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Tony Hall, Photographer

August 11, 2024
by the gentle author

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Bonner St, Bethnal Green

Tony Hall (1936-2008) would not have described himself as a photographer – his life’s work was that of a graphic designer, political cartoonist and illustrator. Yet, on the basis of the legacy of around a thousand photographs that he took, he was unquestionably a photographer, blessed with a natural empathy for his subjects and possessing a bold aesthetic sensibility too.

Tony’s wife Libby Hall, known as a photographer and collector of dog photography, gave her husband’s photographs to the Bishopsgate Institute where they are held in the archive permanently. “It was an extraordinary experience because there were many that I had never seen before and I wanted to ask him about them,” Libby confessed to me, “I noticed Tony reflected in the glass of J.Barker, the butcher’s shop, and then to my surprise I saw myself standing next to him.”

“I was often with him but, from the mid-sixties to the early seventies, he worked shifts and wandered around taking photographs on weekday afternoons,” she reflected, “He loved roaming in the East End and photographing it.”

Born in Ealing, Tony Hall studied painting at the Royal College of Art under Ruskin Spear. But although he quickly acquired a reputation as a talented portrait painter, he chose to reject the medium, deciding that he did not want to create pictures which could only be afforded by the wealthy, turning his abilities instead towards graphic works that could be mass-produced for a wider audience.

Originally from New York, Libby met Tony when she went to work at a printers in Cowcross St, Clerkenwell, where he was employed as a graphic artist. “The boss was member of the Communist Party yet he resented it when we tried to start a union and he was always running out of money to pay our wages, giving us ‘subs’ bit by bit.” she recalled with fond indignation, “I was supposed to manage the office and type things, but the place was such a mess that the typewriter was on top of a filing cabinet and they expected me to type standing up. There were twelve of us working there and we did mail order catalogues. Tony and the others used to compete to see who could get the most appalling designs into the catalogues.”

“Then Tony went to work for the Evening News as a newspaper artist on Fleet St and I joined the Morning Star as a press photographer.” Libby continued,” I remember he refused to draw a graphic of a black man as a mugger and, when the High Wizard of the Klu Klux Klan came to London, Tony draw a little ice cream badge onto his uniform on the photograph and it was published!” After the Evening News, Tony worked at The Sun until the move to Wapping, using this opportunity of short shifts to develop his career as a graphic artist by drawing weekly cartoons for the Labour Herald.

This was the moment when Tony also had the time to pursue his photography, recording an affectionate chronicle of the daily life of the East End where he lived from 1960 until the end of his life – first in Barbauld Rd, Stoke Newington, then in Nevill Rd above a butchers shop, before making a home with Libby in 1967 at Ickburgh Rd, Clapton. “It is the England I first loved …” Libby confided, surveying Tony’s pictures that record his tender personal vision for perpetuity,”… the smell of tobacco, wet tweed and coal fires.”

“He’d say to me sometimes, ‘I must do something with those photographs,'” Libby told me, which makes it a special delight to publish Tony Hall’s pictures.

Children with their bonfire for Guy Fawkes

In the Hackney Rd

 

“I love the way these women are looking at Tony in this picture, they’re looking at him with such trust – it’s the way he’s made them feel. He would have been in his early thirties then.”

 

On the Regent’s Canal near Grove Rd

On Globe Rd

In Old Montague St

In Old Montague St

In Club Row Market

On the Roman Rd

In Ridley Rd Market

In Ridley Rd Market

In Artillery Lane, Spitalfields

Tony & Libby Hall in Cheshire St

Photographs copyright © Estate of Libby Hall

Images Courtesy of the Tony Hall Archive at the Bishopsgate Institute

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Libby Hall, Collector of Dog Photography

The Dogs of Old London

6 Responses leave one →
  1. August 11, 2024

    Incredible pictures, but the one of the huge logs on the boat on Regent’s Canal that, in turn, reflects on the water and the man surveying it all from above is a one in a million photograph.

  2. Bernie permalink
    August 11, 2024

    Ah Ridley Road market! While her strength lasted my mother shopped there on Fridays to prepare for the Shabbas. I clearly remember her buying Plaice and having it cut across into steaks which she would then coat in oatmeal and fry in oil. Delicious! And before the war I recall Moseley and his tribe parading along the High St near Ridley Road.

  3. August 11, 2024

    I absolutely savor every one of these — but may I say how MUCH I enjoy seeing Tony and Libby
    together, enjoying each other’s company and shared manias? The perfect image to follow the
    written narrative. I imagined the “rest” of the day — how they might have continued on, after the photography session, strolling, adventuring, doing the banal things that couples do on their weekend rounds, and also those affectionate moments when they tuck close.

    Tony had “the eye”, there is no doubt. And, lucky man, he had Libby.

  4. Ros permalink
    August 11, 2024

    Yet another superb photographer whose work I love to be reminded of. His pictures are so rich and thoughtful. You have built up the most wonderful collection and I never tire of it.

  5. Cherub permalink
    August 11, 2024

    I see poverty here, especially amongst the elderly, yet people look happy. I suspect it’s because there was more of a sense of community and people looked out for their neighbours. The elderly lady standing outside the entrance to the old flats, the backdrop makes me think of the film Vera Drake.

  6. Sue permalink
    August 11, 2024

    What a fabulous set of photographs, especially the corner shops. How I mourn the loss of them. Even in the London suburbs there were plenty and nothing was thought of sending a twelve year old round the corner for “Half an ounce of Old Holborn please”.

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