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Shutting Up Shop
5 November 2007 - 4 May 2008
Bookshop Gallery
Admission Free
Supported by


Platt's Provision Store
by John Londei
© John Londei
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In 1972, photographer John Londei
started taking pictures of small independent shops the length
and breadth of Britain. Often family-run businesses, well-established
in their local communities, Londei strove to capture the timeworn
presence of these already anachronistic businesses the
butchers and bakers, button makers, cobblers, fishmongers and
chemists of our high streets. Over a fifteen-year period, he
photographed 60 shops. In 2004, when he retraced his steps and
revisited the shops he'd photographed, he found that only seven
of the 60 were still in business. His subsequent book of the
series, Shutting Up Shop is a fitting tribute to Britain's
independent retailers.
Coinciding with the recent publication
of Shutting Up Shop, the National Portrait Gallery presents
a display of a selection of photographs from the book. Proud
proprietors are pictured outside their enterprises, such as Frank
Gedge, owner of a contraceptives shop opened in Stoke-on-Trent
in 1935, and Oliver Meek, 86 years old and last in a line of
basket makers stretching back seven generations in the small
town of Swaffham, Norfolk. The interiors of some of the more
idiosyncratic shops are also shown as a backdrop to their proprietors,
for example Philip Poole photographed in his perfectly organised
pen shop, His Nibs, formerly of Drury Lane, London and Bill and
Joan, standing at the counter of the provisions store they've
run together in Lincolnshire since 1947.
For Londei, the shopkeepers themselves
were vital to the portraits of the shops. 'To these people running
the shop meant so much more than a business. Somehow it felt
as if they'd turned the premises into living entities; and they
themselves were cherished and long-serving members of the community.
And how proud they were to still be serving it!'
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