Christopher Horace Steele-Perkins (born 28 July 1947) is a British photographer and member of Magnum Photos, best known for his depictions of Africa, Afghanistan, England, Northern Ireland, and Japan.
Life and career
editSteele-Perkins was born in Rangoon, Burma, in 1947 to a British father and a Burmese mother; but his father left his mother and took the boy to England at the age of two.[1] He grew up in Burnham-on-Sea.[2] He went to Christ's Hospital and for one year studied chemistry at the University of York before leaving for a stay in Canada. Returning to Britain, he joined the University of Newcastle upon Tyne, where he served as photographer and picture editor for a student magazine. After graduating in psychology in 1970 he started to work as a freelance photographer, specializing in the theatre, while he also lectured in psychology.[citation needed]
By 1971, Steele-Perkins had moved to London and become a full-time photographer, with particular interest in urban issues, including poverty. He went to Bangladesh in 1973 to take photographs for relief organizations;[3] some of this work was exhibited in 1974 at the Camerawork Gallery (London). In 1973–74, he taught photography at the Stanhope Institute and the North East London Polytechnic.[3]
In 1975, Steele-Perkins joined the Exit Photography Group with the photographers Nicholas Battye and Paul Trevor, and there continued his examination of urban problems: Exit's earlier booklet Down Wapping[4] had led to a commission by the Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation to increase the scale of their work, and in six years they produced 30,000 photographs as well as many hours of taped interviews.[5] This led to the 1982 book, Survival Programmes. Steele-Perkins' work included depiction from 1975 to 1977 of street festivals, and prints from London Street Festivals were bought by the British Council and exhibited with Homer Sykes' Once a Year and Patrick Ward's Wish You Were Here; Steele-Perkins' depiction of Notting Hill has been described as being in the vein of Tony Ray-Jones.[6]
Steele-Perkins became an associate of the French agency Viva in 1976, and three years after this, he published his first book, The Teds, an examination of teddy boys that is now considered a classic of documentary and even fashion photography.[7] He curated photographs for the Arts Council collection, and co-edited a collection of these, About 70 Photographs.[citation needed]
In 1977, he made a brief detour into "conceptual" photography, working with the photographer Mark Edwards to collect images from the ends of rolls of 35mm film taken by themselves and others. (These were exposures taken immediately after loading a fresh film and without focusing or aiming, in order to wind along the fogged film leader and ensure that the film in position for the first wanted exposure was unfogged.) Forty were exhibited in "Film Ends".[8]
Work documenting poverty in Britain took Steele-Perkins to Belfast, which he found to be poorer than Glasgow, London, Middlesbrough, or Newcastle, as well as experiencing "a low-intensity war".[9]
Of his experiences in Northern Ireland, he was quoted as saying: "I intended to cover the situation from the standpoint of the underdog, the downtrodden: I was not neutral and was not interested in capturing it so… I began to see that my work in Northern Ireland had always been a celebration of the resilience and unyielding way that the Catholic community resisted."[10]
He stayed in the Catholic Lower Falls area, first squatting and then living in the flat of a man he met in Belfast. His photographs of Northern Ireland appeared in a 1981 book written by Wieland Giebel. Thirty years later, he returned to the area to find that its residents had new problems and fears; the later photographs appear within Magnum Ireland.[9] Both the earlier and the later photographs are collected in The Troubles (2021).
Steele-Perkins photographed wars and disasters in the Third World, leaving Viva in 1979 to join Magnum Photos as a nominee (on encouragement by Josef Koudelka), and becoming an associate member in 1981 and a full member in 1983.[11] He continued to work in Britain, taking photographs published as The Pleasure Principle, an examination (in colour) of life in Britain but also a reflection of himself. With Peter Marlow, he successfully pushed for the opening of a London office for Magnum; the proposal was approved in 1986.[12]
Steele-Perkins made four trips to Afghanistan in the 1990s, sometimes staying with the Taliban, the majority of whom "were just ordinary guys" who treated him courteously.[13] Together with James Nachtwey and others, he was also fired on, prompting him to reconsider his priorities: in addition to the danger of the front line:
. . . you never get good pictures out of it. I've yet to see a decent front-line war picture. All the strong stuff is a bit further back, where the emotions are.[14]
A book of his black and white images, Afghanistan, was published first in French, and later in English and in Japanese. The review in the Spectator read in part:
These astonishingly beautiful photographs are more moving than can be described; they hardly ever dwell on physical brutalities, but on the bleak rubble and desert of the country, punctuated by inexplicable moments of formal beauty, even pastoral bliss . . . the grandeur of the images comes from Steele-Perkins never neglecting the human, the individual face in the great crowd of history.
