<|-- removed generator --> The Online Photographer: Featured Comments from the Chris Killip Post

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Saturday, 16 August 2025

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Here is a PDF that includes a hyperlink to a video about the Getty Museum's retrospective on Chris Killip and the Making of In Flagrante:

https://www.getty.edu/art/exhibitions/chris_killip/CHK_Web_PDF.pdf

'...he seems to make it look a bit grimmer than I remember.'

That's exactly what he's done.

Thank you for the coverage of Killip's work - it has driven me to buy his Flagrant Two and the more comprehensive book of his work that is still readily available despite being out of print - some stunning work.
However I wish to comment about what is being said about his work. First off I agree with the previous comment (Chris C ) that it shows a very selective set of images which do not reflect the far less grim broader picture of life in those parts at that time. Such selectivity is of course entirely justified for artistic reasons and is indeed powerful but needs to be understood in a more balanced context for more general consumption. There are many places where such selective focus could produce not dissimilar images even today in your region and mine - sadly.
My wife and I lived in the area mainly concerned for three years in the 1970's - she teaching in a local high school and I lecturing in a local college, and incidentally my mother remarried to a retiree from the local steelworks and lived there for many years after. So we know the area and the people for more than 25 years.
Yes in the 1970's through to the 1990's the romantic drama and personal pathos of these images could be found but it required effort and was not typical of the region as a whole. The people were proud of their heritage but neither of us ever found in our students, their parents, or among my stepfather's friends many who did not mingle that pride with pleasure that such images were rare and none who wished for their youngsters to go down a mine, work in the other traditional and often demeaning occupations, nor live in the old housing which was being rapidly replaced during this period.
There was great desire in the whole community for development and opportunity despite the inevitable pains involved.
The romance of the art is undeniably dramatic but shows a reality which was increasingly rare and mainly true of many years before and should never be forgotten. But the reality of the whole region shows a far different picture - if though still far from perfect.

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