Photography exhibition

A Leica Q2 enters my life by Kate Mellor

Last year I managed to purchase a Leica Q2 and have been using it in place of my Panasonic largely because of the sharpness it brings to the image. Although I began initially using the camera for photographs of anything that stopped me I soon began to take photographs of the South Pennines.

I was thinking about the Boxing Day floods and I worked out a method that spoke about the rivers and catchment areas through superimposition. I exhibited the photographs at A Space for Photography, Arles, with six other photographers who had trained at the University of Ulster and locally at a Nanholme Open Weekend. This is what I wrote for the Arles publicity:

Upper Calder Catchment Area No 1. Golden Water from Source to River Calder water bodies

This work is part of a series taken in the South Pennines in Yorkshire, where I live, begun before the pandemic. I have used a vintage 1930s Plaubel, a pinhole, and here, a Leica Q2 to describe the immediate environment and my emotional response to it. Now, the photographs hark back to the famous Boxing Day floods that affected the north of England in 2021 and although the environment no longer shows damage, memories continue to impact on minds and behaviours. The volume of water that surged down the valleys was unimaginable. We all believe in climate change now.

Upper Calder Catchment Area No 15. Hebden Water from Widdop Beck to River Calder water bodies

How to describe a process that has taken an era; that becomes invisible through the length of time it has taken? Problems with the climate have only become recognisable in the last few decades but atmospheric change linked to global warming has been known of since the Industrial Revolution. The work buys in to the pictorialism of the early pioneer photographers from that time but it is disrupted alluding to the changes that we can see happening in the environment now.

Upper Calder Catchment Area No 20. River Calder from Walsden Water to Colden Water water bodies

The titles reference catchment data by area although it falls in the Upper Calder region. The landscapes that I make are specific to the area including many of the characteristic features. With superimposition I have chosen to indicate that water flows through all things, even inanimate objects, understandable to those who dwell in a wet climate. There is refraction by photography itself and furthermore by the occluding of lines leading into the depths of the landscape.

The threat of flooding is becoming more frequent.

Upper Calder Catchment Area No 31. River Calder from Walsden Water to Colden Water water bodies

Regeneration  - The Sheffield Project 1981-1991 by Kate Mellor

Steel

Steel

Virtual tour here.

The project, Regeneration, documented the changing ways of life, urban landscape and working identities of Sheffield over a period of time when the city was moving away from heavy manufacturing to the service industries. The changes occurred during the time generally known as Thatcher’s Britain, in the aftermath of the miners’ strike and a period of upheaval in society.

 Regeneration was organised by Matthew Conduit and exhibited at the Untitled Gallery (now Site) and the photographers commissioned were John Kippin, John Darwell, Mike Black, Berris Connolly, Tim Smith, Anna Fox, John Davies, Ken Phillip, Iain Stewart, Bill Stephenson, Graham Gaunt, Patrick Sutherland, Adrian Wynn, and later on, myself. Matthew Conduit has organised a contemporary exhibition looking back at this time and the remarkable body of work that these photographers generated.

 I joined the project when analogue photography was still the only option. I used two cameras, both Plaubels, including the Pro-Shift which allowed me to take very wide angle views. I was interested in the urban landscape and what this revealed about the society.

Nostalgia

Nostalgia

This is what I wrote for the contemporary book out in October when the exhibition launches:

 “Sheffield is primarily a landscape made for work’ wrote Beatrix Campbell in the 1980s. By the end of the decade, sites of heavy manufacturing, the steel mills, and workers’ housing were vanishing, the city targeting a future of commercial enterprise, leisure, and tourism. 

The steel workers were sometimes commemorated in sculpture or intricate brickwork on the side of a building, but they became the history; gentrification was the future. The nature of work had changed in Thatcher’s Britain. I joined the project in the early 90s, seeing a transformational process made by huge earth movers and landscaping, with tree and shrub planting and post-modern architectural revamps. At the time there were expansive flat holes in the landscape, waiting for new buildings, new businesses. One of these areas was completely covered in crumbled brick, with detritus blowing in the wind - old invoices from the disappeared steelworks, and microfilm, the best way to record documents in the pre-digital era. 

 I used some of these discarded documents in the panels I made, concerned with trying to make comparisons between the history of the city and what was taking place in the late 80s. The new era and ethos seemed rather insubstantial. Meadowhall had been built and was already catering for the masses who flocked to its gold and marble corridors. A friend worked on painting the interior, which had classical allusions and a lot of ‘distressing’ because history had to be referenced. Out-of-town shopping centres had become hugely popular, largely because of easy and extensive car parking, with familiar town-centre shops, which unfortunately had moved from the high street.

 After the project I never went back to Meadowhall, and my daughter who studied in Sheffield, refused to get a job there, even though it was within easy reach of the city due to the recently built Supertram. Nonetheless, it appeared to be an exciting time for people who lived in Sheffield. In general, people took great interest in the new building programme and they would often wander out after work to see the progress. Yet, according to comments from people I met, some features were sorely missed, such as the ‘Hole in the Road’ at Castle Square, a pedestrian underpass built in the 1960s, when rapidity of movement became a town planners’ goal. 

 It can be seen in my work with a few lingering shops, the pedestrians using subways under the traffic roundabout for access. The Hole in the Road suffered in the general process of entropy, its form outlived and becoming dangerous. Shortly after, it too vanished from the landscape.”

Cutquicker

Cutquicker

Although it was a long time ago I still have strong memories of the people I ran into who would start a conversation about the changes happening in the city. Mostly left-wing, they decried the “Thatcher ethos” which resulted in hardship when the steelworks failed.

The exhibition is showing at Weston Park, Sheffield Museums, opening on October 23rd 2020 and continuing for some months until May 3rd 2021. A book is also is published to accompany the exhibition with examples of the photographers’ work and their texts.The book has sold out but a second edition should be forthcoming.

https://www.museums-sheffield.org.uk/museums/weston-park/exhibitions/the-sheffield-project-photographs-of-a-changing-city

 Regeneration - The Sheffield Project press release (pdf)