Chris Dorley-Brown is a British documentary photographer[1] and filmmaker, based in the East End of London.[2]
Since 1984, Dorley-Brown has been creating a photographic archive of the London Borough of Hackney.[3][4] Since 1993 he has collaborated with other people on a variety of projects in radio, print, cinema, television, Internet and architecture.[3]
His photography books include The Longest Way Round (2015),[5]Drivers in the 1980s (2015)[4][6][7][8] and The Corners (2018). His films include BBC in the East End 1958–1973 (2007) and 15 Seconds Part 3 (2015).
Dorley-Brown grew up on the Isle of Wight, off the south coast of England.[9] He trained as a silkscreen printer and print finisher after leaving school.[2] Later he joined the photographer Red Saunders' studio as a camera assistant. He went freelance in 1984, creating a photographic archive of the London Borough of Hackney where he lived and worked, which he has continued to do.[3][2][9]
"Largely self-taught, his cultural education was formed in east London in the late seventies, against a backdrop of strongly polarised political conflict and change. His influences are shaped by memory, both personal and those of others."[9]
In 1991, he expanded into filmmaking and other activities associated with burgeoning new technologies.[2][10] Since 1993 Dorley-Brown has collaborated with other people of various creative disciplines, as well as groups and individuals in the public sphere, on a variety of projects in radio, print, cinema, television, Internet and architecture.[3]
The East End in Colour 1960-1980. London: Hoxton Mini Press, 2018. By David Granick. Edited and with an introduction by Dorley-Brown. ISBN978-1-910566-31-2. Edition of 3000 copies. Second edition; ISBN978-1-910566-31-2.
Photography Reborn: Image Making in the Digital Era. New York City: Abrams, 2006. Edited by Jonathan Lipkin. ISBN9780810992443.
London Street Photography: 1860–2010. London: Museum of London; Stockport: Dewi Lewis, 2011. ISBN978-1907893032. Selected from the Museum of London collection by Mike Seaborne and Anna Sparham. Published to accompany an exhibition at the Museum.
The Art of Dissent: Adventures in London's Olympic State. Marshgate, 2012. Edited by Hilary Powell and Isaac Marrero-Guillamon. ISBN978-0957294301.[17] Dorley-Brown contributes journal extracts.
The Wick. Issue 3. London: See Studio, 2013. Edited by Marrero-Guillamon. Newspaper with supplement, "Picturing the Wick", by Dorley-Brown and Francesca Weber-Newth.
BBC in the East End 1958–1973 (2007), for BBC / British Film Institute. Edited by Dorley-Brown.[18] 3 hours long set of 2 DVDs and 40 page booklet with an essay by Tony White. Made on a BBC Creative Archive placement at the BBC Creative Archive Licence Group.[19][20]