Richard Billingham's work 'Ray's a laugh', published by Scalo in 2000, captures personal records of family life, not usually captured. His photographs, taken between 1990 and 1996, tell a story of his upbringing by parents, Ray and Liz Billingham. Ray was an unemployed alcoholic and Liz was an overweight animal lover. Richard Billingham was brought up in Cradley Heath, West Midlands, where his family lived in a cramped council flat, after being made redundant.
'This book is about my close family. My father Raymond is a chronic alcoholic. He doesn’t like going outside and mostly drinks home brew. My mother Elizabeth hardly drinks but she does smoke a lot. She likes pets and things that are decorative. They married in 1970 and I was born soon after. My younger brother Jason was taken into care when he was 11 but is now back with Ray and Liz again. Recently he became a father. Ray says Jason is unruly. Jason says Ray’s a laugh but doesn’t want to be like him.'
(Quoted in Ray’s a Laugh, back cover.)
The photography was not taken to shock, offend or be political. Billingham created the work to be meaningful and to communicate the reality of his family life. He used out of date film and got the images processed at the cheapest place, emphasising the families poverty. He states 'I was just trying to make order out of chaos.'
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Richard Billingham, 'Ray’s A Laugh', Scalo, Zurich, Berlin, New York (1996) |
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Richard Billingham, Unitled (1994), Fuji, long life colour photograph on aluminium, 105x158cm
Billingham's work is something out of the ordinary. I take photographs to remember occasions and have used a collection of photos taken on holidays and anniversaries within my collide project to emphasis happy memories. Billingham's photographs do not capture happy moments. They capture the reality of his everyday life. His collection of photographs are personal, yet we have access to them and they have been published within a book.
Through photography, we have been introduced to the personalities of Ray and Liz Billingham. The images capture these characters, that are representative of a story. The collection is a story which narrates Richard Billingham's upbringing. Linking this example to the conversation project, the collection of photographs converse emotion and demonstrate a lifestyle we may not be familiar with. |
http://www.tate.org.uk/art/artworks/billingham-untitled-p11756/text-summary
http://www.americansuburbx.com/2010/07/richard-billingham-rays-laugh.html
Richard Billingham, Ray’s a Laugh, London 1996, reproduced [pp.94-5] in colour
Mario Testino, Richard Billingham, exhibition catalogue, Ikon Gallery, Birmingham 2000