Peter Mitchell (photographer)

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Peter Mitchell (born 1943) is a British documentary photographer, known for documenting Leeds and the surrounding area for more than 40 years. Mitchell's photographs have been published in three monographs of his own. His work was exhibited at Impressions Gallery in 1979, and nearly thirty years later was included in major survey exhibitions throughout the UK including at Tate Britain and Media Space in London, and the National Science and Media Museum in Bradford. Mitchell's work is held in the permanent collections of the Royal Photographic Society and Leeds Art Gallery.

Contents

Life and work

Mitchell was born in Manchester in 1943. [1]

In 1979 Impressions Gallery showed his work A New Refutation of the Viking 4 Space Mission, the pictures showed the traditional urban landscape presented on a background of space charts, the concept being that an alien has landed from Mars and is wandering around Leeds with a degree of surprise and puzzle. [2] Martin Parr described this show as groundbreaking. [3]

His images of Quarry Hill flats were published as Memento Mori in 1990. Mitchell arrived in Leeds in time to record the passing of the great estate. [4] [5]

In 2007 Mitchell's work was included in How We Are: Photographing Britain a photography exhibition held at Tate Britain. [6]

The main body of his work documents factories and small shop owners. These photographs were shot throughout the 1970s whilst Mitchell was working as a truck driver in Leeds. [7] He photographed the city whilst commuting "in a very formal manner with the aid of a stepladder." [8] After self-publishing Memento Mori in 1990, his movements within the photography sphere were minimal. After many years of persuasion from Parr, Mitchell later agreed to publishing the monograph Strangely Familiar, published by Nazreali Press in 2013. [9] Colin Pantall described this work as "a classic". [10] He told the BBC that it is a "gritty kind of sentimentality". [11]

His follow-up, SomeThing Means Everything to Somebody (2015), shows inanimate objects looked over by scarecrows. Mitchell, a child of the Airfix generation, recorded this collection of scarecrows over 40 years and presents this array of objects and scarecrows as an autobiography. When talking about the book, Peter said "Scarecrows have always been a feature of my childhood...I've purposefully chosen ones that have no face on them because I didn't want people to laugh at them but imagine them as people... I've paired them with the objects that I've got which are my own scruffy little objects - treasured objects I've had since I was little. I chose them because I use them everyday. Everyday objects with the figure of Everyman." [12] Reviewer Karen Jenkins called it a "story of steadfastness and continuity". [13]

In 2020, RRB Photobooks published Early Sunday Morning, edited and sequenced by John Myers, which shows a different Leeds to Mitchell's earlier publications. The book is described as "neither the sombre look at destruction seen in Memento Mori, nor the detached view of 'the man from mars' of A New Refutation of the Viking 4 Space Mission, but a more intimate document of Mitchell's own Leeds." [14] The book's title is itself a reference to American artist Edward Hopper's 1930 painting by Early Sunday Morning. When discussing the book, writer Geoff Dyer said “It is as if Peter Mitchell has taken the atmosphere and mood of Edward Hopper's famous painting and established it as a matter of documentary fact in the north of England at a moment when collapse can lead to further desolation or possible renewal. So these beautiful pictures are drily drenched in history – social, economic and photographic."

Publications

Exhibitions

Collections

Mitchell's work is held in the following public collections:

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References

  1. "What if a Mars rover landed in Leeds? Peter Mitchell's best photograph". The Guardian. 29 June 2022. Retrieved 30 June 2022.
  2. 1 2 Peter Mitchell: Peter Mitchell, accessdate: March 11, 2016
  3. 1 2 Photoworks Ideas: Martin Parr on Peter Mitchell | Photoworks Ideas, accessdate: March 11, 2016
  4. "The big picture: the decline and fall of a utopian social housing scheme". The Guardian. 28 November 2021. Retrieved 13 January 2022.
  5. "Quarry Hill: What happened to the utopian social housing in Leeds?" . The Independent. 13 December 2021. Archived from the original on 26 May 2022. Retrieved 13 January 2022.
  6. 1 2 Tate: How We Are: Photographing Britain: Room 5 | Tate, accessdate: March 11, 2016
  7. britishculturearchive (5 November 2019). "Leeds, 1970s-80s | Photographs by Peter Mitchell". British Culture Archive. Retrieved 8 February 2024.
  8. "Peter Mitchell - Strangely Familiar (signed, First edition)". RRB Photobooks. Retrieved 19 May 2021.
  9. Popham, Pete (13 July 2013). "Northern echo: Extraordinary photographs of Leeds in the 1970s reveal a vanished world" . Independent Print Limited. Archived from the original on 26 May 2022. Retrieved 16 March 2016.
  10. Pantall, Colin (14 October 2013). "Review: Strangely Familiar". Photoeye Blog. Photoeye. Retrieved 11 March 2016.
  11. Killick, Cathy (13 July 2013). "Leeds back streets in 1970s caught on camera". BBC. "Look North", BBC. Retrieved 16 March 2016.
  12. "Some Thing Means Everything To Somebody | Peter Mitchell". Strangely Familiar. Retrieved 24 May 2021.
  13. Jenkins, Karen (31 August 2015). "Review: Some Thing Means Every Thing to Somebody". Photoeye Blog. Photoeye. Retrieved 11 March 2016.
  14. "Peter Mitchell - Early Sunday Morning". RRB Photobooks. Retrieved 24 May 2021.
  15. "Photographs by Peter Mitchell that document the demise of the famous Quarry Hill flats in Leeds". Creative Boom. 22 November 2021. Retrieved 13 January 2022.
  16. Scharf, Aaron, Grayson, Sue, Messer, Bill, Serpentine Gallery, and Arts Council of Great Britain. Summer Show 4 : The Work of 23 Photographers Selected by Aaron Scharf from an Open Submission ... Serpentine Gallery, 20 August-11 September [1977]. London]: Arts Council of Great Britain, 1977. Print.
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