Close Menu
Global News HQ
    What's Hot

    Changing of the guard: How C‑suite churn at global brokers is reshaping the insurance landscape

    December 11, 2025

    I bought a $30 battery analyzer on Amazon, and it revealed the truth about my gadget drawer

    December 11, 2025

    XRP ETFs absorbed nearly $1 billion in 18 days, yet the price is flashing a major warning signal

    December 11, 2025
    Recent Posts
    • Changing of the guard: How C‑suite churn at global brokers is reshaping the insurance landscape
    • I bought a $30 battery analyzer on Amazon, and it revealed the truth about my gadget drawer
    • XRP ETFs absorbed nearly $1 billion in 18 days, yet the price is flashing a major warning signal
    • The Best Ice Makers of 2025
    • Understanding Franchise Government: A Step-by-Step Definition Guide
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube TikTok
    Trending
    • Changing of the guard: How C‑suite churn at global brokers is reshaping the insurance landscape
    • I bought a $30 battery analyzer on Amazon, and it revealed the truth about my gadget drawer
    • XRP ETFs absorbed nearly $1 billion in 18 days, yet the price is flashing a major warning signal
    • The Best Ice Makers of 2025
    • Understanding Franchise Government: A Step-by-Step Definition Guide
    • 5 Types of Gifts the IRS Won’t Tax: Even If They’re Big
    • China Officials, PDD Staff Get Into Fistfights During Audit
    • Introducing the Interim Docket Blog
    Global News HQ
    • Technology & Gadgets
    • Travel & Tourism (Luxury)
    • Health & Wellness (Specialized)
    • Home Improvement & Remodeling
    • Luxury Goods & Services
    • Home
    • Finance & Investment
    • Insurance
    • Legal
    • Real Estate
    • More
      • Cryptocurrency & Blockchain
      • E-commerce & Retail
      • Business & Entrepreneurship
      • Automotive (Car Deals & Maintenance)
    Global News HQ
    Home - Luxury Goods & Services - Martin Parr’s Theatre of the Mundane
    Luxury Goods & Services

    Martin Parr’s Theatre of the Mundane

    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr WhatsApp VKontakte Email
    Martin Parr’s Theatre of the Mundane
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email


    The late Martin Parr was not only a great photographer, but one whose greatness lay precisely in mocking everything that was great, immense and pretentious. It was the reality of the world that he celebrated, making visible the things many try not to see: the vanity fair, global tourism, litter, sunburn. By photographing the mundane, he created work that was unique.

    Wherever he was, whether it was shooting the Badminton Horse Trials or a shopping mall in Las Vegas, the first McDonald’s in Russia, tourists in Gambia, or watches bearing the image of Saddam Hussein, he never ceased to be a faithful trainspotter of places, objects and events of all kinds.

    The “Deja view” exhibition featuring Martin Parr at the Magnum Photo Gallery in Paris in 2022. (Getty Images)

    People called him kitsch, but he was unclassifiable, a pure outsider, never ceasing to be himself, from Manchester Polytechnic to the Ritz, Paris; from a corridor in the department store Kendale Milne, where he first displayed his work in 1971, to the Jeu de Paume, where a major retrospective titled “Global Warning” is set to open in January, with more than 180 photos.

    I met Martin at the end of 2004 through the art director Christophe Renard, when, as a photographer for the Magnum agency, he was working on an exhibition and accompanying “Fashion Magazine” to which I contributed, produced by Le Bon Marché: it featured series such as “Couture Kisses,” “Compensations” and “Lipstick Memories,” with our favourite lipsticks photographed as “traces” on mugs from his personal collection. In a conversation with Paul Smith that ran in the magazine, in which Paul defined British style as “a mixture of classics, tradition, craftsmanship and a hint of eccentricity,” Martin added “ancient and modern combined.” He used to consider irony “the best thing about Britain.”

