Category Archives: Photography

From Pop Art to Community Arts

‘Warhol to Walker’ Exhibition Launch – Thursday July 13th 6-7.30pm

This special exhibition explores the influence print movements have had on Hackney. Starting with the explosion of pop art in the 1960s, the exhibition displays works on loan from the British Museum by celebrated artists including Andy Warhol, Robert Rauschenberg and Kara Walker alongside Hackney artists.

To support the show, Fragile Archivists contributed silk-screen posters from the Chats Palace Archive as well as made a film ‘From Pop Art to Community Arts: Hackney in the 1970s-80s’.

Pop Art Exhibition launch

 

The film is displayed at the Hackney Museum from 11 July till 16 September 2017.
Once the exhibition is over, the film will be available online. Watch this space!

We can’t thank enough our interviewees, the most wonderful Hackney activists, artists and researchers – Jess Baines, Neil Martinson, Alan May, Ingrid Pollard, Red Saunders, Rene Rice and Rebecca Wilson.

From Pop Art to Community Arts

© Asya Gefter

Colin O’Brien and Chats Palace

One day in the early 2000’s I was listening to the tale of Magnum’s discovery of the great Chilean photographer Sergio Larrain from a Hackney photo activist and raconteur. I asked if it was possible that any other significant talents or bodies of work from the mid-20th century remained unknown or overlooked? “Highly unlikely in this day and age” came back the reply.

Well since then there has been the unexpected publishing story of the work of Vivian Maier to name but one. I would also suggest that the late recognition of Colin O’Brien, culminating in the summer of 2015 when his book ‘London Life’ was Amazon’s bestseller in photography is another life to celebrate.

I came across Colin and his work a couple of months after the above conversation. Walking along the chilly London South Bank in December 2006 I spotted a huge black and white print of a Morrissey concert in the Oxo Tower Gallery. Once inside the walls were packed with strong classic black and white images of mainly working class life from London and beyond, portrayed in a straightforward and dignified humanist style. Colin was on hand to chat about his work and offered a portfolio of extra prints where I first saw ‘Lady in a summer dress Chatsworth Road 1980’s’. Benjamin the Chemist plus landmark clock and Percy Ingle the baker were all present and correct in the background. I had walked down that street for 20 years. This was by far the best picture I had seen that summed up the atmosphere of unexpected and quiet beauty that pervaded the relative urban backwater of Homerton and Clapton in those days.

Almost exactly a year on in the late autumn of 2007 Colin installed his exhibition ‘Five decades of East London Photography’ around the downstairs corridor and bar area of Chats Palace. He was delighted that I couldn’t spot which of the prints that he presented in monochrome had actually been printed from colour negatives. (A tough challenge to successfully pull off in a darkroom).

Three large images of the Clerkenwell/Farringdon Road junction were placed above the bar. The alcove walls were similarly adorned with big prints, “Comings and goings in Club Row/Brick Lane 1986” and groupings of children from the series “London Fields travellers kids”. The bar pictures were so popular that Colin agreed to leave them in place for a couple of years after the official exhibition closed. Copies of his images became popular leaving presents for Chats Palace Board and Staff members, to the extent that workers joked of dreading being asked which their ‘favourite O’Brien’ might be. Colin found this quite funny. My personal choice was always “Snow scene New Year’s Eve Clerkenwell 1962” with the isolated single figure crossing the deserted street, composed from an elevated position and constructed with strong diagonals.

Three years later Colin was back at Chats Palace with a new group of pictures, this time of Chatsworth Road. “The last of the real high streets” was a joint project with Clapton writer Jane Eggington and comprised of a series of classic environmental portraits of small business shopkeepers from all over the world. Colin created the work on a digital SLR and grappled with his own digital colour management and printout for the first time. Meanwhile Jane produced a series of poignant pen pictures and anecdotal references to further our understanding of the hard slog contribution of these local businesses during a difficult economic era. Once again the exhibition was extremely popular not least amongst the hundreds of newer residents of Homerton and Clapton who found a sense of orientation of place amongst these photo stories.

