John Riddy

Northampton UK 1959, lives and works in Londen

London (Rail Sidings Road 1 and 2)
2017-2018
archival pigment print
98 x 123 cm each (unframed)
2018.JR.12

Modernity and the light we see it in is a long-standing theme in John Riddy's work ranging from the modernist architecture of 1930s Britain through to the architecture of Corbusier in Chandigarh. These works from 2016-2018 depict disparate views similarly characterised by notions of progress; London’s Victorian railway arches and a view across Lower Manhattan encompassing the High Line. Metropolitan ambition is variously documented in sequential images that chart changing views, spatial progression or altering light and weather. The viewer is invited to consider formal and temporal relationships both within and between still images carefully juxtaposed. 

The evidence of historical progress etched on structures that surround us has been a constant theme for Riddy and it is closely related to his long-standing determination to make photographs which chime with everyday urban experience. The works on show here come from walks in South London and a hotel room in New York and their sequencing echoes our own experience of a walk or a window view changing over time.

For me photography is still more interesting when it resonates with what we know. The more everyday the subject, the greater the complexity when it is transformed within the medium. I think the after-image is more compelling and the work more durable when it resonates with what we think of as shared experience. - John Riddy

As with other recent series every aspect of these works is managed and made by Riddy himself. He sees the researching, taking and printing of the photograph as part of one process that can only be intuitive if he himself is the author of all its aspects. The final print is intended to be a resolution and distillation of that process.