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A Retrospective
 
Chris Killip
Father and son watching a parade, Westend of Newcastle, Tyneside, 1980
© Chris Killip Photography Trust/Magnum Photos
 

Chris Killip »

 

A Retrospective

 
22 February – 19 May 2024
 
Visiting the exhibition is possible as part of regular guided tours, on the "Open Saturday" on 20 April 2024 and during the Night of the Museums on 4 May 2024.
 
 

Deutsche Börse Photography Foundation

Mergenthalerallee 61, 65760 Eschborn
T +49 (0)69-21 11 40 60

deutscheboersephotographyfoundation.org/
Deutsche Börse Photography Foundation
 
 
A Retrospective
 
Chris Killip
Gordon in the water, Seacoal Beach, Lynemouth, 1983
© Chris Killip Photography Trust/Magnum Photos
 
 
With this exhibition, the Deutsche Börse Photography Foundation honours the work of influential British photographer Chris Killip (1946-2020). Among the roughly 140 photographs on display, a particular focus lies on the time Killip spent on the Isle of Man and in the north of England. "Chris Killip. A Retrospective" is the most comprehensive presentation of his oeuvre in Germany to date.

Chris Killip poignantly documented the lives of people in the north of England, who were particularly affected by the economic shifts of the 1970s and 1980s. His portraits, landscapes and architectural photographs show both the consequences and challenges of deindustrialisation and those brought on by the political changes in the wake of Margaret Thatcher’s accession to power in 1979. Killip captured the harsh everyday lives of workers and their families in unsparing yet empathetic black and white images. They bear witness to the personal relationships he established with his protagonists over long periods. To this day, his social documentary approach continues to exert a formative influence on the visual language of subsequent generations of photographers.
 
 
A Retrospective
 
Chris Killip
Girls Playing in the street, Wallsend, Tyneside, 1976
© Chris Killip Photography Trust/Magnum Photos
 
 
Chris Killip was born on the Isle of Man in 1946, the son of a pub owner. By chance, he discovered photography at the age of 17 when he came across an image by Henri Cartier-Bresson in a French magazine. It touched him so deeply that he decided to drop out of his hotel apprenticeship and become a photographer. After a brief stint as a beach photographer, he moved to London in 1964 and worked as an assistant to advertising photographers for several years. His 1969 encounter with the work of Walker Evans and Paul Strand in New York inspired him to return to the Isle of Man to photograph. The resulting images, depicting the simple life within the rural communities he was closely familiar with, laid the foundation for his later work. In 1975, he moved to Newcastle in the north of England and found his central motif in that region’s communities. Killip lived in the US from 1991. He was a professor at Harvard University, where he taught from 1994 to 2017, and died in the US in October 2020.

"Chris Killip. A Retrospective" was curated by Tracy Marshall-Grant, Ken Grant and Anne-Marie Beckmann and produced in collaboration with The Photographers’ Gallery, London. The exhibition was realised with the support of the Martin Parr Foundation and the Chris Killip Photography Trust.
 
 
A Retrospective
 
Chris Killip
Bever, Skinningrove, N. Yorkshire, 1983
© Chris Killip Photography Trust/Magnum Photos
 
 
On the occasion of the exhibition, Arthouse Kinos Frankfurt will show the British film "Pride" (2014) on 19 March at 6.30 p.m. The screening will take place at Cinéma Kino at Hauptwache in Frankfurt, following a short introduction by Cornelia Siebert, curatorial assistant for the exhibition. The superbly cast film tells the touching and true story of the support given to striking miners in the mid-1980s in the north of England by the "Lesbians and Gays Support the Miners", a group of homosexual activists. Tickets are available at www.arthouse-kinos.de.

As part of the "Open Saturday" on 20 April 2024, curator David Campany and Anne-Marie Beckmann, curator of the exhibition, will talk about Killip's work, his influence on other photographers and the political background against which his work was created. The talk will be held in English at 2 p.m. David Campany is a British photography expert, curator, author and editor. He has issued numerous publications and essays on the history of the medium and on many artists, including Chris Killip. Campany is currently Curator at Large at the International Centre of Photography ICP in New York City.
 
 
A Retrospective
 
Chris Killip
'Boo' on a horse, Seacoal Camp, Lynemouth, Northumbria, 1984
© Chris Killip Photography Trust/Magnum Photos
 
 
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