England has been a key subject of Magnum photographer Martin Parr's work since he started taking pictures. Think of England is a comic, opinionated, affectionately satirical, colour-saturated photo-essay about the identity of England.
As
Scotland and Wales consolidate their status as nations and Great
Britain begins to unravel, this book of new work contributes to the
debate about what it means to be English. Quintessentially English
himself, Parr's great achievement as a photographer is his ability to
transform the obvious into the surprising, reinventing clichés of
Englishness as provocative revelations. His tour of obvious England
takes in Ascot and the charity shop, seaside resorts, herbaceous
borders, the bring-and-buy stall, cucumber sandwiches and cups of tea,
baked beans and bad footwear.
Parr's
work has already added to the visual vocabulary of England; this book,
his first specifically on the subject of England, stretches it further.
Simultaneously affectionate and brutally direct, all the photographs
are shot with a ring flash camera (more usually used for medical
photographs), which has been his medium of choice for the last four
years.