Stephen Gill Biography

Stephen Gill, 2014

Stephen Gill (born 1971) is a British experimental, conceptual and do*entary photographer, whose work has been exhibited internationally along with his books that are a key aspect to Gill’s practice.

Books by Gill

  • A Book of Field Studies. London: Chris Boot, 2004. ISBN:978-0954281366. Introduction by Jon Ronson. Subjects divided into separate series 'Day Return', 'Trolleys Portraits', 'Lost', and 'Trolleys Portraits'.
  • Invisible. 2005. ISBN:0-9549405-0-4.
  • Hackney Wick. London: Self-published / Nobody in *ociation with Archive of Modern Conflict, 2005. ISBN:0-9549405-1-2.
  • Buried. 2006. ISBN:0-9549405-4-7.
  • Archaeology in Reverse.
    • London: Self-published / Nobody; Archive of Modern Conflict, 2007. ISBN:0-9549405-5-5. Afterword by Iain Sinclair. Edition of 3000 copies.
    • London: Self-published / Nobody; Archive of Modern Conflict, 2007. Special edition in salamander case and including print. Edition of 100 copies.
  • Hackney Flowers.
    • London: Self-published / Nobody, 2007. ISBN:0-9549405-3-9. Edition of 3500 copies.
    • London: Self-published / Nobody, 2007. Special edition made from waste paper sheets and including a print. Edition of 100 copies.
  • Anonymous Origami. London: Self-published / Nobody; Archive of Modern Conflict, 2007. ISBN:978-0-9549405-8-4.
  • A Series of Disappointments.
    • London: Self-published / Nobody; Archive of Modern Conflict, 2008. ISBN:0-9556577-0-9. Edition of 3000 copies available in three different covers.
    • London: Self-published / Nobody; Archive of Modern Conflict, 2008. Special edition, in a box with a print and stencil. Edition of 100 copies, mixed covers.
  • Warming Down. London: Self-published / Nobody, 2008. Photographs taken in Hackney Wick. 15 C-Type prints and one lino print housed in an ex Hackney Library music score book. Edition of 130 copies.
  • The Hackney Rag. London: Self-published / Nobody; Tokyo: Artbeat, 2009. Newspaper format. Text by Shigeo Goto. Published on the occasion of Gill's first solo exhibition in *an. Selections from his Hackney series Hackney Wick, Buried, Hackney Flowers, Hackney Flower portraits, Archaeology in Reverse and Warming Down as well as new images. Includes a print. Edition of 1000 copies.
  • Trinidad 44 photographs. London: Self-published / Nobody, 2009. 44 loose C-Type prints and a dry point etching, housed within the shell of a scooped out 1964 publication. Edition of 115 copies.
  • Coming up for Air. London: Self-published / Nobody; Archive of Modern Conflict, 2010. ISBN:978-0-9556577-2-6.
  • Outside In. Brighton, England: Photoworks; London: Archive of Modern Conflict, 2010. ISBN:978-1-903796-40-5. Produced as part of Gill's commission to make a series of photographs for the 2010 Brighton Photo Biennial.
  • B Sides. Companion book to Coming up for Air.
    • London: Self-published / Nobody, 2010. ISBN:978-0-9556577-4-0.
    • London: Self-published / Nobody, 2010. Special edition in a box with a print. Edition of 100 copies and 5 artist's proofs.
  • Off Ground. Text by Iain Sinclair. Photographs of bricks and rocks picked up in the aftermath of the Hackney riots.
    • London: Self-published / Nobody; Archive of Modern Conflict, 2011. Newspaper format. Edition of 2000 copies.
    • London: Self-published / Nobody; Archive of Modern Conflict, 2011. Newspaper format. Includes print. Edition of 100 copies.
  • Coexistence. 2012. ISBN:978-2-919873-10-4. Edition of 1500 copies, 250 copies of each cover.
  • Not In Service. London: Self-published / Nobody, 2012. Newspaper format. Published on the occasion of Stephen Gill Best Before End retrospective exhibition at Foam Fotografiemuseum Amsterdam, 16 May – 15 July 2012. Includes image extracts from series Talking to Ants, Off Ground, Hackney Wick, Best Before End, Hammer and Blackberry, Hackney Flowers, A Series of Disappointments, Trolley Portraits and Billboards. Text by Iain Sinclair.
  • Best Before End. Text by Will Self. Photographs made in East London, colour negative films part processed and soaked in energy drink.
    • London: Self-published / Nobody, 2014.
    • London: Self-published / Nobody, 2014. Special edition, in a clamshell box with a print. Edition of 100 copies and 5 artist's proofs.
  • Talking to Ants. Photographs made in East London between 2009 and 2013.
    • London: Self-published / Nobody, 2014. ISBN:978-0-9575369-1-3.
    • London: Self-published / Nobody, 2014. ISBN:978-0-9575369-2-0. Special edition, in a clamshell box with a print. Edition of 100 copies and 5 artist's proofs.
  • Pigeons. London: Self-published / Nobody; Archive of Modern Conflict, 2014. Words by Will Self.
  • Hackney Kisses. London: Self-published / Nobody; Archive of Modern Conflict, 2014. ISBN:978-0-9570490-7-9. Photographer unknown, edited and produced by Gill, words by Timothy Prus.
  • Night Procession. Self-published / Nobody, 2017. ISBN:978-0-9575369-3-7. Photographs by Gill, words by Karl Ove Knausgård.
    • Self-published / Nobody, 2017. With print. ISBN:978-0-9575369-4-4.
  • The Pillar. Self-published / Nobody, 2019. ISBN:9789198523300. Photographs by Gill, words by Karl Ove Knausgård. Winner of the 2019 Les Rencontres de la Photographie author book award. Self-published / Nobody, 2019. ISBN:9789198523317.
  • Please Notify The Sun. Self-published / Nobody, 2021. Photographs by Gill, words by Karl Ove Knausgård.

