The Eyeshot Podcast on Street & Documentary Photography

Paul Trevor: Fifty Years of Analogue Street Photography

22 min · I går
episode Paul Trevor: Fifty Years of Analogue Street Photography cover

Description

British photographer Paul Trevor has spent more than fifty years photographing public life, most of it in East London, and now reopens his black-and-white archive as a book that plays. In this Eyeshot 50mm interview, British street and documentary photographer Paul Trevor talks with Lucrezia Bonarota about a life spent photographing public life. Largely self-taught, he came to photography through cinema and co-founded the Exit Photography Group in 1973, learning alongside other photographers who had no school but each other. He speaks about street photography as learning about loss, the shots that haunt you because you missed them, the generosity of the street, and the discipline of the analogue years: the darkroom, the contact sheets, the slow burn. His new limited-edition book with Eyeshot, Riffs, returns to his archive from the 1970s and 1980s and pairs images from different times and places until new meaning appears through rhythm and surprise.

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36 episodes

episode Paul Trevor: Fifty Years of Analogue Street Photography artwork

Paul Trevor: Fifty Years of Analogue Street Photography

British photographer Paul Trevor has spent more than fifty years photographing public life, most of it in East London, and now reopens his black-and-white archive as a book that plays. In this Eyeshot 50mm interview, British street and documentary photographer Paul Trevor talks with Lucrezia Bonarota about a life spent photographing public life. Largely self-taught, he came to photography through cinema and co-founded the Exit Photography Group in 1973, learning alongside other photographers who had no school but each other. He speaks about street photography as learning about loss, the shots that haunt you because you missed them, the generosity of the street, and the discipline of the analogue years: the darkroom, the contact sheets, the slow burn. His new limited-edition book with Eyeshot, Riffs, returns to his archive from the 1970s and 1980s and pairs images from different times and places until new meaning appears through rhythm and surprise.

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