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SOMERSET NIGHTSDown and Out in Weston-super-Mare
PHOTOS BY DEN ELLIOTT
Den Elliott might never have ended up taking photos had it not been for a previous life as a conservationist. You should hear the way Den talks about his time spent wandering the windswept crags and leafy forests. It’s impossible to imagine how anyone wouldn’t want to take photos of all the great stuff served up by Mother Nature every day. What’s unusual here is that Den lived and grew up in and around Weston-super-Mare’s Bournville Estate. Bournville consists of a group of highrise blocks and council housing built to serve as accommodation for a planned chocolate factory that never arrived to revitalise the area’s ailing economy. Den’s time out in the fields and forests inspired him to put himself through a photography degree at Falmouth University. Studying the work of photographers such as Tom Wood and Donovan Wylie encouraged him to return to the Bournville of his youth and capture the spirit of community and resilience he had experienced growing up in the area. Oh, and he also take photos of some absolute rotters with snarling dogs.
Vice: What first made you think you wanted to take photos of things? Den Elliott: Just being surrounded by all this stupidly nice scenery when I was working as a conservationist. That made me go out and get a cheap Fuji point-and-shoot just to kind of catalogue all this stuff I was seeing. What were you shooting initially? Like, sheep and stuff? There weren’t many sheep around actually. It was more all these massive open spaces with no other human beings in them. It was really eerie. You could walk about for hours and not see another person. Just trees and fields and forests. You sound a bit like a Jack Johnson song right now. How did taking shots of Mother Earth lead to you taking shots of a Somerset estate? Well, I’d never even thought about going to college or university, you know? I was just interested in going out and working. Taking photos of all this scenery made me actually want to go and study something and learn how to do it well. I went back to college and I thought it would be like being back at school but I was well into it, learning all this new stuff. Yup, learning can be OK. Shocking but true. Was it at college you began to develop your photojournalistic style? I began to develop an idea of what I wanted to shoot during my foundation. My lecturer there exposed me to people like Donovan Wylie, Chris Killip and Tom Wood, whose work on Liverpool really made me realise I could shoot the kind of stuff that had surrounded me all the time growing up.
What drew you back to Bournville? You know the chocolate factory never got built, right? Well, that was part of the economic problem in the area. It was where I had a lot of memories bound up. The time I spent out in the countryside prior to taking up photography reminded me of my time growing up therehow you could be surrounded by buildings or natural landscape and still feel alone. Plus going back there and remembering things like the tin roof above the cornershop where I got off with my first girlfriend. Things like that made me want to go back and capture it all. Some of the shots here feature characters who look like they might be a bit of a handful. Did you ever get any opposition from the scallywags you were pointing a flash at? Well, to an extent I find taking pictures goes against my natural instincts. I am pretty shy and putting yourself in a situation where you are having to be really forward and very much in a public state at all times isn’t the easiest thing in the world for me, but that makes the whole process more rewarding. So no one chased you out of the estate for your camera? No. I tried to be accommodating and clear about what was I doing. Most of the people in the photos were into it once they had got over their initial weariness. I also offered them prints of the photos once they were processed which a lot of people were really into. I really wanted to show the sense of community that the estate maintains. Outsiders might not see that. They might just see walking ASBOs and dole queues or whatever but growing around there I knew it wasn’t like that. I had some of my best memories there and wanted to portray that. The photos have a weird ability to kind of make you heart plummet like a lead balloon pumped with sadness then leap with springs of joy in the same shot. How did you feel while you were shooting them? It was great to be there documenting this place I’d grown up in but elements of it, like the lives some of these kids were living, were saddening. The sense of re-exploring my own childhood through them and these places was sort of polarised by my granddad dying at the same time, which put the whole thing in perspective.
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