Paperback, black and white illustrations, 128 pages, W200mm x H245mm
An illustrated catalogue to accompany John Myers exhibition at Ikon.
Essays by Paul Lewis, writer and photography specialist and Eugenie Shinkle, photographer writer and senior lecturer in Photographic Theory at the University of Westminster.
This is the first major exhibition by Midlands-based artist
John Myers. Comprising black and white photographs made in the 1970s, Ikon’s
selection includes Middle England (1970–1974), a number of portraits of
individuals and families living in and around Stourbridge and the Black
Country.
Myers’ approach is documentary in style, reflecting the
taste, self-perceptions and aspirations of the people he photographed. Thus we
observe them in their sitting rooms and bedrooms, or in their leisure or work
spaces, surrounded by the telling paraphernalia of their daily lives. They pose
with deliberate stances and gestures, responding to the sense of occasion
engendered by Myers’ use of a Gandolfi plate camera set on a tripod with a dark
viewing cloth. As well as domestic interiors, occupied particularly by couples
and women, we see the studio where a young girl attends ballet classes, the
back yard where a boy plays football and a club where two men play snooker.
Myers chose to photograph people who lived within walking
distance of his own home, and so he recorded the world as he knew it. A kind of
natural history unfolds through Middle England, with its depictions of human
life and habitats, significantly as the portraits are shown alongside an
exceptional image of a giraffe in a zoo enclosure. This juxtaposition reminds us
of the fact that we are shaped by our built environments, as much as we shape
them.