Milagros Caturla

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Milagros Caturla (Barcelona, 1920 – Sant Cugat del Vallés 2008) was a Spanish amateur photographer. Her work is notable for capturing the everyday life of Barcelona in the late 1950s and 1960s.[1]

She was born in Barcelona in 1920. She was the seventh of nine children born to Luis Caturla, a lieutenant colonel in the Infantry, and Josefa Soriano. She grew up and came of age during the Second Spanish Republic.[2] Before becoming a civil servant in the Diputación Provincial de Barcelona, she worked as a dressmaker in her own workshop in her parents' home and in a food company.[3] She also worked as a seamstress in her parents' home.

Her love of photography led her to buy a Leica M2, the cheapest Leica at the time. In Valencia Street, Barcelona, set up her own home development laboratory. She bought the equipment out of her own wages. She was forced to give up photography when she had to move to a flat in the Ciutat Vella district, where she had no place to set up her photo lab. She died in San Cugat del Vallés on 28 March 2008.

Member of the Agrupació Fotogràfica de Catalunya

Discovery of her work

References

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