Subscribe
Search
ePaper
Newsletters
Subscribe
ePaper
Newsletters
Art market
Museums & heritage
Exhibitions
Books
Podcasts
Columns
Technology
Adventures with Van Gogh
Art market
Museums & heritage
Exhibitions
Books
Podcasts
Columns
Technology
Adventures with Van Gogh
Search
Book Shorts
review

When nothing is sacred, nothing can be subversive: photographs of London’s Soho captured in catalogue

The area’s heyday in the mid 20th century has been obliterated by commercial exploitation

Aldo Scardinelli
12 March 2020
Share
John Goldblatt, Untitled, from the series The Undressing Room (1968) © John Goldblatt, courtesy of the artist’s estate

John Goldblatt, Untitled, from the series The Undressing Room (1968) © John Goldblatt, courtesy of the artist’s estate

The London district of Soho, a tract bordered by the massive retail strip of Oxford Street on the north and the theatre area of Shaftesbury Avenue on the south, is defined east and west by Charing Cross Road and Regent Street. Soho today is a mass tourist trap of restaurants and cafes with a pockmarked veneer of its glory days of sleaze in the mid-20th century. Famous then as the metropolitan hub of a grimy subculture infamous for sex, criminality, perversity, transgression and eccentricity, to name but a few of its hallmarks, this book is a photographic tribute to Soho’s various subversive activities and their sites. John Goldblatt’s 1968 untitled photograph of the strippers’ dressing room (above) is quaint by today’s hard-core diet. Most of the pictures are in nostalgic black and white, indicative of a vanished past. A combination of historic and contemporary work by the photographers Kelvin Brodie, Clancy Gebler Davies, Corinne Day, William Klein and Andres Petersen, along with photographs, commissioned by the Photographers’ Gallery, by Daragh Soden for the exhibition which this book accompanied last year, are presented in discrete chapters headed by short texts outlining Soho’s social history. As there are no longer any broadly accepted ethical standards in English society, Soho’s raison d’être has vanished and has been replaced by gross commercialisation and commodification. Ichabod? It all depends on your point of view.

  • Karen McQuaid and Julian Rodriguez, ed, Shot in Soho: Photographing Love and Lawlessness in the Heart of London, Prestel, 162pp, £24.99, $35 (hb)
Book ShortsBooksSocial historyLondonThe Photographers' GalleryPhotographs
Share
Subscribe to The Art Newspaper’s digital newsletter for your daily digest of essential news, views and analysis from the international art world delivered directly to your inbox.
Newsletter sign-up
Information
About
Contact
Cookie policy
Data protection
Privacy policy
Frequently Asked Questions
Subscription T&Cs
Terms and conditions
Advertise
Sister Papers
Sponsorship policy
Follow us
Facebook
Instagram
YouTube
LinkedIn
© The Art Newspaper