Chris Killip: Retrospective (Fotomuseum Den Haag)

Ken Grant (Artist), Tracy Marshall-Grant (Artist)

Research output: Non-textual formExhibition

Abstract

The exhibition Chris Killip Retrospective comprising of over 140 photographs, represents the first comprehensive survey of the photographer’s career through his photographic prints. From its first iteration in London’s Photographer’s Gallery, the exhibition travelled to Gateshead, UK, where many of the photographs were originally taken, before installation at Deutsche Boerse, Frankfurt, The iteration of the exhibition at Fotomuseum Den Haag in The Hague brought the work of Killip to Dutch audiences for the first time as a major survey. The exhibition drew on an archive of prints Killip sanctioned as his legacy. Working in collaboration with Tracy Marshall, who managed the exhibition production, Grant drew on the archive, associated artefacts kept by Killip, to examine and articulate the development of the photographer’s practice into a foremost commentator of an era of deindustrialization in Britain. Key inclusions included early work made in the Isle of Man, with other rooms housing installations of Killip’s Seacoal and Skinningrove series’. A further section, ‘In the time of In Flagrante’, examined the construction of Killip’s use of narrative distinct from other representations of class and politics made during the Thatcher era. The exhibition served to foreground Killip's efforts to value and document the lives of those affected by the economic shifts in the North of England, throughout the 1970s and 80s whilst it proposed conversations about the potential for photography of such circumstances to successfully exist in the gallery context. Grant spoke on a panel as part of a public event with the artist Lisa Barnard, to discuss the work's legacy and new approaches to contemporary documentary practice.
Original languageEnglish
Place of PublicationThe Hague, Netherlands
Size147 photographs
Publication statusPublished (in print/issue) - 30 Aug 2024

Keywords

  • Photography and Britain
  • Photography and class
  • Photography and the North
  • Documentary Photography
  • Contemporary Documentary practices

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