The book and the travelling exhibition of photographs were also reviewed favorably in the Guardian, Observer, Library Journal, and London Evening Standard.[16]
Steele-Perkins served as the President of Magnum from 1995 to 1998.[17] One of the annual meetings over which he presided was that of 1996, to which Russell Miller was given unprecedented access as an outsider and which Miller has described in some detail.[18]
With his second wife the presenter and writer Miyako Yamada (山田美也子), whom he married in 1999,[19] Steele-Perkins has spent much time in Japan, publishing two books of photographs: Fuji, a collection of views and glimpses of the mountain inspired by Hokusai's Thirty-six Views of Mount Fuji; and Tokyo Love Hello, scenes of life in the city. Between these two books he also published a personal visual diary of the year 2001, Echoes.
Work in South Korea included a contribution to a Hayward Gallery touring exhibition of photographs of contemporary slavery, "Documenting Disposable People", in which Steele-Perkins interviewed and made black-and-white photographs of Korean "comfort women". "Their eyes were really important to me: I wanted them to look at you, and for you to look at them", he wrote. "They're not going to be around that much longer, and it was important to give this show a history."[20] The photographs were published within Documenting Disposable People: Contemporary Global Slavery.[n 1]
Steele-Perkins returned to England for a project by the Side Gallery on Durham's closed coalfields (exhibited within "Coalfield Stories"[21]); after this work ended, he stayed on to work on a depiction (in black and white) of life in the north-east of England, published as Northern Exposures.[22]
In 2008 Steele-Perkins won an Arts Council England grant for "Carers: The Hidden Face of Britain", a project to interview those caring for their relatives at home, and to photograph the relationships.[23] Some of this work has appeared in The Guardian,[24] and also in his book England, My England, a compilation of four decades of his photography that combines photographs taken for publication with much more personal work: he does not see himself as having a separate personality when at home.[25] "By turns gritty and evocative," wrote a reviewer in The Guardian, "it is a book one imagines that Orwell would have liked very much."[26]
Steele-Perkins has two sons, Cedric, born 16 November 1990, and Cameron, born 18 June 1992. With his marriage to Miyako Yamada he has a stepson, Daisuke and a granddaughter, Momoe.
Publications
editPhotobooks by Steele-Perkins
edit- The Teds. London: Travelling Light/Exit, 1979; ISBN 0-906333-05-9. With text by Richard Smith.
- New edition. Stockport: Dewi Lewis, 2003; ISBN 1-899235-44-2.
- Revised larger format edition. Stockport: Dewi Lewis, 2018; ISBN 978-1-911306-05-4
- The Pleasure Principle. Manchester: Cornerhouse Books, 1989; ISBN 0-948797-50-9
- Afghanistan. London: Westzone Publishing, 2000; ISBN 1-903391-13-X[n 2]
- Afghanistan. Paris: Marval, 2000;ISBN 2862342971 (in French)
- Afuganisutan: Shashinshū (アフガニスタン 写真集) / Afghanistan. Tokyo: Shōbunsha, 2001; ISBN 4794965168 (in Japanese)
- Fuji: Images of Contemporary Japan. New York: Umbrage; London: Turnaround, 2002; ISBN 1-884167-12-8
- Echoes. London: Trolley, 2003; ISBN 1-904563-11-2
- Tokyo Love Hello. Paris: Editions Intervalles, 2006; ISBN 2916355057 Photographs taken in Tokyo, 1997–2006. With an introduction by Donald Richie, texts and captions in French and English.
- Northern Exposures: Rural Life in the North East. Newcastle upon Tyne: Northumbria University Press, 2007; ISBN 1-904794-20-3. Black and white photographs taken from 2002 and after.
