
Martin Parr
About this book
In the United Kingdom, one is never more than 75 miles away from the coast. With this much shoreline, it's not surprising that there should be a thriving British tradition of seaside photography. American photographers may have invented street photography, but according to photographer Martin Parr, "in the U.K., we have the beach!" Here, he asserts, people can relax, be themselves and indulge in mildly eccentric British behavior. Parr has been photographing this subject for many decades, in close-ups of sun bathers, rambunctious swimmers caught mid-plunge and the eternal sandy picnic. His career, in fact, could be traced back to the 1986 publication of 'The Last Resort', which depicted the seaside resort of New Brighton, near Liverpool.
Subjects
Pictorial worksSocial life and customsStreet photographyArtistic PhotographyDocumentary photographyMethodist church buildingsExhibitionsBeachesParr, martin , 1952-Methodist church buildings--england--hebden bridge--pictorial worksPhotography, artisticSchwarzweißfotografieYorkMenschDocumentary photography--englandDa670.h343 p37 2013770Schwarzweißphotographie