In the heart of the West End, Soho has long been a haven for creativity, criminals, scandal, sex and a source of inspiration for photographers. The three fascinating archives in this exhibition document this bohemian area of London, famed in the 50s and 60s for its vibrancy and exoticism.
Jean Straker (UK, 1913 – 1984) founded the Visual Arts Club in Soho in 1951 ‘for artistes and photographers, amateur and professional, studying the female nude’. He was a prolific photographer, and his photographs are now part of the collection of the National Media Museum in Bradford. The works are remarkable for their lack of artifice, their sexuality and curiosity and for reflecting the sexual predilections of the era.
Magnum photographer David Hurn (UK, b. 1934) documented Soho’s strippers, in the many peep shows and strip clubs. With a sympathetic and insightful gaze, Hurn depicts these working women in their public and private spaces, both performing and at rest.
Photographs from the Daily Herald Archive show how press photographers were drawn to Soho, as both a hub of criminality and the backdrop for an explosion of youth culture. From images of scarred gangsters to the wedding of 50s pop star and teen idol Tommy Steele, these photographs and the scandal they caused are icons of the 50s and 60s.
This exhibition is curated by Val Williams and Bob Pullen. One of the three final exhibitions at No 5 & 8 Great Newport Street.
For further information on this and past exhibitions, visit our Archive and Study Room.