Mik Critchlow

Mik Critchlow (7 March 1955 โ€“ 7 March 2023) was a British social documentary and portrait photographer who made work about North East England, in particular about his home town of Ashington.[1][2][3] A book of this work was published in 2019 and he had a solo exhibition at Woodhorn museum in 2021/22.[2][4] Critchlow's work is held in the collection of Amber Film & Photography Collective.[5]

Life and work

Critchlow was born and lived in Ashington, Northumberland. His grandfather worked as a coal miner there for 52 years and Critchlow's father was a coal miner. He left school aged 15.[2]

Beginning in 1977, he worked for decades on a long-term documentary photography project about Ashington, chronicling social change, including with its coal mining.[2][6][7] An exhibition and book, Coal Town, depicted "the colliery and the people who worked there before and after the mine was closed."[2] He also photographed the harsh way of life of people collecting seacoal from the beach near Lynemouth power station, close to Ashington.[8]

Death

Critchlow died on 7 March 2023, on his 68th birthday.[1][9][10]

Publications

  • Seamen โ€“ The NUS Strike 1988 โ€“ 1989: Photographs by Mik Critchlow. Black Diamond, 2013. Edition of 200 copies.
  • Hirst. Manchester: Buddleia / Morpeth: Bait (Museums Northumberland), 2018. With a foreword by Andrea Hawkins. Edition of 500 copies.
  • Coal Town. Liverpool: Bluecoat, 2019. With a foreword by Derek Smith.[2]

Solo exhibitions

Collections

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.