No Such Thing as Society

Photography in Britain 1967 – 1987: From the Arts Council Collection and the British Council Collection

No Such Thing as Society
Price £17.99
ISBN 9781853322655
Pages 168
Binding softback
Illustration 45 colour, 115 b&w illustrations
Dimensions 240 x 220 mm
Weight 730g

A document of British photography from the late 1960s until the late 1980s, No Such Thing as Society draws from the collections of the Arts Council and the British Council to give a radically new picture of these two turbulent decades.

The early 1970s saw the emergence of new and independent approaches to documentary photography, which focused on social realism. The leading exponent, Tony Ray-Jones, captured the comedies of social class and the absurdities of human behaviour within the constraints of British culture.

By the end of the 1970s, the status of photography within the artistic context had been established. Motifs of intense political dissatisfaction spread across the urban vistas of Ian Dobbie, while Philip Jones-Griffith and Paul Graham employed more conventional forms of photojournalism of urban conflict in the North of Ireland and the streets of South London.

The human costs of de-industrialisation and globalisation were the great central themes of the documentary photographers active in the North of England in the late 1970s and 1980s. The social disasters captured in Chris Killip’s work extended into the darkly-coloured, claustrophobic interiors of DHSS offices photographed by Paul Graham, and Martin Parr’s lividly coloured documents of holiday makers in New Brighton, Liverpool.