- England, My England: A Photographer's Portrait. Newcastle upon Tyne: Northumbria Press, 2009; ISBN 1-904794-38-6. Photographs 1969–2009, combining the documentary and the personal.[27]
- England, My England: A Magnum Photographer's Portrait. Carmarthen: McNidder & Grace, 2023; ISBN 9781904794387. Reworked, paperback edition, with an introduction by David Elliott.[28][29]
- Fading Light: Portraits of Centenarians. Alnwick: McNidder & Grace, 2012; ISBN 978-0-85716-032-4.[30]
- A Place in the Country. Stockport: Dewi Lewis, 2014; ISBN 978-1-907893-62-9[n 3]
- The New Londoners. Stockport: Dewi Lewis, 2019; ISBN 978-1-911306-45-0[n 4]
- The Troubles. [Liverpool]: Bluecoat Press, 2021. With an essay by Paul McCorry; ISBN 9781908457653[n 5]
Zines by Steele-Perkins
edit- Wolverhampton 1978. Southport: Café Royal Books, 2019. With an introduction by Francis Hodgson. Edition of 500.[n 6]
- Brixton 1973–1975. Southport: Café Royal Books, 2019. With an introduction by Francis Hodgson. Edition of 250.[n 7]
Other book contributions
edit- Young British Photographers. London: Co-optic Photography, [1975]. Photographs by, among others, Valerie Wilmer, Brian Griffin, Paddy Summerfield, Homer Sykes, and Simon Marsden. Co-edited with Mark Edwards.
- About 70 Photographs. London: Arts Council of Great Britain, 1980; ISBN 0-7287-0208-8 (paperback); ISBN 0-7287-0209-6 (hardback). Steele-Perkins and William Messer comment on about seventy photographs by other photographers.
- La Grèce au présent, ed. Luce M. Albiges. Paris: Bibliothèque Publique d'Information, Centre Georges Pompidou, 1981. (in French) Exhibition catalogue, works by various photographers.
- Das kurze Leben des Brian Stewart: Alltag im irischen Bürgerkrieg. West Berlin: Elefanten Press, 1981; ISBN 3-88520-051-1. Text by Wieland Giebel. Steele-Perkins contributes eighteen (18) photographs.
- El Salvador: Work of Thirty Photographers, ed. Carolyn Forché et al. New York: Writers & Readers, 1982; ISBN 0-86316-064-6 (paperback); ISBN 0-86316-063-8.
- Survival Programmes: in Britain's Inner Cities (with Nicholas Battye and Paul Trevor, as the Exit Photography Group). Milton Keynes: Open University Press, 1982; ISBN 0-335-10111-9.
- Beirut: Frontline Story. London: Pluto Press; Trenton, N.J.: Africa World Press, 1983; ISBN 0-86104-397-9. Text by Selim Nassib and Caroline Tisdall, photographs by Steele-Perkins.
- The Indelible Image: Photographs of War, 1846 to the Present, ed. Frances Fralin. New York: Abrams, 1985; ISBN 0-8109-1110-8. Catalogue of the exhibition at the Corcoran Gallery.
- In Our Time: The World as Seen by Magnum Photographers. New York: Norton, 1989; ISBN 0-393-02767-8. London: André Deutsch, 1993; ISBN 0-233-98822-X. Text by William Manchester et al.
- Way to Gods: Magunamu Foto: Kumano kodō, Santiago e no michi (WAY to GODS マグナム フォト 熊野古道 サンティアゴへの道), ed. Nagasaka Yoshimitsu (永坂嘉光). Tokyo: Kawade Kobō Shinsha, 1999; ISBN 4-309-90293-6. (in Japanese) (Additional title on front cover: Ancient Kumano Roads and Roads to Santiago.) Contains photographs by Steele-Perkins of Kumano Kodō (pp. 103-120); as well as photographs of Kumano kodō by Elliott Erwitt and Peter Marlow, and of camino de Santiago by Marlow and Harry Gruyaert.
- Magnum°. London: Phaidon, 2000; ISBN 0-7148-9065-0. (Also called Magnum Degrees.) Steele-Perkins edited this collection of work by Magnum photographers during the last decade or so of the twentieth century. His own photographs of Tiananmen Square, the effects of war in Somalia, Uganda and Afghanistan, and the work of Abdul Sattar Edhi are included.
- Arms against Fury: Magnum Photographers in Afghanistan, ed. Robert Dannin. New York: PowerHouse, 2002; ISBN 1-57687-151-7; London: Thames & Hudson, 2002; ISBN 0-500-54263-5.
- Magnum Football (distributed in the US as Magnum Soccer). London: Phaidon, 2002; ISBN 0-7148-4236-2. London: Phaidon, 2005; ISBN 0-7148-4521-3. With other Magnum photographers. Contains eight photographs by Steele-Perkins.
