Daniel Meadows was born in 1952 he was one of a group of photographers trained at Manchester Polytechnic in the early 1970s. He is best known for his work as a documentarist. Like his collaborator Martin Parr, he was a radical photographer, both exploring the idea of the ‘ordinary’ and utilising street studio portraiture to produce a remarkable portrait of urban society in Britain in the 1970s. Unlike most of his other work, he wrote about and interviewed his subjects in this series of images.
In this series of images I like how he has just captured people in everyday life and how they've not been told how to stand or pose but have just posed on there own and in a way they'd like to be photographed. It is ineteresting how the people act when having there picture took and are told its being took to how they would look and be if they didn't no about it.
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