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Martin Parr & British New Wave Colour Photography. Jodie, Rebecca, Lewis, Kotryna. Martin Parr. Who is Martin Parr?. Born 24 May 1952, Parr is a British documentary photographer, photojournalist and filmmaker.
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Martin Parr & British New Wave Colour Photography Jodie, Rebecca, Lewis, Kotryna
Who is Martin Parr? • Born 24 May 1952, Parr is a British documentary photographer, photojournalist and filmmaker. • Studied photography at Manchester Polytechnic and began pursuing it professionally from the 1970s. • He is known for projects that critique aspects of everyday modern life, particularly suburban, provincial life in England. • He is a member of Magnum photos, an exclusive collective of the most revered photographers in the world.
Martin Parr’s Work • Started out in black and white photography in the mid-1970s, he switched to colour in 1984, the first notable result was ‘Last Resort: Photographs of New Brighton’. • His work is often described as intimate, anthropological and satirical and is heavily inspired by the photographer Weegee. • He often places his subjects under the microscope, exposing their lives and values in ways often involve inadvertent humour. (See: Sign of the Times: A Portrait of the Nation’s Tastes ’92).
Implications OF HIS WORK • Parr addresses themes of consumerism, mass tourism and globalisation with a distinctive wit and sense of irony. • The gaudy and sometimes grotesque imagery of these works seemed to reflect the spirit of Thatcher’s Britain, while echoing the tradition of tacky seaside postcards. • In ‘Common Sense’ (‘95), he uses bright colours and exaggerated close-ups to explore the excesses of contemporary capitalism. • Motifs such as hats, hats, hands , food and dogs are repeated throughout, creating a snatched catalogue or our all too familiar shortcomings.
Anna Fox • Part of British New Wave Photography that appeared in the 1980s • Like Parr she observed the bizarre in the everyday • The Village-she tried to expose the reality behind the ‘picture perfect’ rural Britain • Her photos are at many times grotesque and unflattering with a satirical feeling (such as Hampshire Pram Race 2006) ‘Fox's work…also has an oblique, gothic sensibility that reveals the darkness in apparently ordinary situations.’ – Tina Jackson (Metro)
Hampshire Pram Race 2006 • Photo resembles Diane Arbus’ ‘Identicle Twins’ 1967 in the reading ‘How do we read a photograph’ which implies the concern with identity and difference- however the colour used by fox is vivid to emphasize the abnormality in the so- called normal situations. • Parr differs in this way as his work takes on a humorous and mocking tone but remains light-hearted in his mocking yet appreciation of British culture
'Colour is so immediate…It's more aggressive. It's like, it's today, and not romantic or nostalgic – Anna Fox • London offices in Work Stations (1986/88)
Paul Graham From ‘New Europe’ (1986)
Conclusion • These photographers all used colour documentary to successfully highlight either humour and abnormality in supposedly mundane situations in British life • Do you think that colour lessens the critique of British culture so as to remain satirical rather than merely accusatory? • Do their intentions come across in their work?