- The Face of Human Rights, ed. Walter Kälin et al. Baden, Switzerland: Lars Müller, 2004; ISBN 3-03778-017-7. Steele-Perkins contributes ten or more photographs.
- Magnum Stories, ed. Chris Boot. London: Phaidon, 2004; ISBN 0714842451. Steele-Perkins' story on famine in Somalia in August 1992 appears with an introduction by him on pp. 442-49.
- Magnum Ireland, ed. Brigitte Lardinois and Val Williams. New York: Thames & Hudson, 2005; ISBN 0-500-54303-8. With other Magnum photographers. Steele-Perkins' 1978 photographs of West Belfast are on pp. 116-23; his photographs of the Milltown Cemetery attack (West Belfast, 1988) are on pp. 160-63.
- Euro visions: Chypre, Estonie, Hongrie, Lettonie, Lituanie, Malte, Pologne, République Tchèque, Slovaquie, Slovenie par dix photographes de Magnum. Paris: Magnum, 2005; ISBN 2-84426-293-7.
- Magnum Photos: Euro Visions, the New Europeans by Ten Magnum Photographers. Göttingen: Steidl, 2006; ISBN 3-86521-223-9. English translation. Steele-Perkins' photographs of Slovakia appear on pp. 152-61, with one page for each of ten themes; an interview with him precedes the photographs.[n 8]
- United Opus, ed. Justyn Barnes. London: Kraken Opus, 2006; ISBN 1-905794-03-7, ISBN 1-905794-00-2. With other photographers and writers. A book about Manchester United F.C.[31]
- How We Are: Photographing Britain from the 1840s to the Present, ed. Val Williams and Susan Bright. London: Tate Publishing, 2007; ISBN 978-1-85437-714-2.
- Magunamu ga totta Tōkyō (マグナムが撮った東京) / Tokyo Seen by Magnum Photographers. Tokyo: Magnum Photos Tokyo, 2007.
- Magnum Magnum: with 413 photographs in colour and duotone, ed. Brigitte Lardinois. London: Thames & Hudson, 2007; ISBN 978-0-500-54342-9. London: Thames & Hudson, 2008; ISBN 0-500-54366-6 (in English) pp. 144-49 is a selection of Steele-Perkins' photographs by Bruno Barbey; elsewhere, he presents a selection of photographs taken by Alex Webb.
- Ces images qui nous racontent le monde, ed. Éric Godeau. Paris: Albin Michel, 2007; ISBN 2-226-15219-9 (in French). With other Magnum photographers.
- Darfur: Twenty Years of War and Genocide in Sudan, ed. Leora Kahn. New York: PowerHouse, 2007; ISBN 1-57687-385-4 (hard). New York: PowerHouse, 2008; ISBN 1-57687-415-X (paper). Photographs taken by Steele-Perkins in 1991 and by seven others.
- Documenting Disposable People: Contemporary Global Slavery. London: Hayward Publishing, 2008; ISBN 978-1-85332-264-8. The book of the exhibition.
- Korea: As Seen by Magnum Photographers. New York: Norton, 2009; ISBN 978-0-393-06774-3. Steele-Perkins was one of twenty photographers who combined to photograph South Korea from 2006 to 2007.
- Chris Steele-Perkins Issue 44 (October 2019) of Magnum La Storia Le Immagini (ISSN 2532-733X). Milan: Hachette Fascicoli. With texts by Rosa Carnevale and David Clark.
CD-ROMs
edit- Za Wākusu (ザ・ワークス) / The Works. Tokyo: Media Towns, 1999. 180 photographs by Steele-Perkins, from 1980 to 1994, of Chad, Ethiopia, Kenya, Namibia, Somalia, South Africa, Sudan, Tanzania, Uganda, Zaire and Zimbabwe.
