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‘The second nastiest little man I have ever met’ – John Deakin: Under The Influence + The Lure Of Soho

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//Deakin drinking, 1960s. John Deakin, courtesy Robin Muir//

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//The cover of the new book features this 50s portrait of author JP Donleavy//

“The second nastiest little man I have ever met” – Barbara Hutton

“He was a member of photography’s unhappiest minority whose members, while doubting its status as art, sometimes prove better than anyone else that there is no doubt about it” – Bruce Bernard

The documentary portraiture of British fashion photographer John Deakin from the 1940s to his death in the early 70s is poised for a fresh round of appraisal with next week’s opening of the exhibition Under The Influence at London’s Photographers’ Gallery.

This coincides with the publication of Robin Muir’s companion book of the same title.

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//Girl In Cafe, late 1950s. (c) John Deakin, The John Deakin Archive 2013//

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//Tony Abbro of Abbro & Varriano, newsagents, 48 Old Compton Street, Soho, 1961. (c) John Deakin, The John Deakin Archive 2013//

Muir is Deakin’s foremost proponent, responsible for 2002’s A Maverick Eye. This collected Deakin’s so-called “street photography” in London and on the Continent compiled during bouts of employment for British Vogue. As the title suggests, the new book focuses on the inhabitants of the stamping ground most associated with Deakin’s lush life: Soho.

On Deakin’s death in May 1972, his friend and subject Bruce Bernard rescued what comprises Deakin’s body of work in this field  from a set of tatty cardboard boxes under the bed in his Berwick Street flat.

As Muir has written, these contained “hundreds of negatives, torn prints and stained contact sheets wrapped in brittle and dessicated brown paper”.

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//Jeffrey Bernard, Cambridge Circus, London, 1950s. (c) John Deakin, The John Deakin Archive 2013//

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//Partygoer, 1940s. (c) John Deakin, The John Deakin Archive 2013//

Bernard went on to organise the first public exhibition of Deakin’s portraits at the V&A in 1983, but a source of frustration for exacting Deakin enthusiasts has long been the imprecise dating of his oeuvre.

This is due in part to the rickety life led by the photographer, and exacerbated by the fact that those in his circle who could attest to when portraits were taken – if they could remember – have almost to a man (pace JP Donleavy) hopped off the twig.

And so many of these images will apparently forever now be consigned to decades rather than years, but it is a testament to Deakin’s considerable compositional powers that this lack of detail, which would otherwise provide insights into the development of his craft, does not impinge on the enduring vitality of these photographs.

Read more about Under The Influence: John Deakin And The Lure Of Soho here.

Copies of Muir’s new book are available here.

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