Martin Parr, unmistakably, with his take on village life – affectionate, nostalgic, wryly amused – here in Chew Stoke, Somerset, from 1992.

Martin chose the village due to its proximity to Bristol and its shop, village hall, pub, post office, church and schools: the key establishments around which village life rotates. Over time, the two men [Parr plus journalist Robert Chesshyre] nurtured relationships with villagers, who invited them to attend and photograph cricket matches, weddings, Christmas plays and community events.

These images capture the details and rhythms of village life: the milk deliveries, school drop-offs, gardening, keep-fit classes, cups of tea, pints in the pub, jars of homemade lemon curd and jumble sales….

"The village has a cherished place in most English hearts," adds Robert Chesshyre. "Research shows that seven out of ten Britons would live in the country if they could. We carry a warm mental picture: timeless, unspoilt, sunlit; roses at the cottage door; cricket on the green; a stream flowing through frosted fields; lingering evenings in a village pub; carols in a country church.

"There is an alternative image: of young people forced to leave because scarce housing has been taken by commuters and the retired; of failed village shops and non-existent buses; of isolation and the wagging of gossips' tongues. Which of these notions does the modern village match?"

He concludes: "Between Chew Stoke, and Bristol rises Dundry Hill, over 600ft high and as total a barrier between town and country as there can be in Britain. Throughout 1992, photographer Martin Parr and I crossed that frontier regularly. This is our report from the other side."

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[Images © Martin Parr / Magnum Photos]

The exhibition A Year in the Life of Chew Stoke Village is at the Martin Parr Foundation, 316 Paintworks, Bristol from 19 January to 9 April. There's an  accompanying book by RRB Photobooks..

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One response to “Village England”

  1. Tim Worstall Avatar
    Tim Worstall

    “There is an alternative image: of young people forced to leave because scarce housing has been taken by commuters and the retired”
    Well, yes, it’s inside the Bristol green belt so no more housing can be built…..

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