Peter Marlow (photographer)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Peter Marlow (19 January 1952 – 21 February 2016) was a British photographer and photojournalist, and member of Magnum Photos.[1]
Marlow was born in Kenilworth in 1952. He studied psychology at Manchester University, graduating in 1974.[2]
Career
He began his photography career in 1975 working on an Italian cruise liner in the Caribbean before joining the Sygma news agency in Paris in 1976.[3] In the 1970s, Marlow worked in Northern Ireland, Angola, The Philippines and Lebanon primarily as a war photographer, but soon found that the competition of photojournalism did not suit him.
I did get some very good pictures, and was doing a lot of conflict work, but I just realised I was never ever going to be Don McCullin. And actually, in certain situations, I was very, very scared.[4]
He returned home to Britain, and worked in Liverpool on an eight-year project, Liverpool – Looking out to Sea, which documented what he perceived to be decline of the city under Margaret Thatcher.[4]
He became associated with Magnum Photos in 1980 and became a full member in 1986, having been attracted to the freedom the agency gives its photographers to work on personal projects.[4][1][5] Alongside Chris Steele-Perkins, he founded Magnum's London office in 1987.[1] He served as the agency's president twice and was vice-president numerous times.[1] The photographer Martin Parr said it was "difficult to overestimate" Marlow's contribution to Magnum.[1]
He also worked regularly for The Sunday Times in the mid-1980s.[1] In 1991 he received an assignment from the Somme department in France to photograph Amiens.[6] Later he began to work abroad again, travelling to Japan, the United States, and other parts of Europe.[7] His later photography is primarily in color.[8] Though well known for his depictions of places, Marlow also documented politics with a collaboration with Tony Blair.[3]
Marlow is also known for his photos of his three sons and wife.[2]
Marlow died on 21 February 2016 from influenza contracted during a stem cell transplant as a treatment for multiple myeloma.[9][10]
Publications
Books by Marlow
- Liverpool: Looking out to Sea. London: Jonathan Cape/Random House, 1993. ISBN 0-224-03727-7; ISBN 0-224-03728-5
- Concorde: The Last Summer. London: Thames & Hudson, 2006. ISBN 978-0-500-51312-5. With a preface by A. A. Gill and an introduction by Mike Bannister.
- Concorde: le dernier été. Paris: Thames & Hudson, 2006. ISBN 9782878112832. Translated by Joëlle Marelli.
- The English Cathedral. London and New York: Merrell, 2012. ISBN 9781858945903. With an introduction by Martin Barnes and other text by John Goodall.
- English National Ballet: Breaking New Ground. London: Magnum Photos, 2015. ISBN 978-0956547842.
- Undercover Spitalfields: Market Stories. London: Magnum Photos, 2013. ISBN 9780956547835. With Ballymore Group.
Books with others
- Département Somme: regards de photographes. Amiens: Trois Cailloux, 1992. ISBN 2903082669. Photographs by Marlow, Harry Gruyaert, Jeanloup Sieff, Michel Vanden Eeckhoudt, Martine Voyeux and Hugues de Wurstemberger; prefaces by Christian Caujolle and Jacques Darras.
- Way to Gods: Magunamu Foto: Kumano kodō, Santiago e no michi (WAY to GODS マグナム フォト 熊野古道 サンティアゴへの道), ed. Nagasaka Yoshimitsu (永坂嘉光). Tokyo: Kawade Kobō Shinsha, 1999. ISBN 4-309-90293-6. (Additional title on front cover: Ancient Kumano Roads and Roads to Santiago.) Contains photographs by Marlow of Kumano kodō and camino de Santiago; as well as photographs by Elliott Erwitt, Chris Steele-Perkins and Harry Gruyaert.
- The Shape of a Pocket. London: Bloomsbury, 2001. With John Berger.[dubious – discuss]
Filmography
- 1989: Moving Stills – Channel 4, UK
- 1992: Waiting for Madonna – documentary, 15 min, directed by Marlow, TV Tokyo, Japan/Little Magic Productions USA
- 1994: Profile of Peter Marlow – The Late Show, BBC, UK
Awards
- 1982: Arts Council of Great Britain[citation needed]
- 1986: National Headline Award[citation needed]
- 1999: III Premio de Creación Fotográfica Luis Ksado[11]
- 2006: Honorary Fellowship of the Royal Photographic Society, Bath, UK[12]
Exhibitions
- 1979: The Ultra Right in Europe, The Canon Gallery, Amsterdam
- 1983: London by Night, The Photographers' Gallery, London
- 1987: Peter Marlow's London Night Photos, Lausanne, Switzerland
- 1989: Liverpool, Il Diaframma, Milan
- 1993: Looking Out to Sea, Open Eye Gallery, Liverpool; The Photographers' Gallery, London
- 1993: Brighton Besides the Seaside, University of Brighton, Brighton, UK
- 1994: Looking Out to Sea, Royal Photographic Society, Bath, UK
- 1998: Non Places, Keynes Gallery, Canterbury, UK
- 1999: Ancient Kumano Roads Japan and the Road to Santiago de Compostela Spain, Galleries in Osaka, Kyoto, Tokyo and Wakayama, Japan
- 2000: Britain, Saison Photographique Cherbourg Octeville, France
- 2001: Nantes, ABN AMRO Gallery Nantes, France
- 2009–2010: London at Night, The Wapping Project Bankside, Wapping Hydraulic Power Station, London[13][14]
- 2011: Point of Interest, The Wapping Project Bankside, Wapping Hydraulic Power Station, London[15][16]
- 2013: The English Cathedral, The Wapping Project Bankside, Wapping Hydraulic Power Station, London[17][18]