Archives
editFilms
edit- Video Diaries: Dying for Publicity. 1993, 70 minutes. Steele-Perkins reflects on his reporting of and role in scenes of suffering.[32]
Exhibitions
editSolo
edit- "The Face of Bengal". Camerawork Gallery (London), 1974.[33]
- "The Teds". Camerawork Gallery (London), 1979.[33]
- "Beirut". Camerawork Gallery (London), 1983.[33]
- "Famine in Africa". Barbican Art Gallery (London), 1985.[33]
- "Lebanon". Magnum Gallery (Paris), 1985.[33]
- "South Africa". Fnac (Paris), 1986.[33]
- "The Pleasure Principle". Fnac (Paris), 1990.[33]
- Photographs of Britain. Aperture Foundation (New York), May 1991.[34]
- "Africa, Work in Progress". Visa pour l'image (Perpignan), 1992.[35]
- "Nomansland". Photo Gallery International (Tokyo), August–September 1999.[36]
- "Afghanistan". Visa pour l'image (Perpignan), 1999.[37]
- "Notes from Afghanistan". Side Gallery (Newcastle), September–October 2000.[38] Ffotogallery (Cardiff), August (?) – September 2000.[39]
- "Fuji". Midlands Arts Centre (Birmingham), January–March 2002.[40]
- "Photographs of Mt Fuji". Aberystwyth Arts Centre (Aberystwyth), May–June 2002.[41]
- "Fuji". Impressions Gallery (York), August–September 2002.[42]
- "Fuji". Granship (Shizuoka City), May–June 2002.[43]
- "The Teds". Gallery 292 (New York City), March 2003.[44]
- "The Teds: From the Originals to the Plastics". Stephen Daiter Gallery (Chicago), January–February 2004.[45]
- "Echoes". Leica Gallery Tokyo (Ginza, Tokyo), August–September 2005.[46]
- "Hinterland". Side Gallery (Newcastle), April–May 2006.[47]
- "Haswell Plough to Harajuku". Host Gallery (London), June–July 2007.[48]
- "Northern Exposures". Northumbria University Gallery, 2007.[49]
- "Fuji". Porta Praetoria (Aosta), as part of the Mountain Photo Festival, August–September 2008.[50]
- "England My England". Kings Place Gallery (London), June–July 2010.[51]
- "For Love of the Game". Third Floor Gallery (Cardiff), June–July 2010. Photographs of football in Japan, England, and Ghana.[52]
- "Northern Exposures". Galleries Inc at Central Square North (Newcastle), January–February 2011.[53]
- "The Pleasure Principle". Open Eye Gallery (Liverpool), November–December 2011.[54]
- "Centenarians". University Gallery, Northumbria University (Newcastle), October–November 2012.[55]
Group or shared
edit- "The Inquisitive Eye". ICA (London), 1974.[8]
- "Il Regno Unito si diverte". British Council, Milan, 1981. (With Homer Sykes and Patrick Ward.)[56]
- "Maritime England". Photographers' Gallery (London), 1982.[8]
- "The Other Britain". National Theatre (London), and touring in Britain, 1982.[57]
- "El Salvador: Work of Thirty Photographers". ICP (New York), 1984.[58]
- "The Indelible Image". Corcoran Gallery (Washington, D.C.), 1985.[8]
- "In Our Time". A Magnum Photos exhibition. World tour, 1990.[8]
- "A Terrible Beauty". Artists Space (New York), 1994.[8]
- "Our Turning World". Barbican Art Gallery (London), December 1999 – March 2000. With other Magnum photographers.[59]
- "Magnum Style". Staley-Wise Gallery (New York), April–June 2004. ("Style is evident in body language, original dress, and physical beauty"; with other Magnum photographers.)[60]
- "Acqua fonte di vita". Fondazione Luciana Matalon (Milan), May–June 2004. (With ten other photographers.) An exhibition showing the importance of water.[61]
- "Magnum Football". Millennium Point (Birmingham), May–August 2004. (With other Magnum photographers.)[62] And (also as "Planet Football", "Weltsprach Fußball", "Världsspråket fotboll" and "Fotbollens språk") at many other places around the world until 2008.[63]
- "Magnum Stories". The Guardian Newsroom (London), November–December 2004. With many other Magnum photographers; an exhibition to coincide with publication of the book Magnum Stories.[64]
- Exhibition of new acquisitions, Galleria Fnac Milano (Milan), May–June 2005.[65]
- "NorthSouthEastWest: A 360° View of Climate Change". (With nine other Magnum photographers.) Science Museum (London), March 2005; and many cities worldwide until 2006.[66]
- "Teenage Kicks: The Mods 'n' Rockers Generation". Photographers' Gallery (London), 2005–2007.[67]
- "Euro Visions: The New Europeans as Seen by Magnum Photographers". Centre Georges Pompidou (Paris), September–October 2005. Steele-Perkins presented photographs of Slovakia.[68] Ujazdów Castle (Warsaw), October–November 2006.[69]
