Tag: Stephen Gill

  • Hackney photographer Stephen Gill publishes two new books

    Embracing: A Hackney couple on their wedding day. Photograph courtesy of Stephen Gill
    Embracing: A Hackney couple on their wedding day. Photograph courtesy of Stephen Gill

    Stephen Gill’s oblique take on the local urban landscape has fascinated photography fans across the world. His latest books, bearing similar covers and published contemporaneously, treat very different topics yet are linked through reliance on happenstance.

    Hackney Kisses is a collection of photographs printed from 1950s negatives Gill bought on eBay. The actual taker of this collection of wedding pics remains unknown, but their theme is one of universal relevance.

    Even the camera-shy can rarely avoid being snapped on their wedding day, and matrimonial shots virtually all involve at least one kiss.
    Most of these images follow convention: there is a multi-tiered cake standing at attention next to the happy couple, who are attired in the classic wedding gear of the time: a dark suit and slicked-back hair for him, lots of white lace for her. Some kisses are overtly lustful; others are nervous pecks for the camera. All are romantic.

    Writes Timothy Prus of this collection: “Kissing can be quite like the reveries in a beautiful forest, it can also be end-of-pier theatre. Our Master of the Hackney Kisses knows how these traits combine.”

    By contrast, Pigeons takes as its object one of the most unromantic topics imaginable.
    The collection features dead pigeons, flying pigeons, nesting pigeons, pigeons out of focus, pigeons sheltering under bridges, fornicating pigeons and decaying pigeon body parts.

    Though the birds inhabit a world made by us, we don’t normally notice them. They are also a less-than-endearing bird, and these photos do not seek to change that.

    The images have been taken by a camera placed atop a pole, thrust up into the dark underbellies of bridges. The result of this process has a random element to it, and it also yields a completely deadpan muck-and-all survey of the species in its near-monochrome habitat.

    An introduction by Will Self provides an evocative reflection on the place of pigeons in London culture past and present. He concludes by noting that “Stephen Gill’s photographs are devoid of sentiment or affectation – rather than showing the pigeon in our world, they take us into theirs.”

    The pair of books reflect two of Stephen Gill’s long-established passions – Hackney and birds. What the volumes share is a formal structure of repetition on a theme. Another less obvious commonality is the element of chance that was involved in their making; both collections are, in their different ways, the products of what might be called stochastic photography. They are thus fitting pictorial archaeologies of the local imaginary, sampling bits of Hackney life from marital rapture to pullastrine domesticity.

    Stephen Gill, Hackney Kisses, Archive of Modern Conflict, 2014. ISBN: 9780957049079. RRP: £40. Stephen Gill, Pigeons, Nobody Books and Archive of Modern Conflict, 2014. ISBN: 9780957536975. RRP: £38.

  • Stephen Gill: Conceptual chronicler

    Detail from Pussy 5 by Stephen Gill
    Detail from Pussy 5 by Stephen Gill

    If art imitates life, then what better art form than photography, which exactly replicates what we see?

    Stephen Gill, photographer, conceptual artist and serial chronicler of Hackney, might not agree. Aware of the limitations of traditional documentary photography, Gill is interested in expressing concepts beyond the merely descriptive.

    In two recently published photo books, he continues to broaden the frontiers of the medium. The first, Best Before End, is a collection of photos of East London made using energy drinks. Psychedelic images bearing little resemblance to what the eye sees is the result of Gill placing objects inside the camera before taking the photos, then immersing the negatives in the drinks.

    A bare-footed guitar player on stage, traffic, undergrowth, hands and limbs suddenly gain an abstract, fantastical quality. Images shift position and are manipulated to reflect the giddy pace of urban life, just as energy drinks are a symptom of it, something one-time Jolt Cola junkie Will Self points out in the book’s foreword.

    East London is more recognisable in the series that makes up Talking to Ants. Here the city and natural world entwine: a building site overlooks a calm stretch of water; a figure appears buried by undergrowth; and a bespectacled man with shoulder length hair sips from a bottle cap.

    The ants of the title are a reference to Gill’s method of placing surrounding objects and creatures (including ants) behind the lens whilst taking photographs. A close-up of foliage includes the black outline of a broken ruler and a couple of wood lice, while a row of houses is strewn with pieces of soil.

    Arranged randomly, the deliberate act of taking a photograph is suddenly subverted, with the end result not simply a representation of an environment, but also a product of it. This is image manipulation using an analogue lens that achieves more artistically than the digital enhancement of Photoshop.

    Both books are published by Nobody. Talking to Ants, RRP:£35, ISBN: 978-0957536913. Best Before End, RRP: £44, ISBN: 9780957536951