The bizarre photographs of Martin Parr

The pictures that made the English photographer Martin Parr famous are shots of his compatriots on a short vacation in the rocky southern English seaside resort of New Brighton. The series “The Last Resort” shows people, kissed a little too hard by the sun, with cancer-red skin, the bulldozer providing shade, relaxing among the fast food garbage.

“This is what we look like when we have fun,” these images scream in brightly colored artificiality, as if they had been dipped in candied sugar again. The ruthless documentarian achieved this effect by using flashlight during the day.

You almost get sunburned when you look at them, some of these photographs are so exaggerated. This also meant that Parr’s acceptance into the renowned photo agency “Magnum” in the 1990s was only possible despite resistance. He is said to have said that he would rather go to the supermarket for his work than to the war. From 2013 to 2017, the Brit was even president of “Magnum”.

 

Parr, born in Epsom, Surrey in 1952, had an incredibly good eye for the painful bizarreness of everyday life, for the banal and vulgar and sometimes the comic. He used an underwater camera to photograph people in bad weather bracing themselves against the wind with wet raincoats. With these observations he explicitly meant himself. Basically, all of his pictures were self-portraits, he said about the recordings.

Satirical portraits of British society

The Berlin exhibition house C/O Berlin wrote that he was the “photographer with the English eye”. Parr himself said that he had applied the national characteristics of the British to his work with mischief and irony.

In the foundation he founded in Bristol, photography relating to Great Britain and Ireland is exhibited and his own work is collected and archived. Most recently, Parr worked to replenish his archive of images about Britain, to which he continually contributed new images. In 2021, Parr was diagnosed with cancer. He died on Sunday at the age of 73.

 

The “Short & Sweet” exhibition at Mudec in Milan in summer 2024 featured images from some of Martin Parr’s most important series. The photographer’s favorite subjects included beach life and leisure.

© IMAGO/Avalon.red/IMAGO/Nicola Marfisi/AGF / Avalon

Martin Parr’s food photography focused on consumerism, sadness and excess. Here are some of his food shots, exhibited on the streets of Toronto.

© IMAGO/dreamstime/Copyright: xDreamstimexArim44x v

Nobody is consciously bizarre in these pictures. It just is what it is.

© IMAGO/Avalon.red/IMAGO/Nicola Marfisi/AGF / Avalon

Craving sausages? A look at an exhibition by Martin Parr in Tartu, Estonia.

© imago images/Scanpix/SILLE ANNUK via www.imago-images.de

Martin Parr had a keen sense of social milieus. He observed cheap tourism as well as high society with its exaggerated consumer trappings.

© IMAGO/Avalon.red/IMAGO/Nicola Marfisi/AGF / Avalon

Parr has published more than 40 photo books. Satirical portraits abound in “Common Sense” from 1999. Here a lady sunbathing in Benidorm.

© IMAGO/MAXPPP/IMAGO/olivier corsan

His pictures were also regularly exhibited in Germany. Martin Parr at a large retrospective at the NRW-Forum Düsseldorf in 2019.

© IMAGO/ABACAPRESS/IMAGO/IPA/ABACA

 

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