The Photographers’ Gallery celebrates the chaos of Soho in new show – Creative Review

Posted: October 16, 2019 at 5:16 pm

Perhaps more than anywhere else in London, Soho has stood as an emblem of hedonism. In testament to this, as the area attempts to cling onto its identity in the face of advancing gentrification, The Photographers Gallery is holding an exhibition that celebrates its resplendent visual and cultural history.

Opening on October 18, Shot In Soho includes works by legendary photographers like William Klein, Anders Petersen, as well as the late Corinne Day, whose Soho home occasionally served as the set for her renowned editorial shoots. The exhibition features other photographers who arent necessarily associated with shooting Soho, such asKelvin Brodie,Clancy Gebler DaviesandJohn Goldblatt, but who helped to document it nonetheless. It also includes new, specially commissioned work by Daragh Soden, who explores the heart of contemporary Soho.

A cultural hub and a hub for multiculturalism, its little surprise that Soho became the face of countless iconic movements from Swinging London over on Carnaby Street to the beating heart of the music scene on Denmark Street and home to various communities that shaped the areas personality.

Now, Soho is flanked by commercial hotspots and taunted by the impending arrival of developers (the gallery seems keen to highlight the eventual impact of the local Crossrail station on Tottenham Court Road). It seems the area itself a tourist destination these days is battling to guard its character.

Though Soho still harbours relics of its eccentric past, they serve as embers of a long history thats potentially winding down, but ought not fade from memory thanks to the wealth of photographers who documented it.

Shot In Soho runs at The Photographers Gallery, London from October 18February 20; thephotographersgallery.org.uk

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The Photographers' Gallery celebrates the chaos of Soho in new show - Creative Review

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