- "El Salvador: Work of Thirty Photographers". ICP (New York), September–November 2005. The exhibition of 1984.[70]
- "Euro Visions: The New Europeans by Twelve Magnum Photographers". Royal Museums of Fine Arts of Belgium (Brussels), March–July 2007. The earlier exhibition augmented by photographs (by Bruno Barbey and Paolo Pellegrin) of Bulgaria and Romania.[71]
- "The Coast Exposed". Queen's House (Greenwich, London), and smaller versions elsewhere in the UK.[72]
- "I Shot Norman Foster". The Yard (The Architecture Foundation, London), November 2005 – January 2006. The architecture of Norman Foster.[73] Steele-Perkins photographed the London Gherkin, "hiding it within the chaos of the City's streets, in similar fashion to his Mount Fuji series".[74]
- "After Image: Social Documentary Photography in the 20th century". NGV International (Melbourne), November 2006 – April 2007. A number of photographers, from the 1870s to the 1980s.[75]
- "Survival Programmes: In Britain's Inner Cities Between 1974 and 1979". (With Nicholas Battye and Paul Trevor.) Side Gallery (Newcastle), January–March 2007.[5]
- "Tokyo Seen by Magnum Photographers". Tokyo Metropolitan Museum of Photography (Ebisu, Tokyo), March–May 2007.[76]
- "To the Dogs". Presentation House Gallery (Vancouver), June–August 2007.[77]
- "No Such Thing as Society: Photography in Britain 1968–1987." Aberystwyth Arts Centre, March 2008; Tullie House (Carlisle), May 2008; Ujazdów Castle (Warsaw), November 2008.[78]
- "Darfur: Photojournalists Respond." With Lynsey Addario, Pep Bonet, Colin Finlay, Ron Haviv, Olivier Jobard, Kadir van Lohuizen, and Sven Torfinn. Holocaust Museum Houston, March–August 2008.[79] JFK High School (Plainview, New York), Boston Public Library, University of Arkansas (Fayetteville), Idaho Historical Museum (Boise), Illinois Holocaust Museum and Education Center (Skokie), University of New Hampshire (Durham), Barness Family Jewish Community Center (Chandler, Arizona), 2008–10.[80]
- "Bitter Fruit: Pictures from Afghanistan". (With other Magnum photographers.) Magnum Print Room (London), 2009.[81]
- "Disposable People: Contemporary Global Slavery". (With seven other Magnum photographers.) Southbank Centre (London), and five other locations in England and Wales, 2009–2010. Steele-Perkins shows portraits of Korean "comfort women".[82]
- "The Other Britain Revisited: Photographs from New Society". Victoria and Albert Museum (London), May–September 2010.[57]
- "Facts of Life / British Documentary Photography". Photomonth, National Museum, Kraków, August–November 2010. British photography 1974–1997.[83]
- "Mass Photography: Blackpool through the Camera", Grundy Art Gallery (Blackpool), 2011.[84]
- "Dokyumentarī Fuji" (ドキュメンタリー富士) / "Documentary Fuji", Shizuoka City Tokaido Hiroshige Museum of Art (Shizuoka City), July–September 2013. An exhibition of photographs by Steele-Perkins and prints by Hiroshige.[85][86]
As co-curator
edit- "Young British Photographers". Photographers' Gallery (London), 1975. (Co-curator, with Mark Edwards.)[87]
- "Film Ends". Travelling in Britain, 1977. (Co-selector, with Mark Edwards.)[8]
Collections
edit- Arts Council of Great Britain[33]
- Photographers' Gallery (London)[33]
- British Library of Political and Economic Science (London)[88]
- Victoria and Albert Museum (London)[89]
- Tate (London and elsewhere)[90]
- Side Gallery (Newcastle)[88]
- National Media Museum (Bradford)[33]
- National Portrait Gallery (London)[91]
- Irish Museum of Modern Art (Dublin)[92]
- Bibliothèque nationale de France (Paris)[33]
- Fnac (Paris)[93]
- Tokyo Fuji Art Museum (Hachiōji, Tokyo)[33]
- National Gallery of Victoria (Melbourne)[75]
- Corcoran Gallery of Art (Washington, DC)[92]
Awards
edit- 1988: Oskar Barnack Award (Leica and World Press Photo), for a story on Thalidomide victims[94][95][96]
- 1988: Tom Hopkinson Prize for British Photojournalism (Photographers' Gallery)[97]
- 1989: Robert Capa Gold Medal (International Center of Photography)[97]
- 2000: World Press Photo award, "Daily Life" category[98]
- 2008: Terence Donovan Award (Royal Photographic Society)[99]
- 2009: Shortlisted for the Prix Pictet for Mount Fuji[100]
- 2014: Honorary Fellowship of The Royal Photographic Society.[101]
Notes
edit- ^ For bibliographic detail see the list of publications. Samples can be seen in Chris Steele-Perkins, "Comfort Women", The Drawbridge, no. 13 (Summer 2009). Retrieved 13 January 2010.
