The bard celebrates two other fine practitioners of the art, and laments a lost brewer
Stills From Life
Syd Shelton, Unicorn Books, £40
SYD SHELTON’S Stills From Life is a 50-year focus on race and class struggle, taking the reader on a journey from the proud slums of Sydney to Brighton beach. A key activist in the original Rock Against Racism movement, his shots range from the streets to the stage and back again, and almost all with the focus on people.
Shelton’s photographic career starts on the opposite side of the world. Having studied in Wakefied he visited Australia in the early 1970s where he started to document society, taking shots of the inner-city suburb of Redfern, and most notably people of “The Block,” one of the first Aboriginal housing settlements.
This early work is dark, moody, somewhat oppressive, but impressive. A companion piece on Woolloomooloo and the fight against gentrification and the “green ban” that stopped residents being evicted is stark, with the subjects becoming detached, mirroring the gradual erosion of the working class from the docks and surrounding area.
If true, the photo’s history is a damning indictment of the systematic exploitation of non-Western journalists by Western media organisations – a pattern that persists today, posit KATE CANTRELL and ALISON BEDFORD
MARIA DUARTE recommends the ambitious portrait of an agricultural community confronted by the trauma of enclosure
MICHAL BONCZA, MARIA DUARTE and ANGUS REID review The Other Way Around, Modi: Three Days On The Wing Of Madness, Watch The Skies, and Superman
MARJORIE MAYO, JOHN GREEN and MARIA DUARTE review Sudan, Remember Us, From Hilde, With Love, The Road to Patagonia, and F1


