Side Gallery closed on 9 April 2023 after the loss of its Arts Council England National Portfolio Organisation status and funding in November 2022, combined with rising energy bills.[8] It launched a fundraising campaign which closed on 30 May 2023 to help it work towards reopening in 2024.[9]
History
The inaugural exhibition was titled Documents in the North East and showed the work of four documentary photographers: Robert Hamilton Carling, James Henry Cleet, Sirkka-Liisa Konttinen and Graham Smith.[10]
In 2015 the gallery closed for a year and a half for major redevelopment, reopening in September 2016.[6] A second exhibition space was added, as well as a library, and study centre / social space with digital access to the collection.[11][12][13]
Side Gallery closed on 9 April 2023 after a reduction in Arts Council England funding, combined with rising energy bills. It launched a fundraising campaign to raise £60,000 so it could work towards reopening in 2024.[14][15]
1977. until 13 February. Documents in the North East. Featuring work from Robert Hamilton Carling, James Henry Cleet, Sirkka-Liisa Konttinen and Graham Smith.
1977. until 13 March. Singular Realities. Curated by Gerry Badger. Showing work from Lewis Ambler, Kurt Benning, John Blakemore, Beverly Bryon, Eric Carpenter, Paul Hill, Isabella Jedrzejscyk, Paul Joyce, Guy Ryecart, Paddy Summerfield, Gail Tandy and Peter Turner.
1977. until 10 April. New York in the Thirties – The photographs of Berenice Abbott.
1977. until 8 May. A Vision of Paris – The photographs of Eugene Atget and Viva – The photographs of Claude Raimond-Dityvon, Yves Jean-mougin, Herve Gloaguen, Martine Franck, François Hers, Michel Dulluc and Jacques Minassian.
Collection
The gallery's collection includes "an extensive documentary record of the region"[1] as well as work by Sirkka-Liisa Konttinen,[19]Russell Lee, Lewis Hine,[1] and Susan Meiselas.[1] Some of the gallery's exhibitions that are held in its collection include Tish Murtha's Juvenile Jazz Bands (1979), Konttinen's Step by Step (1984), Dean Chapman's Shifting Ground (2001) and Karen Robinson's All Dressed Up (2005).[6]
^New British Image 1977 British Journal of Photography, 11 February 1977, p. 109. Accessed 12 April 2023. McCormack was director of the Side Gallery and a member of the Arts Council's Photography Committee.
^William Messer, 'The British obsession: about to pay off, part 4', British Journal of Photography, 30 December 1977, p.1105. Martin is described as having 'taken the helm' after McCormack's departure.