Phil Maxwell’s photographs of London’s East End 1980s

East End article taken from the wonderful Spitalfields Life. Original post can be found here

In 1981, when Phil Maxwell got a job in the East End and moved to London from Liverpool, he found himself living in a council flat in Pauline House at the end of Hanbury St where he lives to this day. “In Liverpool, they told me, ‘You won’t find people in London as friendly, they don’t have the Scouse humour.”” explained Phil, recalling his arrival in East London, “But when I moved here I found that Scouse humor and East End humour are almost the same, produced by similar forces. Just as in Liverpool, you have the river, the dockers, strong trade unions, a history of unemployment and seasonal work – humour developed out of hardship, people were able to laugh at their own demise. The East End was a small world and a wonderful place in those days. The area was a desert, so much corrugated iron, so many bombed out buildings, and many old Jewish people with a great sense of humour.”

Phil Maxwell's photographs of London's East End 1980s

As a teenager, Phil ran away from home in Coventry to Euston, “I stayed two nights at St Anne’s Centre in Soho and I fell in love with the place.” he told me, disclosing the origin of his affection for London.Although he spent his childhood making cameras out of boxes and created a darkroom in his bedroom, Phil’s aspirations were not encouraged at his secondary modern school,”You were basically taught you were useless and you’d be lucky if you got a job in factory,” he admitted regretfully. But it was in Liverpool where he had his first job, as a teacher of religious instruction, that Phil began to take pictures seriously. As he explained, “I was a great admirer of Bill Brandt, Humphrey Spender and Henri Cartier Bresson, and passionate to record the lives of ordinary people.” Living independently for the first time and escaping his catholic upbringing, Phil also came out amongst the teachers at his school and to some of the pupils whose parents he met on the gay scene at this time, which meant that he could no longer continue teaching. “I wasn’t going to be put in a situation where I was forced to be secretive about my sexuality.” he confided to me.

In London, Phil’s work as a media resources officer, preparing visual material for schools, allowed him an income and the time to pursue the photography that was his central concern. At once, he dedicated himself to documenting the lives of working people in the East End, commencing a lifetime’s project that thirty years later has led to the creation of an unparalleled archive of work, both in street photography and as a record of the popular antifascist political movements in London.

“I was obsessed with photography but I never thought I’d be able to make a living. And ultimately I was very lucky, because although I freelanced for some magazines, I never got a job on a major publication – which means that I kept all my negatives. And now I find that I am unique among photographers of my generation because I have complete ownership of my work. In the end, my lack of self-esteem worked to my advantage because it gave me freedom. I’ve found a way of working independently without having the integrity of my work undermined.”, outlined Phil, looking back without regrets upon the evolution of his singular career as a photographer.

The fluent pictures you see here, which serve as an introductory glimpse of his vast archive, are amongst the first Phil took in Spitalfields and the vicinity, after he arrived from Liverpool in 1981. This was the place as he found it – where he discovered his creative and personal freedom – the location which he has photographed ceaselessly throughout the intervening years and continues to photograph today. As well as recording the changes in the neighbourhood, these pictures capture many remarkable personalities that Phil knew personally. Phil’s involvement with his subjects means that he is never merely taking pictures, he is always recording life happening. Every single image is another frame in an ongoing drama, with the same people and places recurring over three decades. For this reason, Phil’s pictures have never contained anonymous faces in the street, because for him these were all the people he lived among every day.

Describing the couple stepping out of Whitechapel Station in the second photo below, Phil explained they lived in the flat below him and, once the wife died, her husband enjoyed the freedom to do all the things he was not allowed to do while she was alive. In the few years that he lived on after his wife’s death, Phil regularly steered him home drunk and left him sleeping in a chair. The demonstrators with bicycles in a lower photo were gathered in Brick Lane in support of Afia Begum, a Bengali woman who was threatened with deportation after her husband died in a fire in 1982.

It is this affectionate yet unsentimental relationship with his subjects that gives Phil Maxwell’s photographs their special quality. As Phil admitted open-heartedly, “I would be nowhere without these people, they are my constant inspiration. I always have a camera in my pocket and whenever I go out I always see something I have never seen before. I love the different cultures and histories that are on the doorstep. Wherever I travel in the world, I always come back and find a little of it here. I’ve always said I couldn’t live anywhere else – such a mixture of class, race, cultures, and aspirations and it’s all here in one go.”

 

Phil Maxwell's photographs of London's East End 1980s Phil Maxwell's photographs of London's East End 1980s Phil Maxwell's photographs of London's East End 1980s Phil Maxwell's photographs of London's East End 1980s Phil Maxwell's photographs of London's East End 1980s Phil Maxwell's photographs of London's East End 1980s

 

 

 

Photographs copyright © Phil Maxwell

Photographic History at The Bishopsgate Institute

The Past People and Streets of East London.

This is a sponsored article on behalf of Bishopsgate Institute.

The Bishopsgate Institute Special Collections Photography

Around the turn of the century in 1900 and afterwards, postcards became a popular and well-used form of communication for many Londoners. They depicted street scenes and iconic images of London’s buildings and environments. This postcard from 1910 shows a Liverpool Street Station unrecognisable to users of its services today.

