Episode 3
Photographer Eamonn McCabe traces the story of British photography from the explosion of colour images in the late 1950s to the ongoing impact of the digital revolution.
In the final episode, Eamonn McCabe traces the story of British photography from the explosion of colour images in the late 1950s to the ongoing impact of the digital revolution.
Eamonn enters the colourful Britain of postcard producer John Hinde, whose postwar experiments with colour photography captured a new mood of optimism and leisure in the country. He sees how colour snaps began to replace black-and-white prints in the family album as cheaper cameras and new processing techniques allowed ordinary people to record the world around them in colour. Eamonn meets John Bulmer, who broke new ground by using colour for documentary photography in his striking images of the north of England for the Sunday Times colour magazine. And he finds out why Jane Bown refused to follow the trend by sticking to black and white for her striking portraits of the era's most memorable faces.
Eamonn explores how a new, independent movement in photography emerged in the 1970s, fostering talents like Peter Mitchell, who used colour photography to comment on a changing urban Britain. Eamonn sees how this new movement encouraged Fay Godwin to infuse her poetic landscapes with political and environmental concerns, and meets Birmingham-based photographer Vanley Burke, whose work chronicled the growing African-Caribbean community in Handsworth. And Eamonn joins one of today's best-known British photographers, Martin Parr, to find out how he has trained a satirical eye on modern society.
Assessing the impact of the 'big bang' of digital photography, Eamonn goes back to his roots as a sports photographer - covering boxing in the East End of London. He reflects on how technology has developed from when he started in the 1970s, with manual cameras and rolls of film, to the digital cameras of today. Eamonn then sees how the digital revolution has shaped a new generation of practitioners - in whose hands a thoroughly 21st-century British photography is being created.
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Music Played
Timings (where shown) are from the start of the programme in hours and minutes
-
00:01
The Shadows
Apache
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00:03
The Yardbirds
For Your Love
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00:07
Johnny Kidd and the Pirates
Shakin All Over
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00:14
Humphrey Lyttelton
Looking For Turner
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00:20
Steel Pulse
Handsworth Revolution
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00:25
Joy Division
Shadowplay
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00:27
Eagulls
My Life In Rewind
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00:39
Tears for Fears
Shout
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00:40
Tears for Fears
Mad World
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00:47
Caribou
Sun
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00:52
Metronomy
The Look
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00:56
Boards of Canada
Dayvan Cowboy
Credits
Role | Contributor |
---|---|
Presenter | Eamonn McCabe |
Executive Producer | John Das |
Series Producer | Alastair Laurence |
Producer | Chloe Penman |
Production Manager | Nicole Larmour |
Broadcasts
- Mon 20 Mar 2017 21:00
- Tue 21 Mar 2017 03:00
- Thu 23 Mar 2017 01:45
- Wed 27 Sep 2017 23:00
- Tue 10 Jul 2018 01:25
- Thu 14 Mar 2019 02:00
- Tue 21 Jan 2020 01:30
- Mon 14 Jun 2021 23:30
- Tue 16 Nov 2021 23:30
- Mon 15 Apr 2024 20:00
- Tue 16 Apr 2024 02:30
National Media Museum Exhibition
A 麻豆社 and National Media Museum partnership. Britain in Focus: A Photographic History.
Photographing the Heysel disaster
Britain in Focus presenter Eamonn McCabe on the football match where everything changed.