Colin once mentioned that he had always wanted to exhibit at The Victoria and Albert Museum and in a way he did get to do that when he worked alongside photographer Asya Gefter and I on a schools based outreach project for The Museum of Childhood in 2011. ‘Playing In and Out’ looked at kids play over the decades and Colin got to show a large selection of his archive in a grid formation in the new front extention to the Museum as well as giving a lively interview session with a class of children from a Tower Hamlets Primary school .

In 2015 Colin became a trustee of Chats Palace and this year a small exhibition of his work was installed in the recently refurbished Blue Room on the first floor of Chats Palace where it will stay for the foreseeable future. As with all his work it shows the working class of London in all its multifarious ethnic and cultural, working and non-working forms. Inquisitive, confident and outward looking. A timely and timeless corrective for the caricatures of 2016. Thank you Colin.

Peter Young
Photochats

The Pepper and The Palace

Fragile Archivists would like to wish everyone all the best for 2016 – the 40th anniversary of the start of Chats Palace.

Look out for our anniversary exhibition later this year. In the meantime here is this month’s Red Pepper magazine’s feature on 40 years of Chats Palace (click on the link to read the full article)!

24 in pictures chats _124 in pictures chats_2

Available half-price from Chats Palace!

The story so far …

Visit our new page of Exhibitions and Talks and don’t forget that ‘Mike Gray – In Black and White’ photography exhibition is at Chats Palace bar throughout the Summer 2015 as well as the ‘Photographer Unknown’ next door in Chats gallery. Have a lovely Summer!

Mike Gray - In Black and White

Photomonth Events

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Photomonth events at Chats Palace

HACKNEY FLASHERS EXPOSED

40th anniversary of a Women’s Photographic Collective

Sunday 12th October, 2pm – 5pm

FREE AND OPEN TO ALL

Sierra Exif JPEG

The Hackney Flashers Collective was active as a feminist agitprop group in London from 1974 to 1980. The group produced two photographic/graphic exhibitions on large panels addressing complex ideas about women’s lives as workers and as mothers, inside and outside the home – Women and Work and Who’s Holding the Baby?

To mark the recent launch of the Hackney Flashers website, the group are calling a meeting of the generations: how did they work as a collective in the 1970s? How is the struggle for the most basic of women’s rights being carried on now, forty years later?
A rare chance to see some of the exhibition panels from the time too!

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Exhibition ‘Photographer Unknown’

OCTOBER 12 – DECEMBER 21

Thursday – Sunday, 12pm – 5pm

A selection from the 40 year old Chats Palace archive portraying Homerton scenes and characters through the ad hoc documentation of a group of voluntary and often uncredited photographers. Portraits range from casual snaps to more formal studies and in passing offer a glimpse of the area, within our living memory.

Photographer unknown grid2

International Women’s day 1988

Welcome to a new season of exhibitions and talks on the early years of Chats Palace and associated local archiving themes. We start by celebrating International Women’s Day by showing this collage from the 1988 Women’s Day event, held in the Chats Bar. If anyone could offer any memories or anecdotes of the meal or tell us about the characters in the pictures, then please do get in touch.

International women's day 1988 copy

It was a good time to be in and around Hackney

Tonight Chats Palace hosts reggae extravaganza celebrating some of the best Queens of Reggae. The Fragile Archivists talked to David Corio about the reggae and blues club scene in the 1970s/80s Hackney.

© David Corio - The Four Aces Club, London 1986

© David Corio – The Four Aces Club, London 1986

David Corio began his professional career in 1978 taking photographs for New Musical Express, followed by The Face, Time Out, and Black Echoes. After a stint as a music writer at City Limits, he worked as a freelance photographer for the Daily Telegraph, The Times, Q, Theatre Royal Stratford, and Greensleeves Records, among others.