From fledgling photographers attempting to capture the flourishing docks and shipyards of the Isle of Dogs, to the work of their contemporary counterparts, London’s East End has long provided a source of creative inspiration for those looking to capture the life of the city on film. These evocative images tell the story of the everyday Londoner, and make for a fascinating insight into the history of the city.

The Bishopsgate Institute Special Collections and Archives hold more than half a million such images, with a particular emphasis on street photography in the East End. Ranging from the 1850s onwards, these iconic and unique collections of early photography are a must-see for those looking to understand the social and cultural history of the capital and its people.

The collections were started by the Bishopsgate Institute’s second librarian, Charles W.F. Goss — a collector of the highest order — and they continue to accept images and collections to this day. You can check out a small sample of imagery from the collection below, some of which have been sourced from the most unusual of places, including a set of 1979 US tourist snaps purchased by the Library on eBay.

 The Bishopsgate Institute Special Collections Photography
John Thomson and Adolphe Smith’s 1877 book Street Life in London was one of the first to publish photo documentary of the employment and experiences of everyday Londoners, including this image of a convicts’ home in Drury Lane, described in the book as being ‘…frequented by hungry convicts or ticket-of-leave men, who find kindly welcome and may, if they choose, receive wholesome advice from the owner of this strange establishment’.
The Bishopsgate Institute Special Collections Photography
The Institute holds a collection of over 4,000 glass photographic slides of London covering the period from the 1880s to the 1950s, digitised during a project from 2006 to 2009. This scene from the collection shows a market stall in Hoxton Street, Shoreditch, although the cause of all the attention is not known.
The Bishopsgate Institute Special Collections Photography
This photo is part of a series of over 20 images taken by Essex studio photographer C. A. Mathew of the streets of Spitalfields in 1912. Although the motives of why he took the photos are of some debate, they remain an important record, documenting this area of London when populated by families and dispelling myths about the levels of poverty in this area of London.
The Bishopsgate Institute Special Collections Photography
The extensive political and radical collections held at Bishopsgate Institute also contain fine examples of London social life, including this wonderful snap of Labour leader George Lansbury on the campaign trail in Bow in the 1930s.
The Bishopsgate Institute Special Collections Photography
The images taken by Hungarian photographer László Moholy-Nagy in Mary Benedetta’s 1936 book The Street Markets of London have now become iconic depictions of street life in the capital at the time. Shown here is a rather fine fellow from Petticoat Lane Market.
The Bishopsgate Institute Special Collections Photography
Dennis Anthony was commissioned to take images of Petticoat Lane Market in the 1960s. His images showing the customers and stall-holders have an almost filmic gaze.
The Bishopsgate Institute Special Collections Photography

My beautiful picture

For over 30 years, photographer Phil Maxwell captured the life and residents of Brick Lane and its environs. His archive, consisting of thousands of images, is now held at the Institute and offers an unparalleled record of the area in a period of rapid change.
The Bishopsgate Institute Special Collections Photography
Between 1990 and 1991, Mark Jackson and Huw Davies decamped to Spitalfields Market to document the workings and characters of the world-famous fruit and vegetable market just as it was about to move to its current home in Hackney Wick. Their legacy of over 5,000 images are now held by the Library.

Exhibition by Alec Byrne

Must see exhibition for 60s and 70s music fans. Unseen photographs of David Bowie, Iggy Pop, Marc Bolan and many more pop icons of the decades.

unseen archive of photographer Alex Byrne

Lovers of Bowie, Bolan or indeed anything to do with the rich pantheon of rock and roll and the equally rich photographic imagery that accompanies it will be veritably salivating at the prospect of London Rocks.

The show at London’s Proud Central presents the unseen archive of photographer Alex Byrne, who came to prominence in the 1960s and 70s, celebrating the passion and grit of the musicians in his impressively starry sphere. He began his career under contract to shoot live acts for NME at just 17 years-old, and rather sickeningly described his then-scheduled as “The Who on Thursday, The Rolling Stones on Saturday, Led Zeppelin on Monday — just incredible’.”

Alongside celebrating Byrne’s clear photographic prowess, the exhibition looks to simultaneously explore the cultural significance of rock ’n’ roll in the 60s and 70s “swinging” London, including Bowie, The Beatles and The Rolling Stones.

Mostly shot in moody black and white – with a notable exception for the gorgeous curls and brilliant pink and yellow smiley t-shirt of Marc Bolan, the images brim with personality; each one really does appear to speak a thousand words about an unprecedentedly exciting cultural moment. “His intuitive approach was of a rock n’ roll mindset,” says the gallery, “favouring candid photography over a studio setting. Byrne’s desire to capture the most powerful imagery saw him battling to the front of crowds and racing home from performances to develop his work through the night.”

The exhibition features many previously unseen photographs, and coincides with the UK launch of Byrne’s book London Rock: The Unseen Archive, distributed by Ebury Publishing.

London Rock: The Unseen Archive by Alec Byrne runs until 28 January at Proud Central London.

unseen archive of photographer Alex Byrne

unseen archive of photographer Alex Byrne

unseen archive of photographer Alex Byrne

unseen archive of photographer Alex Byrne