    Martin Parr images on display at the Centro del Carmen on March 26, 2021 in Valencia, Spain.
    Martin Parr images on display at the Centro del Carmen on March 26, 2021 in Valencia, Spain. (Getty Images)

    With Renard, who would later become the art director of Stiletto, the magazine I founded in 2003, we commissioned many fashion stories from Martin. He often set out to create a sense of “incongruity,” the greatest quality of a successful photograph in his eyes. And each time we worked together, it was an extraordinary experience, whether it was for the “Baie des Anges” series in Nice in 2005 with impromptu casting on the beach and models dressed in suits, mingling with vacationers; for “Rebirth” in 2007, an auction organized to benefit Jerusalem’s Hadassah Hospital for which he photographed the lots in a cosmetic surgery clinic; or for “Redux,” another charity project for which various luxury brands created miniature icons that Martin shot at the Plaza Athénée.

    He served up life like a commemorative teapot on a plastic tea tray, with perfect manners.

    One evening, I invited him to the Cristal Room Baccarat for a Stiletto dinner with William Klein, who paid him no attention whatsoever, as if he didn’t exist. But Martin didn’t care; he always liked to watch while pretending not to exist. It was through his profession that he existed, while giving the impression of resembling an eternal Mr Bean of photography. “Where is your photographer?” an attachée de press once asked me, not realising that Martin was standing in front of her. One of the world’s biggest collectors of photography books (alongside Karl Lagerfeld) looked so unlikely to her with his corduroy trousers, carpenter jacket and old Camper shoes.

    Martin Parr's exhibition "Short & Sweet" during the preview at Archaeological Civic Museum of Bologna in 2024 in Bologna, Italy.
    Martin Parr’s exhibition “Short & Sweet” during the preview at Archaeological Civic Museum of Bologna in 2024 in Bologna, Italy. (Getty Images)

    He skillfully transitioned from ‘80s social documentarian (The Cost of Living, The Last Resort) to chronicling a world devoured by consumerism. I remember when we asked Martin to shoot swimsuits in 2007, he came back, laughing and happy, with photos full of rolls of fat and potato chips.

    Even when you had lunch with him, the world became Martin’s: he would order frogs’ legs and suddenly everything from the red-and-white checked tablecloth to the crumbs on it took on new importance. You saw everything through his eyes. No pretender to ugly chic could ever surpass him.



    Source link

    horizontal Photography
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr WhatsApp Email
    Previous ArticleShould the Government Bail Out the Wine Industry?
    Next Article Cheap Team Building Ideas to Boost Collaboration

    Related Posts

    China Officials, PDD Staff Get Into Fistfights During Audit

    December 11, 2025

    Frederick Anderson Pre-Fall 2026 Collection

    December 11, 2025

    Oprah Winfrey Just Sold Part of Her Vast Montecito Estate for $17.2 Million

    December 11, 2025

    Chase opens new Sapphire Lounge in Las Vegas

    December 11, 2025
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    ads
    Don't Miss
    Insurance
    1 Min Read

    Changing of the guard: How C‑suite churn at global brokers is reshaping the insurance landscape

    The recent wave of leadership moves at the big global brokers is only the visible…

    I bought a $30 battery analyzer on Amazon, and it revealed the truth about my gadget drawer

    December 11, 2025

    XRP ETFs absorbed nearly $1 billion in 18 days, yet the price is flashing a major warning signal

    December 11, 2025

    The Best Ice Makers of 2025

    December 11, 2025
    Top
    Insurance
    1 Min Read

    Changing of the guard: How C‑suite churn at global brokers is reshaping the insurance landscape

    The recent wave of leadership moves at the big global brokers is only the visible…

    I bought a $30 battery analyzer on Amazon, and it revealed the truth about my gadget drawer

    December 11, 2025

    XRP ETFs absorbed nearly $1 billion in 18 days, yet the price is flashing a major warning signal

    December 11, 2025
    Our Picks
    Insurance
    1 Min Read

    Changing of the guard: How C‑suite churn at global brokers is reshaping the insurance landscape

    The recent wave of leadership moves at the big global brokers is only the visible…

    Technology & Gadgets
    5 Mins Read

    I bought a $30 battery analyzer on Amazon, and it revealed the truth about my gadget drawer

    Xtar VX2 Pro Battery Analyzer and Charger ZDNET’s key takeaways This does a lot more…

    Pages
    • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Disclaimer
    • Homepage
    • Privacy Policy
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube TikTok
    • Home
    © 2025 Global News HQ .

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

    Go to mobile version