“The years since have robbed David’s photos of none of their urgency or elegance and in the instance of fallen stars like Marley, Simone, Fela and Dury, lent them poignancy. The unusual candour of the portraits he produced were a tribute to David’s easy way around people, celebrities or otherwise.”  Neil Spencer, former editor of the NME

Fan at Misty In Roots concert Stockwell, London 1977

© David Corio – Reggae fans, London 1977

You can see David Corio’s photograph of London Reggae fans as part of the current photography exhibition of young people from the Photochats archive at Chats Palace.

for more details and opening hours see “You’re only young once”.

Happy 100th anniversary – May 31st

Launch of poster exhibition from the Fragile Archivists

**You are welcome to see the exhibition throughout the summer and autumn – please contact www.chatspalace.co.uk for opening hours**

   

community arts / free form / chatsworth road market / kingsmead estate / music hall / inclusive theatre / homerton grove adventure playground / pensioner’s club / christmas shows / social benefits / disability arts / cabaret / gigs / political campaigns / hackney marsh fun festival / muppets / notting hill carnival / silkscreen printshop / workshops

The Monkey Stomp Blues present live and direct from the eastern corners of Norfolk the Americana folklore stylings of the Vagaband
in a rare Hackney visit – from 7pm till 11pm ‘ish

http://www.thevagaband.co.uk

https://www.facebook.com/events/517657348292899/

Saturday 1st June

An exhibition of stories by pupils from Kingsmead, Daubeney and Rushmore School celebrating “The secrets of Chatsworth Road”

Storytelling workshops throughout the day – families come and celebrate
http://www.chatspalace.co.uk/whatson

Coming up in the autumn from the Fragile Archivists

a programme of screenings and talks

films about Hackney by John Smith – www.johnsmithfilms.com

Somewhere in Hackney (1980) film and discussion

‘Hackney Captured’ form the Rio Cinema projection room

Miners’ Strike, GLC abolition, the Wapping dispute and more

Christmas 32 years ago…

“On the opening night itself the audience were welcomed and led into a magical forest glade environment. Having been shown to their tree trunk seats, they were entertained by the outlaw community. With the appearance of Robin and Marion the story began. After much plot and counter plot, farce and ducking down rabbit holes, our hero and heroine managed to defeat the evil Sir Guy of Gisbourne.”
Chats Palace Annual Report on Robbin’ the Rich (Dec 14, 1980 – January 10,1981) 

Click here to see the individual posters

1977 The Wonderful Palace of Nod group

1977 – The Wonderful Palace of Nod

1978 The Thief of Ragbag

1978 – The Thief of Ragbag

1979 The Ice Queen group

1979 – The Ice Queen – “Freeze up Mother Brown’

1980 Robbin' the Rich group

1980 – Robbin’ the Rich

1981 Bluebeard group

1981 – Bluebeard – The Barbary Ghost

1982 Burgerbar Galactica group

1982 – Burgerbar Galactica – ‘May the Sauce be with you’

1983 Things that grow bumps in the night group

1983 – Things that grow Bumps in the Night

1984 Sawdust group

1984 – Sawdust – Who stole the fun of the fair?

1985 Junglenuts group

1985 – Junglenuts – On the tail of the loathsome shrine

1986 Apocalympics group

1986 – Apocalympics! – Who cheats wins

The annual christmas pantomime was the major winter event at Chats Palace for many years. Starting with ‘A Hackney’d Show’ in 1976, there followed more than a decade of large scale community productions. The shows created their own traditions including the legendary last night, where the volunteers kept the cast on tenterhooks by adding to the action such things as live ferrets or worse!

Billie Windows Production Team 1988

‘A Wish for Billie Windows’ – Chats Palace Christmas Show 1988
Production team photo: back row – Rebecca Chester (designer), David Wooley (stage manager), Annie Smol (producer); middle row – Gary Horsman (light+sound+design), Tom Jones (publicity), Susan Chester (costumes); front row – Brian Walker (set builder), Malcolm Fredrick (director), John McGovern (link worker), Jack Bradley (writer)

Photographing Hackney

Between 2007 and 2011 Chats Palace hosted a series of photography exhibitions which, in their different ways reflect the changing nature of the Hackney landscape and its communities.

