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From the factory floor
Posted by Mark Sinclair, 4 October 2011, 11:15 Permalink Comments (4)

Photographer Chris Coekin's new project mixes still life, staged portraiture and field recordings to convey the working life of a British wire factory...
The Altogether has taken Coekin the best part of five years to make in collaboration with John Pring & Son wire factory in Sandbach in Cheshire.

His focus is the factory workforce – portrayed in posed settings which reference the iconography of trade union banners – and the landscape of the factory itself, which recently closed its doors after 177 years of production.

In exploring the factory buildings, Coekin has examined their overlooked corners, often coming across discarded tools and metal objects that he then took back to his studio to photograph on a glistening background of industrial oil.

The result is more a conceptual statement on industrial labour: the toil of men and women working in tandem with machines and the ultimate fragility of a working life, even, Coekin seems to suggest, of copper, iron and heavy machinery, in the face of an unforgiving economic climate.

In this sense, Coekin's project now also fuctions as a final tribute to the workers pictured, to the factory way of life at John Pring & Son.
The book is accompanied by a seven-inch vinyl record featuring two tracks, Days at the Factories and CuSO4 Shuffle, based on recorded sounds from the factory floor and the voices of some of the workers.
The Altogether is published by Walkout Books; £20.

4 Comments
Not sure on this one I'm afraid, the shots of the workers look a little too staged... kind of what I'd expect of stock photos.
The hammer shot is – however – very nice.
2011-10-04 11:54:26
The shots of the workers are obviously posed.
Perhaps as a homage to some of the work by Lewis Hine?
2011-10-04 18:15:25
I love the concept and idea about documenting a rapidly disappearing part of UK manufacturing industry, but as the above commentators suggest, I am not keen on the people shots. I would like to see the trade union banners thay are based upon and perhaps that would put them into a context. Very tempted to buy the book anyway - the idea of using found sounds is always interesting to me - those with similar tastes might like an album called Funf on the Ostgut label, where sounds from an empty nightclub in Berlin have been used to create new music.
2011-10-05 10:18:33
I'm pretty damn sure that the worker's shots are supposed to look staged. Old paintings/photographs of kings, queens and celebrated figures were always staged and this looks like a direct reference to that. I could be wrong but that's how I see it.
2011-10-05 13:08:46
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