- ^ "Afghanistan", The New Yorker, 1 October 2001. Retrieved 15 March 2009.
- ^ Dewi Lewis's page about A Place in the Country.
- ^ Website about the book and related exhibitions. Dewi Lewis's page about The New Londoners.
- ^ Bluecoat Press's page about The Troubles.
- ^ Café Royal Books' page about Wolverhampton 1978.
- ^ Café Royal Books' page about Brixton 1973–1975.
- ^ For comments on Steele-Perkins' work, see John Petrenko, "Chris Steele-Perkins", John Petrenko Photography and Art Blog, 2 November 2009. Retrieved 21 January 2010.
References
edit- ^ Unless otherwise noted, biographical information comes from the profile of Steele-Perkins in Contemporary Authors vol. 211 (Farmington Hills, Mich.: Gale, 2003; ISBN 0-7876-6635-1), pp. 378-81.
- ^ "The Teds are back in town – as Chris Steele-Perkins' photographs go on show". TheGuardian.com. 10 October 2016.
- ^ a b William Manchester et al., In Our Time: The World as Seen by Magnum Photographers (New York: Norton, 1989; ISBN 0-393-02767-8), p. 453.
- ^ The booklet states that "Exit is a collective of four photographers: Nicholas Battye, Diane 'Hank' Olson, Alex Slotzkin and Paul Trevor"
- ^ a b "Tales of Survival"[permanent dead link ], British Journal of Photography, 10 January 2007. Retrieved 23 March 2009.
- ^ David Alan Mellor, No Such Thing as Society: Photography in Britain 1967–1987: From the British Council and the Arts Council Collection (London: Hayward Publishing, 2007; ISBN 978-1-85332-265-5), p. 52. Mellor talks of the "international touring exhibition England at Play; this may have been an alternative English title for Il Regno Unito si diverte and it is the subtitle of Ward's book, Wish You Were Here.
- ^ Documentary: Page about The Teds, Magnum Photos. Retrieved 23 March 2009. Fashion: Max Décharné, "Max Décharné's top 10 London fashion books", The Guardian, 22 November 2005. Retrieved 15 March 2009.
- ^ a b c d e f g Profile in Contemporary Authors vol. 211.
- ^ a b "War and Peace: Life in Belfast after the Troubles"[dead link ], Times (London), 12 July 2008. Retrieved 12 March 2010.
- ^ "The Troubles in Northern Ireland, 1978 Through the Lens of Chris Steel-Perkins". 5 September 2021.
- ^ Russell Miller, Magnum: Fifty Years at the Front Line of History (New York: Grove, 1998; ISBN 0-8021-3653-2), p. 268.
- ^ Miller, Magnum, pp. 268-70.
- ^ "Witness: The Taliban are seen as extremists, but photographer Chris Steele-Perkins has captured their humanity", Scotland on Sunday, 23 September 2001; quoted in the Contemporary Authors vol. 211 profile of Steele-Perkins.
- ^ Quoted by Miller, Magnum, p.304.
- ^ Philip Hensher, The Spectator, 19 May 2001; quoted in the Contemporary Authors vol. 211 profile.
- ^ Review of Afghanistan by John F. Riddick in the Library Journal, December 2001; Nick Redman, "9 to 5, Afghan Style," Evening Standard, 6 April 2001; Jonathan Jones, "The Guide Thursday: Exhibitions: Chris Steele-Perkins", The Guardian, 17 August 2000. Each of the three is quoted in the Contemporary Authors vol. 211 profile. Review by Jason Burke, The Observer, 13 May 2001.