Colin O’Brien’s photograph of the ‘woman in summer dress’ walking along Chatsworth Road (1985) was spotted at his Oxo Tower Gallery 2006 show. This fortuitous connection led first to a survey of O’Brien’s classic monochrome images “Five Decades of East London Photography”. Three years later followed his collaboration with journalist Jane Egginton – “The Last of the Real High Streets” –  where they made environmental portraits and collected anecdotal stories from both longstanding and recently established shopkeepers.

Lady in Summer Dress Chatsworth Road 1980's

© Colin O’Brien

Meanwhile the emerging popularity of Flickr brought the work of Alan Denney to a wider audience. Denney has been quietly observing the daily struggles of Hackney’s population for more than 30 years. Following his exhibition at Chats Palace in 2009 he has gone on to pursue projects around the Hasidic community in Stamford Hill, surveyed what he sees as the alarming and metaphorical cracks in many Hackney buildings and is currently collecting images under the title ‘You don’t see feet like that in Mayfair’.

“I didn’t find taking photographs of strangers easy; it never happened, but my fear was that one day someone would take offence and have a go at me. I tried to take photographs of people who were fully absorbed in what they were doing, not responding to me as a stranger pointing a camera at them.”

Berris Conolly left Hackney in the late 80’s vowing never to return, but not until he had surveyed virtually every street in the borough with his bulky Pentax 6×7 camera. The resulting work, self published a few years ago caught the eye of a younger urban photographer Alex Pink, who revisited many of the austere and empty vistas to digitally record how they had developed, or not, in the intervening decades.

‘Hackney revisited’ was shown at Chats Palace in the autumn of 2011.
Biddle Builders Lower Clapton road
Northwold road
© Berris Conolly and Alex Pink

Collectively the concerns of these photographers, both in terms of timescale and subject may be of interest to readers of this blog. You can see more of their work here: Colin O’Brien, Alan Denney,  Berris Conolly, Alex Pink.

1977/2012 – Street party celebrations

As the Sex Pistols ‘God Save The Queen’ reached number two in the British pop singles chart in June 1977 the nation geared up for a massive cultural celebration.

For the newly established Chats Palace, the local Queen’s Silver Jubilee parties offered an opportunity to make links with the many tenants associations on the surrounding housing estates. The Chats art workers formed a site decoration service to assist with the festivities.

Many of the pictures shown here are from the Priory Court estate on Brooksby’s Walk, Clapton Park and the streets leading down to Hackney Marshes.

Interesting to compare Alan May’s image of the party trestle table and bunting with the more celebrated one taken by Martin Parr on the same day up in Elland in West Yorkshire. 35 years on and the flags and bunting were again out on Chatsworth Road earlier this summer as the Queen proved to be more resilient than 35mm analogue photography!

Click below ‘Continue reading’ for more photographs.

© Chats Palace

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Steve Latner on art in Hackney

Hackney born artist and teacher Steve Latner discusses the development of local arts facilities over the last 30 years:

Steve Latner on art in Hackney:

Steve Latner by Peter Young, 2012

From his early experience of attending Punk gigs in the Chats bar in 1976/77, Steve immersed himself in the youth and adult drama groups of Hoxton Hall run by Margret Shepherd in the 1980’s, then returned to Chats Palace in the 90’s to study batik and silk screen printing with Kim Bennett.

Steve Latner on Citizen Smith and fax machine printing:

Steve went on to run the Cinestasia short film festival and was a founder member of Photo Studio East who celebrate their 10th anniversary early next year with an exhibition of Hackney portraiture at Chats Palace.

Wayne Campbell – Long term voluntary cleaner at Chats Palace and part of an ‘A to Z of Hackney Portraits’ by Photo Studio East

“A lot of like minded people”

Kate Kelly worked as a photography tutor at Chats Palace in the early 1980’s.

Kelly secured funding to run a weekly all day darkroom workshop for local women with full on site creche facilities, lunch and lots of cups of tea!

The group produced a series of image and text panels that explored living conditions and health issues that affected women and families in Hackney at the time. The work was influenced by women photographic activists such as the Hackney Flashers and Jo Spence.

