Manx photographer Chris Killip is to talk to an audience at the Manx Museum on Saturday, May 7.
He will reflect on his varied career and experience before signing copies of his new book.
Killip’s career has been wide-ranging and included a period living and working in the north east of England.
He has received prestigious commissions and recognition of his work, both in the form of awards and in major institutions featuring his work in their permanent collections.
The event marks the opening day of a new exhibition Chris Killip’s Isle of Man Revisited. Born in 1946, Chris lived on the Isle of Man until his late teens when he moved to London to work first as a photographer’s assistant and then as a freelance photographer. In the early 1970s he returned to photograph the island, recording buildings, interiors, natural features and people of all ages at work and rest.
Now, visitors to the Manx Museum have the rare opportunity to view large prints of some of these, selected from 250 photographs acquired by Manx National Heritage from Chris Killip.
According to a press release from the museum: ‘The island, as seen through Killip’s camera lens, makes a lasting impression.
‘What he saw and what he chose to photograph has the ongoing power to startle and unsettle as well as to mesmerise and delight.
‘Killip himself recognises the different relationships people can have to his work. It makes him “very happy that the work is in the Isle of Man because that is where it well and truly belongs. It is more open to all sorts of other meanings which it couldn’t have in other places because it doesn’t belong.”’
Exhibition dates: May 7 to July 30, Manx Museum, Kingswood Grove, Douglas.