Making History: Art and Documentary in Britain from 1929 to Now
3 February  –  23 April 2006
Making History
Art and Documentary in Britain from 1929 to Now
Floor plan Section 1: Defining Documentary Section 2: Looking at Britain Section3: Gender, Race and Society Section 4: Reconstructing History
Section 1: Defining Documentary: 1929-1949
Clive Branson, Portrait of a Worker, c 1930 © Estate of the Artist
Clive Branson
Portrait of a Worker circa 1930
© Estate of the artist
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The 1930s and 1940s can be viewed as the era in which documentary was first defined and given recognition as an independent area of production. Perhaps the most prominent manifestation of documentary was the film movement of the 1930s, led by the producer and filmmaker John Grierson (1898-1972), who had coined the term 'documentary' in this context.
 

Installation view © Tate 2006
Installation view © Tate 2006

Grierson defined documentary as 'the creative use of actuality'. His film Drifters 1929 was a significant departure from anything previously made by the British film industry. It was influenced by Modernist film practice, yet attempted to reintroduce social commentary into avant-garde film. As a producer, working for the official film units of the Empire Marketing Board and the General Post Office, Grierson brought together an extraordinary group of practitioners from various disciplines (among them Humphrey Jennings, Benjamin Britten and W.H. Auden) and persuaded important figures from overseas (including Robert Flaherty and Alberto Cavalcanti) to work in Britain, giving the movement an international dimension.

William Coldstream, troubled by the inaccessibility of avant-garde painting to a general audience, turned briefly to filmmaking in 1934, working at the GPO Film Unit. When he returned to painting, it was with a new commitment to observational realism inspired by Grierson's ideals. Coldstream also participated in Mass-Observation, the documentary project founded in 1937 by anthropologist Tom Harrisson with Charles Madge and Humphrey Jennings. Mass-Observation sought to record working-class lives and experiences, but it was not a straightforward exercise; complex and sometimes contradictory in its motives and methods, it attracted artists on both sides of the Realist versus Surrealist debate.

With the outbreak of World War II, many of the artists and practitioners who had been involved in documentary projects during the 1930s were co-opted into official bodies for the creation of propaganda. Bill Brandt, Henry Moore and Humphrey Jennings created works in diverse media that defined the Home Front.

William Coldstream, Rifelman Mangal Singh: 2/6 Rajput Rifels 1943-4 © Imperial War Museum
William Coldstream
Rifleman Mangal Singh: 2/6 Rajput Rifles 1943-4
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William Coldstream,  Man with a Beard, 1939 © Tate London 2002
William Coldstream
Man with a Beard 1939
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William Coldstream, Havildar Ajmer Singh, 1943 © Tate London 2002
William Coldstream
Havildar Ajmer Singh 1943
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Lawrence Gowing, Mrs Roberts 1944 Tate London 2002
Lawrence Gowing
Mrs Roberts 1944
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Wolfgang Suschitzky, Lyons Corner House, Tottenham Court Road c.1934 © W. Suschitzky
Wolfgang Suschitzky
Lyons Corner House, Tottenham Court Road c.1934
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Wolfgang Suschitzky, Lyons Corner House, Tottenham Court Road c.1934 © W. Suschitzky
Henry Moore
Grey Tube Shelter 1940
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Humphrey Spencer, Woman busker with street organ from a pub in Whitechapel c. 1937-8 © The Humphrey Spender Archive
Humphrey Spender
Woman busker with street organ from a pub in Whitechapel c. 1937-8
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Stanley Spencer, William McBrearty, Sawyer 1943-4 © Estate of Stanley Spencer. All Rights Reserved, DACS 2002
Stanley Spencer
William McBrearty, Sawyer 1943-4
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Clive Branson, Selling the 'Daily Worker' outside Projectile Engineering Works 1937, © Estate of the Artist
Clive Branson
Selling the 'Daily Worker' outside Projectile Engineering Works 1937
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William Coldstream, On The Map, 1937 © Tate London 2002
William Coldstream
On The Map 1937
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Julian Trevelyan, The Potteries, c. 1938. © Estate of the Artist
Julian Trevelyan
The Potteries c1938
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Julian Trevelyan, Teapot Café c1937-8 © Trevelyan Estate
Julian Trevelyan
Teapot Café c1937-8
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