Down the road from
Notting
Dale
Roger
Mayne is noted for producing some of the most important photographs
of London life in the late fifties. In March he will exhibit a
very personal collection of family photographs at the Town Mill
in Lyme Regis.
Its not everyday that one gets the opportunity to leaf through
a body of unpublished work from a great artist. But as I sat chatting
to Lyme Regis photographer Roger Mayne, looking through a mock
up of a new book of his photographs he has compiled, I found myself
contemplating selling my home to raise the money to publish it.
Much as I enjoy my copy of his book Photographs, Roger Mayne,
which was published by Jonathan Cape in 2001, I have no doubt
that this thoughtfully put together collection of his work spanning
many years and subjects would find an eager and appreciative audience.
Roger Mayne, now a veteran of more than thirty years in Lyme Regis
and a trustee of the Town Mill, is busy working on selections
and prints for an exhibition of his lesser known work to be shown
there at the end of March. Entitled Grandpas Eye, the exhibition
concentrates on some of the more personal photographs he has taken
of his grandchildren over the years. Capturing very personal moments,
with a photographers vision and a parents love, he
has produced a range of images that will intrigue and delight
those who visit the exhibition.
Roger is perhaps best known for a series of photographs taken
in Southam Street in Londons Notting Dale (now Notting Hill)
from 1956 to 1961, which captured the spirit of the late fifties.
The Southam Street collection, which is seen as a definitive archive
from the period, is of national importance and is now held by
the Victoria and Albert Museum in London.
Although the street was demolished in 1969 the work was brought
to a new audience in the 90s when it was used extensively for
concert backdrops, record sleeves and press-adverts by the singer
Morrissey. One of the images was used on the cover of novelist
Colin MacInnes book Absolute Beginners (1959), which is set in
the area around Southam Street.
Although now more than fifty years old the Southam Street photographs
have become an indelible part of how people perceive Roger Mayne
as a photographer. They are in many ways a noose around his neck.
In a sense I put it round my own neck says Roger.
What happened was - Ive always been an inveterate
maker of albums - so I made an album of Southam Street, because
it was the most prolific. I tended to have favourite streets.
Southam Street had the most photographs, so I made an album of
it. Then I had 56 pages given to me in a magazine so I condensed
the photographs to fit the 56 pages. It went to about 1500 copies.
When the V&A exhibition came up, a similar situation happened.
I re-edited the Southam Street and of course by doing that I drew
all this attention, and I just saddled myself since with Southam
Street. Some of the people photographed came to the V&A opening.
The Evening Standard did a feature on the street of Roger
Maynes exhibition and they were interested to hear
comments from some of the people who lived on the street. They
got some - in fact quite a lot. Then The Sunday Times did a feature
before the exhibition and some of the families photographed called
me and came to the opening.
Rogers unique vision and ability to see the composition
of what is before him, is to many, the mystery of photography.
To capture the essence of something that actually happened may
seem a god-given talent but it also takes a certain amount of
training. Speaking about how one develops the ability to see the
composition he says. When I came to London I endlessly went
to galleries - I soaked myself in visual art, cinema as well -
I got it into my system. You almost feel that the moment is significant
without knowing necessarily why. Terry Frost says If you
know before you look then you cannot see for knowing. Its
not an intellectual process. It is not simply capturing a moment.
It is what is in front of me - it is a formal shape. If the formal
shape is interesting, it makes the photograph possible to look
at again and again and again. A lot of news photography for instance
- what is in front of the camera - it can be tough, it can be
sensational, interesting, all sorts of things, but it lacks a
compositional element.
His attitude to press photographs today elicits another Terry
Frost quote. Terry Frost made a comment about press photographers
says Roger (who himself purchased a Terry Frost when he was an
up and coming painter in 1953). Press photographers
take photographs as if Cezanne had never lived! according
to Frost. So many of the journalistic pictures today have a feeling
that they have been put in front of an interesting background,
but you can see that they are having their photograph taken.
Sometime ago Roger Mayne had an exhibition at the Arnolfini Gallery.
It was in sections, based on themes. One gallery owner asked to
show the section on family. His reason? He said that this is the
way children should be photographed but never are.
Roger Maynes exhibition at the Town Mill is from 31 March
- 29 April, 11-5PM Tuesday to Sunday.