Kate Kelly on – art practice and community projects in the 1980’s:

Some of the photo panels from that period have survived and Kate, who has recently reconnected with Chats Palace, called in earlier this week to do an hour long interview remembering those times.

© Chats Palace

Continue reading

Rowan Arts – posters and oral histories

While looking for stories about Chats Palace and the old Homerton Library, we discovered the old Fire Station in Holloway, North London – the home of an arts charity Rowan Arts.
In collaboration with London Metropolitan Archives, Rowan Arts is running a Poster Design Competition to promote the LMA film collection – deadline Monday 15 October
http://www.therowanartsproject.com/lmaposter

Last month Rowan Arts launched their Born and Bred project and organised a very informative training with an oral historian Verusca Calabria who shared her skills in how to record and preserve the histories and traditions of families and communities.

Born and Bred is an intriguing oral history and photography project which tells the stories of 51 Londoners who live on or around Holloway Road in Islington. The Rowan Arts exhibition, on display in an old fire station until the end of the year, features photographs of local characters alongside written down extracts from interviews which tell their individual stories.
http://www.therowanartsproject.com/bornandbred

© Isabelle Gressel

For many, Holloway Road is a bustling thoroughfare, the start of the A1 ‘The Great North Road’ out of London – for these people it is their home. Those participating in the project range from local business owners to elder residents who remember how it was during World War II.

Ellie Rowsell and Sadie Cleary (pictured) met as three year olds and grew up around the area. Today they play in a band together – http://wolfalice.bandcamp.com – that performs regularly at local pub The Florin. Another participant, the late George Bartlett, remembers meeting John Lennon on Holloway Road, who had ventured there in a white Rolls Royce to get his hair cut.

You can listen to the interviews and read short interview extracts on the project website as well as pick up a free copy of the project book, which contains all of the information in the exhibition as well as additional material about Holloway Road from 84 Mayton Street, N7 6QT.

Music in Chats Palace bar

© Peter Young / Chats Palace

The picture above shows a monthly Irish Folk Session that took place in Chats Palace bar space in the early 1990’s. Around that period one could hear jazz, acoustic, cabaret, poetry and women’s performance events on mid-week evenings.

One of the most notable artists to play in the bar during that era was Clifford Jarvis. An American jazz drummer who had played with the Sun Ra Orchestra, Jarvis came to settle in Hackney in the 1980’s and taught percussion in community projects in the area including Pyramid Arts in Dalston and Chats Palace. Clifford played several memorable Thursday night gigs in the bar with his trio.
Here he is playing drums with Archie Shepp in 1978 (not at Chats!)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fvuWNzPBZB4

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The Wonderful Palace of Nod

One of the oldest pictures we’ve found so far is this Free Form Art Trust group shot, taken around Christmas 1977, during the production of the Christmas panto ‘The Wonderful Palace of Nod’. Look out for the full selection of Chats Christmas show posters in the near future.

The story of Free Form and its involvement with community arts in Hackney is admirably told in Kate Crehan’s book ‘Community arts: an anthropological perspective’. Kate, an academic at City University of New York is also a long-time friend of two of the organisations’ founders.

© Mike Gray/Chats Palace
Back row: Alex Carr, Kelly Harvey, Joyce (?)
Standing middle row: Steve Simmons, Hazel Goldman, Cilla Baines, Heather Macadam, Barbara Wheeler-Early (with baby), Martin Goodrich, Karen Merkel, Alan May, Felicity Harvest
Seated front row: Rod Brookes (with Zoot the dog), Graham Downes (with Harry the dog), Liz Hocking

If you happen to know anyone in the photo, please ask them to get in touch with us.

Summer playschemes 1980 and 2012

Since the early days of Chats Palace, annual summer playschemes were popular with the local community (run in conjunction with the Homerton Grove Adventure Playground). Over 30 years later, Lauren Mills, a Homerton born and bred choreographer and founder of BYB arts organisation, coordinates a team of volunteers to run an affordable playscheme at Chats Palace throughout the summer holidays.

© Chats Palace

© Chats Palace

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