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News release


13 July 2009

Life in post-war England celebrated in John Gay exhibition at Guildhall Art Gallery

More than 100 photographs of post-war England and iconic views of London will feature in a major exhibition of John Gay’s work at Guildhall Art Gallery next month.

John Gay: A Centenary Celebration, which opens on Monday 3 August 2009, will present a wide range of photographs of people, buildings, animals and landscapes, taken by Gay between the mid-1930s and 1990s. The images have been selected from English Heritage’s extensive collection and brought together for the exhibition, which marks the centenary of Gay’s birth, and have been interpreted as an exploration of his adopted homeland.

Described by English Heritage as one of the most respected - but now, largely overlooked - photographers of the mid-20th century, John Gay was born as Hans Göhler in Germany in 1909 and moved to England in 1935, where he anglicised his name and settled in Highgate until his death in 1999.

During his prolific career as a freelance photographer, Gay worked for Country Fair, The Strand and Farmer’s Weekly. He also published several photographic books and collaborated with high profile authors, such as Sir John Betjeman and architectural historian Gavin Stamp.

Vivien Knight, head of Guildhall Art Gallery, says: “I’m sure that visitors to the exhibition will be immediately drawn into John Gay’s view of post-war England, and many of them will recognise his photographs of London, rural life and holidaymakers in Blackpool in the 1940s. There’ll be a lot to enjoy, especially for anyone with a keen interest in social history, photography and architecture.”

Anne Woodward, Exhibitions Manager at English Heritage, says: “John Gay’s photographs record English people and places during fifty years of unprecedented change. They evoke the contrasting moods of the post-war decades, from the smoky austerity of a station platform in the 1940s to the brave new world of 1960s architecture.”

Over 40,000 photographs by John Gay are held at the National Monuments Record, the public archive of English Heritage, and many can be seen free of charge online at www.english-heritage.org.uk/viewfinder.

Admission to John Gay: A Centenary Celebration is free on purchase of a ticket (£2.50 for adults, concessions £1) to Guildhall Art Gallery. Entry is free of charge to City workers and residents, as well as all day on Fridays and from 3.30pm on other days.

Ends

For further information, interviews and images:

Andrew Buckingham, Press Officer, City of London Corporation, 020 7332 1452 or mob: 07795 333 060; email andrew.buckingham@cityoflondon.gov.uk

Renee Fok at the English Heritage Press Office, telephone 020 7973 3295, email renee.fok@english-heritage.org.uk

Notes for Editors:

John Gay: A Centenary Celebration runs from Monday 3 August to Sunday 18 October at Guildhall Art Gallery.

The gallery’s contact details are: Guildhall Art Gallery, Guildhall Yard, London, EC2V 5AE, telephone 020 7332 3870, email guildhall.artgallery@cityoflondon.gov.uk

Andrew Sargent’s book, England Observed: John Gay (1909 - 1999), accompanies the exhibition. Priced £20.00 - ISBN 978 1-848020-03-0, 324 pages.

Journalists who would like to attend the press view on Thursday 30 July from 10am - 12noon are asked to contact Andrew Buckingham (see above for details).

The City of London Corporation, which provides local government services for the ‘Square Mile’, the financial and commercial heart of Britain, works nationally and internationally to maintain and enhance the City as a world-leading international financial and business centre. Its other special responsibilities and services to London and the wider UK include the Barbican Centre, Tower Bridge, the Central Criminal Court at the Old Bailey, 10,000 acres of open space including Hampstead Heath and Epping Forest, three wholesale food markets, two inner-London City Academies, the City Bridge Trust and acting as London’s Port Health Authority. The Lord Mayor of the City of London (currently Ian Luder) works extensively at home and abroad to promote the City.


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