SOME QUOTES

May 20th, 2008 admin

Here are a few quotes I’ve come across in my research over past few weeks, which I’ve found particularly interesting or inspirational. If you have any other suggestions, please post them below.

“Happy are those who see beauty in modest spots where others see nothing. Everything is beautiful, the whole secret lies in knowing how to interpret.” 

Pissarro (1893). Quoted in Britain Observed by Geoffrey Grigson (1975)

“My limited and abstracted art is to be found under every hedge, and in every lane, and therefore nobody thinks it worth picking up.” 

Constable (1832) on declaring he had never seen an ugly thing in his life. Quoted in Britain Observed by Geoffrey Grigson (1975)

“It is part of the photographer’s job to see more intensely than most people do. He must have and keep in him something of the receptiveness of the child who looks at the world for the first time or of the traveller who enters a strange country.” 

Bill Brandt (1948)

“One of the pleasures of being English is to return to this country after a longish time abroad, especially if you come up the Solent in a liner….soon familiarity blinds you again, but for an hour ot two you have caught a surprising vision of your country and your countrymen: you have notice a hundred details which are peculiar to England; you have, in fact been able to look through foreign eyes.” 

Raymond Mortimer from the introduction to Bill Brandt’s The English at Home (1936)

 “England has a much softer atmosphere. Colours just don’t sing the way they do in the States…When I got back to England I found everything so grey that I didn’t see any point in shooting in colour. It didn’t seem to be an important part of our lives….To me Britian is very much a black and white country…” 

Tony Ray-Jones from an interview in SLR Camera (1969)

 “We must live in a country and work there in order to understand its ways and customs – to travel through as a tourist is to see only clichés.” 

Tony Ray-Jones, Notes on Jean Renoir (c.1967)

 “One can learn a good deal about the spirit of England from the comic coloured postcards that you see in the windows of cheap stationers’ shops. These things are a sort of diary upon which the English people have unconsciously recorded themselves. Their old-fashioned outlook, their graded snobberies, their mixture of bawdiness and hypocrisy, their extreme gentleness, their deeply moral attitude to life, are all mirrored there.” 

George Orwell, The Lion and the Unicorn (1941)

“Englishness is continuous, it stretches into the future and the past, there is something in it that persists; as in a living creature. What can the England of 1940 have in common with the England of 1840? But then, what have you in common with the child of five whose photograph your mother keeps on the mantelpiece? Nothing, except that you happen to be the same person.” 

George Orwell, The Lion and the Unicorn (1941)

 “England is not at all a single category but a set of relationships. The nation exists in tension. Its fellow members remain deeply divided among themselves, but at the same time they constantly prove themselves ready to unite around certain issues, talismans and images.” 

John Taylor, A Dream of England (1994)

“The English have not devoted a lot of energy discussing who they are. It is a mark of self-confidence: the English have not spent a great deal of time defining themselves because they haven’t needed to.”  

Jeremy Paxman, The English (1999)

“In a society of individuals, loyalties are to kindred spirits. Instead of easy-going, random meetings of street life, the English do their socialising by choice and form clubs – ‘Who runs the country?’ asked John Betjeman rhetorically. ‘The RSPB. Their members are behind every hedge.’ And he was speaking long before the RSPB membership reached its present vertiginous levels of well over one million. There are clubs to going fishing, support football teams, play cards, arrange flowers, race pigeons, make jam, ride bicycles, watch birds, even for going on holiday.” 

Jeremy Paxman, The English (1999)

“I hope that this apparently incongruous series of images will communicate something of the mixture of anxiety and apprehension, sadness and affection with which I view the current state of our nation.” 

Paul Graham from the introduction to Britain in 1984 co-published by the National Media Museum and The Photographers’ Gallery (1984)

ONE RESPONSE TO “SOME QUOTES”

  1. Jennifer Hodgson Says:
    May 26th, 2008 at 6:45 am

    Hi there Simon,

    Really good to see Tony Ray-Jones in your list there. I’m a postgraduate academic and writer specialising in Englishness, and particularly the English seaside; I discovered Ray-Jones’ work as an undergraduate and found he enabled me to finally put my finger on the “strangeness” I’d been trying to elucidate about Englishness, and especially about England by the Sea. I’m currently based in East Anglia, and I’m overjoyed to report that the scenes he photographed in Great Yarmouth are still largely intact!

    I notice you mention Tom Stoddart’s work below. Since I began work in the area, I’ve noticed something of a new heritage industry springing up around English national identity. Interesting that an aesthetics of Englishness with its roots so firmly embedded in the mid twentieth century moment should be so prevalent in the cultural imagination half a century later! There’s something incredibly compelling going on, for sure.

    I have a couple of suggestions for your reading list. Have you looked into the work of Mass Observation, a national project documenting the surrealism of everyday life, primarily during the 30s-50s period. Richard Hoggart’s ‘The Uses of Literacy’ is a partially-autobiographical memoir about English working class culture at mid century, and given the personal perspective you mention on your homepage, might be of particular interest to you. Patrick Wright and Jed Esty are good contextual reading too, especially about the place of nostalgia in the English cultural imagination.

    On a much smaller scale, this site (http://www.rememberfileybutlins.co.uk/) might be of interest to you. I was brought up in the North East of England, where this Butlin’s camp at Filey lay intact but dormant for 20 years after it was closed in the early eighties (my family used to drive past on the way to our caravan near Scarborough). It was a fantastic site, with the Clubhouse, chalets, lido etc all left like the Marie Celeste. Unfortunately, by the time I was old enough to scale the walls with my camera the building developers had arrived, but the site above documents the camp just before it was demolished.

    I hope some of the above is helpful. If you want to discuss any of it further, do feel free to email me – I’m a bit of an enthusiast, as you can probably tell.

    Best wishes and good luck with your project,

    Jennifer

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