Shirley Baker (9 July 1932 – 21 September 2014) was a British photographer, best known for her street photography and street portraits in working class areas of Greater Manchester.[1][2][3] She worked as a freelance writer and photographer on various magazines, books and newspapers, and as a lecturer on photography.[4] Most of her photography was made for her personal interest but she undertook occasional commissions.[1]
Baker started working as an industrial photographer for fabric manufacturers Courtaulds before working as freelance, as a photographer for other businesses[6] and as a writer and photographer on various magazines, books and newspapers,[4] including The Guardian.[6]
Baker had two books of her photographs published during her lifetime. Street Photographs: Manchester and Salford (1989) contains her photographs of people in Salford and Manchester in the 1960s and early 1970s. In the late 1990s she was commissioned by The Lowry to revisit the same places. The Lowry held an exhibition of her work and published a book, Streets and Spaces: Urban Photography – Salford and Manchester – 1960s–2000 (2000), with her older photographs juxtaposed against her new photographs, showing people in different periods, in a radically altered urban landscape, yet involved in similar activities.[6]
In the 1980s, when Baker's doctor husband's work took them to London for a time, she photographed punks in and around Camden Lock and Camden Market.[1][2][6] She also photographed in Japan, New York and the French Riviera.[9] In 1987 she undertook a project on the Royal Manchester Children's Hospital supported by Viewpoint Gallery, Salford. In July and August 1987 she completed a commission to photograph at Manchester Airport for the Documentary Photography Archive (DPA). Baker's work at the airport was featured in a Granada Television programme on the work of the DPA and broadcast as part of its "Celebration" series on 23 October 1987.[10]
Legacy
Shirley Baker: Life Through a Lens, a feature-length documentary, had its premiere on 18 May 2023, at the Centre for British Photography in London. It was then shown at Manchester Art Gallery on 23 May 2023. The film, written by John West and directed and edited by Jason Figgis, is narrated by the actor Samantha Beckinsale.[11]
Publications
Street Photographs: Manchester and Salford. Newcastle upon Tyne: Bloodaxe, 1989. ISBN978-1852240585. With essays by Stephen Constantine, "Street Scenes: Late Afternoon", and by Baker, "Street Photographs".
Streets and Spaces: Urban Photography – Salford and Manchester – 1960s–2000. Salford: The Lowry, 2000. ISBN978-1902970127. Edited by Michael Leitch and with an essay by Baker. Published to accompany an exhibition at The Lowry.
Women and Children; and Loitering Men. London: The Photographers' Gallery, 2015. ISBN9780957618848. Published to accompany the exhibition Women, Children and Loitering Men at The Photographers' Gallery, London, 17 July – 20 September 2015.[12] Edited by Anna Douglas. With a preface by Brett Rogers, a foreword by Grislelda Pollock, an essay by Anna Douglas and a short story by Jackie Kay.
2015: Women, Children and Loitering Men, The Photographers' Gallery, London, July–September 2015.[14][15]
Exhibitions with others
1963: Nine Photographers, Manchester Building and Design Centre, Manchester, November–December 1963.[16]
1986: Here Yesterday, and Gone Today exhibited at Salford Art Gallery as part of the Images of Salford exhibition.[5]
1989: North West Frontiers, July–August 1989, Cornerhouse, Manchester.[17]
2012: A Lowry Summer, The Lowry, Salford, Greater Manchester, July–October 2012. Exhibition of work by L. S. Lowry accompanied by work from other artists who depicted leisure time, Baker and Humphrey Spender.[18]
2012: Observers: British Photography and the British Scene, Serviço Social da Indústria (SESI), São Paulo.[19]