Post-punk London, wrestling and strippers: See the shots of photographer Dick Scott-Stewart
This article originally appeared on Culture24.
Wrestlers, strippers and cross-dressers feature among Dick Scott-Stewart's works - as a new Museum of London display demonstrates
Vicky Scott's Fantasy Photography (1982)© Dick Scott-Stewart Archive / Museum of London Dick Scott-Stewart was a freelance photographer and an admirer of the great European and American black and white photographers, using high contrast and a vivid use of light and dark to distinctively portray those with “a withdrawal from and opposition to the realities of the present”, who he saw “escaping...into their music, their dress style, their meeting places” during the late 1970s and post-punk era in London.
Born in Cheltenham and educated in his art at the London College of
Printing, Scott-Stewart remains relatively unknown – although the Museum
of London’s new exhibition, Stomping Grounds, aims to correct that by beaming them into widescreen vision via a projector.
Scott-Stewart published a book, Fairground Snaps, in 1974, and the
museum is featuring 117 photographs from his finest personal projects,
as well as ephemera and a wrestling series, drawn together 14 years
after his death.
Inside the Blitz Club (1981)© Dick Scott-Stewart Archive / Museum of London Anna Sparham, the museum’s Curator of Photographs, describes
Scott-Stewart as an “accomplished” photographer with a mastery for
image-making. “He held great respect for his subjects, recognising and
identifying with people on the periphery," she says.
“Like many people of his generation he had enjoyed watching the
wrestling on Saturday afternoon television. The entertaining pantomime
that the sport offered appealed to Scott-Stewart’s humour and
photographer's eye.
“He and his friends would regularly go and enjoy the show at Battersea.
He had intended to create a book of his project on the wrestling at
Battersea Town Hall.”
Jive Dancing, Empire Ballroom (1983)© Dick Scott-Stewart Archive / Museum of London The museum has worked with the Dick Scott-Stewart Archive, which has
donated the photos, on the display. His wife, Mog, calls the exhibition
“marvellous”, and says her late husband’s work is “part of the bigger
18th and 19th century photographic project of humanising London and the
people who live here.” His sitters, who are often marginalised figures,
often appear to enjoy the portraits.
“This cross-dresser isn’t presented in a sensationalised or
over-dramatic manner,” says Sparham, of Cross-Dresser, created in 1981.
“The relaxed pose and the backstage context implies ease with the
photographer, reflecting Scott-Stewart’s personable and sociable nature.
“Sometimes
his photographs are more surreptitiously shot. His images of strippers
document both the environment in which they are performing and the
vulnerability of the situation.
Wrestler at Battersea Town Hall (1981)© Dick Scott-Stewart Archive / Museum of London “This is accentuated through Scott-Stewart’s play with voyeurism and
multiple viewers – the photographer photographing a man, photographing a
stripper, no doubt surrounded by an attentive crowd.
“His
photographs show that his subjects are often conscious of his presence.
An engagement with people often really comes through, as does his
empathy for the subjects.
“Scott-Stewart related most strongly to
those he saw as facing certain struggles in life, who lived on the
periphery. His images of youth subculture reflect how individuals
congregate, survive in their groups and strive to move against the tide
of the mainstream.
Punks on the Kings Road (1981)© Dick Scott-Stewart Archive / Museum of London “These images offer a fascinating glimpse into different social groups.
His images collectively present a real sense of identity and belonging.”
Stomping Grounds is part of a run of displays at the museum exploring London’s subcultures, including
Tattoo London and parts of the
Punk.London programme.
What do you think? Leave a comment below.Trans women, Pimlico (1981)© Dick Scott-Stewart Archive / Museum of London The Blitz Club, Covent Garden (1980)© Dick Scott-Stewart Archive / Museum of London Dick Scott-Stewart© Dick Scott-Stewart Archive / Museum of London Three places to see photography exhibitions inScottish National Portrait Gallery, EdinburghThe self-portrait occupies a core place in the history of European art.
Ever since the Renaissance, and in some cases even earlier, artists have
self-consciously created images of themselves. The current exhibition, Facing the World, presents
an exciting selection of portraits, in various media spanning six
centuries, from Rembrandt to Ai Weiwei’s Instagram posts. Until October 16 2016.
Plymouth City Museum and Art GalleryIn the Frame features the venue's newest
acquisition - an early self-portrait by Plympton-born 18th century
artist, Sir Joshua Reynolds, set among other paintings of
artists including self-portraits by James Northcote and Edward Opie. Plymouth's maritime greats turn up, too - from
Hawkins and Raleigh to 18th century Admirals and George Gibbon, the
Lieutenant Governor of Plymouth in the early 1700s, painted by Thomas
Hudson.
Dowlais Library, Merthyr TydfilThe current exhibition shows photographs taken over the last 40 years by Walter
Waygood, a documentary photographer who captures the changing
lifestyles of people in Merthyr Tydfil. Until June 3 2016.
Source: http://www.culture24.org.uk/art/photography-and-film/art555662-dick-scott-stewart-stomping-grounds-london