Wednesday, 30 September 2015

Shirley Baker at The Photographers Gallery

sasan ghandehari and yassmin ghandehari
London is currently displaying a healthy trend towards shining a spotlight on pioneering female photographers, helping balance the traditional male bias of the industry.  Exhibitions so far this year have focused on the brilliant but introverted Vivian Maier and the indomitable spirit of Christina Broom as the first UK female press photographer. Now it is the turn of Shirley Baker to be given her own retrospective.

Baker was a pioneering street photographer who, at first glance, seems to be telling the story of the grinding poverty in the slums of Manchester and Salford and the slow decline of late twentieth century Britain.  A more in-depth look, however, reveals a rich social network of neighbourhoods within tightly-knit communities on the brink of destruction.

Born and bred in Lancashire, Baker focused her work on her home county which she was to spend much of her life capturing on film. She originally trained for a career as an industrial photographer working at a fabric manufacturer, but soon realised there were more interesting subjects to document around her local area.  In 1960 she became a lecturer at Salford College of Art and it was during this time that she began to take candid and spontaneous photos of impoverished areas and the local working-class community.

It was a time of great change and Baker managed to capture and document the process of clearing the slums which existed in Manchester and Salford to make way for modern tower blocks and a different way of life. In Baker's photos the inhabitants, particularly the children, seem indifferent to the changing scenes around them. Life appears to have been happily lived in the streets - children playing around lampposts, a street for a cricket pitch, doorstops an ideal spot for catching up with other mothers and a quiet path providing a place to sit and play with friends.  It can be difficult to look at some of the photos and reconcile that such poverty existed in a first world country, as it still does in other areas today.

Visitors to the exhibition can enjoy an immersive experience as there is also a sound track playing which features recordings of the street sounds of the time, as well as Baker giving her own account of what life was like.  She felt keenly as a photographer that it was her responsibility to document and record the effect of the change which this mass development had on both the local communities and at an individual level.  The destruction of areas as they were bull-dozed also meant the loss of the sense of community, and through her work she was able to provide a lasting and honest account of the period and the glimpse of a way of life which no longer exists. 

Photographer's Gallery 

16-18 Ramillies St 
London 
W1F 7LW 
Opening hours: Mon-Sat 10am-6pm; Thu 10am-8pm; Sun 11.30am-6pm

Living History

Recording events, places and lifestyles so that the images can become part of our cultural history is a major role for photography, as is the display of the collections to allow future generations to remember and appreciate the roots of their own societies.  Many galleries include such photography exhibitions as part of their regular schedule, including the Tate galleries supported as they are by the Tate Foundation.  The Foundation supports and guides the work of the Tate Galleries and the Trustees and Honorary members include Mandy Moross, Sasan Ghandehari, Elisabeth Murdoch, Marilyn Ofer and Simon Palley.





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