- ^ "Chris Steele-Perkins", Magnum Photos (London: Thames & Hudson, 2008; ISBN 0-500-41094-1), unpaginated (opp. pl. 65).
- ^ Miller, Magnum, pp. vii–viii, 3–15.
- ^ "Kyapa-shō kameraman ga shuzai Archived 5 August 2012 at archive.today", Hibakusha ga egaita genbaku no e o machikado ni kaesu kai, n.d. (in Japanese) Biography for the 2009 Prix Pictet shortlist. Both accessed 6 January 2010.
- ^ Quoted in Farah Nayeri, "'Comfort Women', exploited maids show slavery's face in photos", Bloomberg News, 8 October 2008. Retrieved 11 January 2010.
- ^ Exhibition notice Archived 7 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine, Side Gallery. Retrieved 19 March 2009.
- ^ Chris Steele-Perkins, foreword to Northern Exposures.
- ^ "Grants for the Arts: December 2008 Awards Archived 10 December 2009 at the Wayback Machine" (PDF file), Arts Council England. Retrieved 13 January 2010.
- ^ Chris Steele-Perkins, "The Hidden Face of Caring", The Guardian, 14 November 2009. Retrieved 13 January 2010.
- ^ Gemma Padley, "Being English: Chris Steele-Perkins, Magnum Photographer", Amateur Photographer, 19–26 December 2009, pp. 25–30. An interview with Steele-Perkins primarily about the book England, My England.
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- ^ "Chris Steele-Perkins: England My England Archived 21 June 2010 at the Wayback Machine", Kings Place Gallery. Pascal Wyse, "Photographer Chris Steele-Perkins's view of England" (slideshow narrated by Steele-Perkins), The Guardian, 30 June 2010. Lillian He, "Review: Art at Kings Place - Sally Soames and Chris Steele-Perkins", Londonist, 29 June 2010. All accessed 2010-07-01.
- ^ Exhibition notice Archived 11 January 2012 at the Wayback Machine, Third Floor Gallery. Joni Karanka, "For Love of the Game Archived 7 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine", artcardiff.com, 2 June 2010. Both accessed 2010-07-01.
- ^ "Galleries Inc at Central Square North – Chris Steele-Perkins: Northern Exposures", NewcastleGateshead. Robert Clark, "Chris Steele-Perkins, Newcastle upon Tyne"; in "This week's new exhibitions", The Guardian, 15 January 2011. Both accessed 15 January 2011.
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- ^ Exhibition notice, Shizuoka City Tokaido Hiroshige Museum of Art. (in Japanese) Accessed 6 November 2013.
- ^ Exhibition notice, Shift. Retrieved 6 November 2013.
- ^ Manchester et al., In Our Time, p.453. The Contemporary Authors vol. 211 profile says Steele-Perkins "was part of" this show but does not specify his role.
- ^ a b "Survival Programmes: Exit Photography Group" (reference code GB 0097 SURVIVAL) at AIM25. Retrieved 17 March 2009.
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- ^ Chris Steele-Perkins within the NPG database. Retrieved 6 March 2009.
- ^ a b Biography for the 2009 Prix Pictet shortlist. Retrieved 6 January 2010.
- ^ "La collection photographique de la Fnac : Images entre histoire et poésie Archived 30 November 2006 at the Wayback Machine", exhibition notice for la Conciergerie, photographie.com, 2004. (in French) Accessed 23 March 2009.
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- ^ "1987, Christopher Steele-Perkins, Individual awards, Oskar Barnack Award", World Press Photo. Retrieved 22 May 2014.
- ^ Manchester et al., In Our Time, p.453.
- ^ a b "The Coast Exposed: Photographers Archived 17 February 2009 at the Wayback Machine". National Maritime Museum. Retrieved 15 March 2009.
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- ^ "Daniel Meadows awarded RPS Fellowship", Cardiff School of Journalism, Media, and Cultural Studies, 22 September 2008. Retrieved 28 March 2009.
- ^ "Chris Steele-Perkins: Mount Fuji", Prix Pictet. Retrieved 1 June 2014.
- ^ "Honorary Fellowships (HonFRPS)". Royal Photographic Society. Archived from the original on 27 January 2017. Retrieved 8 March 2017.
External links
edit- Chris Steele-Perkins, his own website.
- Chris Steele-Perkins at Magnum Photos.