Books edited by Gill

  • Unseen UK: a book of photographs by the people at Royal Mail. London: Royal Mail, 2006. ISBN:0-946165-53-X.
  • Bright, Bright Day by Andrei Tarkovsky. London: White Space Gallery, 2008. ISBN:0-9557394-1-1. Polaroid photographs by Tarkovsky, edited by Gill. Edition of 3000 copies.
  • Let's Sit Down Before we go by Bertien van Manen. London: Mack, 2011. ISBN:978-1-907946-12-7.
  • I Will Be Wolf by Bertien van Manen. London: Mack, 2017. ISBN:9781910164914.

Exhibitions

  • 2003: Hackney Wick, Photographers' Gallery, London.
  • 2004: Field Studies, Rencontres d’Arles, Arles, France.
  • 2004: Field Studies, Museum of Architecture, Moscow.
  • 2005: Stephen Gill Photographs, Architectural *ociation School of Architecture, London.
  • 2005: Invisible and Lost, PHotoEspaña, Real Jardín Botánico.
  • 2006: Toronto Photography Festival, Canada.
  • 2007: Anonymous Origami and Buried, Leighton House Museum, London.
  • 2008: A Series of Disappointments, Gungallery, Stockholm.
  • 2009: Hackney Flowers, G/P Gallery, Tokyo.
  • 2010: Coming up for Air, G/P Gallery, Tokyo.
  • 2011: Outside In, Gungallery, Stockholm.
  • 2011: Outside In, G/P Gallery, Tokyo.
  • 2012: Coexistence, CNA, Luxembourg.
  • 2013: Best Before End, Foam Fotografiemuseum Amsterdam, Amsterdam. Exhibition of his London series made between 2000 and 2013.
  • 2014: Talking to Ants, Shoot Gallery, Oslo.
  • 2014: Best Before End, GP Gallery, Tokyo.
  • 2014: Urban Spirit, Christophe Guye Galerie, Zurich, Switzerland
  • 2015: Buried flowers coexist with disappointed ants, Christophe Guye Galerie, Zurich.
  • 2015: London Chronicles, Pôle Image, Rouen.
  • 2015: Talking to Ants, Dillon Gallery, New York.
  • 2015: Myeyefellout, The Photographers' Gallery, London.
  • 2016: Stephen Gill's fatigue laboratory, Christophe Guye Galerie, Zurich.
  • 2018: Stephen Gill. Vom Do*ent zum Experiment: Fotografien, Projektionen, Bücher, Objekte (Stephen Gill. From do*ent to experiment: photographs, projections, books and objects), Museum für Photographie, Braunschweig, April–June 2018.
  • 2020: Abstractions, Christophe Guye Galerie, Zurich, Switzerland.

Collections

Gill's photographic work is held in various collections including:

  • Victoria and Albert Museum, London
  • National Portrait Gallery, London
  • The Tate, London
  • Sprengel Museum, Hanover
  • Museum of London, London
  • Archive of Modern Conflict, London

Quotes

Iain Sinclair:

Stephen Gill has learnt this: to haunt the places that haunt him. His photo-ac*ulations demonstrate a tender vision factored out of experience; alert, watchful, not overeager, wary of that mendacious conceit, ‘closure’. There is always flow, momentum, the sense of a man p*ing through a place that delights him. A sense of stepping down, immediate engagement, politic exchange. Then he remounts the bicycle and away. Loving retrievals, like a letter to a friend, never possession… What I like about Stephen Gill is that he has learnt to give us only as much as we need, the bones of the bones of the bones…

According to Martin Parr (writing in 2004):

Stephen Gill is emerging as a major force in British photography. His best work is a hybrid between do*entary and conceptual work and for this international it is the repeated exploration of one idea, executed with the precision that makes these series so fascinating and illuminating. Gill brings a very British, understated irony into portrait and landscape photography.

Jon Ronson, writing in 2004 about Field Studies, was reminded of the Observer's Books:

Stephen's photos have all the naive gusto of the Observer series of old Mercifully lacking in malevolence, they are also wise and modern and beautifully laden with tiny, understated details about the way we live today. When you look at a Martin Parr photograph, everything about it says, instantly, Martin Parr. Stephen's photographs, however, are so subtle, so seemingly un-aut*d, it's only when you stare at them en m*e and one after the other, you realise that they can only have been taken by Stephen Gill. There is a tremendous, quiet, respectful, *ulative power to his work.

References

    External links

    • Official website
    • Gallery at Christophe Guye Galerie
    • Nobody Books
    • About Best Before End, Will Self: my energy-drink addiction, at The Guardian
    • Review: Stephen Gill’s “Best Before End” at FOAM
    • Review of Pigeons at The Financial Times
    • Video of Best Before End at Foam
    • Review of Coexistence at Time
    • Interview about Outside In at The Morning News
    • About Coming Up For Air at The Telegraph
    • Self-publish or be damned: why photographers are going it alone at The Guardian
    • About Hackney Wick at Hackney Citizen
    • Review of Archaeology in Reverse at The Guardian
    • Review of Hackney Wick at The Guardian
    • About Invisible at The Guardian