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In page after page of stunning photographs, reproduced big and bold like the city itself, London gets the photographic tribute it deserves. The images are accompanied by hundreds of quotations, lively essays and references from key movies, books and music.
Synopsis
Samuel Johnson famously said that: "When a man is tired of London, he is tired of life." In this title, London's remarkable history, architecture, landmarks, streets, style, cool, swagger, and stalwart residents are pictured in hundreds of compelling photographs sourced from a wide array of archives around the world.
Book Details
Publisher:
TASCHEN
Publication Date:
10-Jul-2012
ISBN:
9783836528771
Observer review
London: Portrait of a City by Reuel Golden review
Kathy Sweeney the observer Sat 11 August 2012
As a pictorial history of London, this handsomely produced volume is unrivalled. One of Taschen's bigger-is-better coffee-table books, it is arranged into five chronological sections, celebrating and occasionally lamenting urban change in London from Victorian times to now. It tells a powerful and vibrant story, zeroing in on the pubs, docks, alleys, construction sites, crowded streets, markets and shops places where people either meet or cross paths as strangers that give shape to daily life.
The book draws richly on urban still photography and decades of the city's photojournalism to illustrate its major themes and trends. The best pictures, aesthetically and historically, vividly reveal the city's slums. London is often depicted as crowded, intimidating, dirty and anonymous; murky images of its dank fogs one of which claimed 4,000 lives in 1952, mainly as a result of respiratory diseases reveal their density and gloom. Other pictures men walking on a frozen Thames in 1894, a homeless shelter in 1901, troops at Euston on their way to the Somme all retain a human individuality, revealing the stoicism and camaraderie of the inhabitants and capturing the city's indomitable spirit, its landmarks and its style.
Collated by Reuel Golden, former editor of the British Journal of Photography, London features work from David Bailey, Cecil Beaton, Henri Cartier-Bresson, Terence Donovan and Roger Fenton, among others, alongside a well-crafted and informative text and references from key films, books and records. Many pictures have not been used before, so there's a constant feeling of revelation, and it's fascinating to see the images presented in such an indulgent and uncrowded manner.