinating insight not only into her incredible life and work, but also her strong connections with Purbeck.”

The exhibition is free and will be open daily from 11am to 4pm.

Jessica published a book about her mother last year called Face: Shape and Angle.

Helen Muspratt was born in India, the daughter of Lt Colonel Vivian Muspratt, a soldier in the Indian Army and his wife Lily, nee Hope.

The family returned to England in 1914 and later settled in the seaside town of Swanage where she and her younger sister, Joan were sent to Oldfeld School.

The family were frequently photographed by Constance Ellis in Guildford who inspired Helen to take up photography as a career. She was also influenced by the artistic community in Purbeck, who included the retired head of the Glasgow School of Art, Fra Newbery. In 1926 she enrolled at the Regent’s Street Polytechnic to study photography.

In 1929, at the age of 20 Helen set up a studio in Swanage, specialising in portraiture and children in particular. Within two years she was featured in the magazine, British Photography who described her studio as one where ‘every aspect reflects the personality of an individual photographer’.

The business was later taken over by her sister who successfully ran the studio under her own name, Joan Muspratt, until her death in 1957.

In 1932 she met Lettice Ramsey, whose husband Frank, a brilliant young mathematician at Cambridge, had recently died.They decided to set up a studio there and Ramsey & Muspratt was established. Among their early sitters were many of Lettice’s friends, members of the Bloomsbury Group and they also photographed Burgess and McLean who later became notorious as spies.

Many of these photographs are regularly to be seen in the National Portrait Gallery. Helen was mixing with a vibrant set of idealistic intellectuals during term time and retreating to Swanage for the summer months where business was flourishing.

In 1936 she visited the Soviet Union where she demonstrated her talent as a documentary photographer and in the following year she recorded the conditions in the South Wales valleys.

In 1937 Helen married communist party organiser, Jack Dunman. They made a joint decision that she should become the main breadwinner in order to free Jack for political work. This coincided with setting up a second Ramsey & Muspratt studio in Oxford. Eventually she took over the Oxford studio and the partnership with Lettice was dissolved, but they both retained the name Ramsey & Muspratt, together with a lifelong friendship.

Marriage and the birth of three children left little time for experimental or documentary work and Helen settled to become a leading portrait photographer. Oxford remained her base for the rest of her working life.

In 1986 Helen Muspratt, at the age of 79, was finally receiving recognition for an extraordinary career, mainly as a portrait photographer, but also for her early experimentation with techniques such as solarisation, and for some fascinating ventures into photo-journalism including a trip to the Soviet Union in 1936. Her work was represented in a major exhibition organized by the National Museum of Photography, Film and Television, entitled Women Photographers in Britain 1900 -1950. At the same time, the Museum commissioned a new book, Women Photographers – The Other Observers 1900 to the Present by Val Williams. There followed a televised interview; one of the Five Women Photographers programmes produced by Broadside for Chanel 4. The BBC also featured her as one of their Women of our Century – Interviews with six of Britain’s most eminent women.

To find out more about Helen’s life and work go to helenmuspratt-photographer.com