Stephen's
affectionate portraits of the runners, spectators and staff at the 2005
BUPA Great North, Tesco Junior and Tesco Mini Runs were displayed on 20
billboards along the route of the BUPA Great North Run in Newcastle,
Gateshead and South Shields and in an exhibition at Trinity Gardens on
Newcastle's Quayside.
Stephen
Gill’s photographs focus on the quiet, inbetween moments of everyday
life,the scenes that are often invisible to us, the faces that pass us
by. Jon Ronson says "Stephen Gill takes photographs of those small
moments that most of us miss."
Arriving in the North East on the Friday before the 2005 Run, Gill saw the final days' build of the finish area take shape,
with tiered seating rigged up, the coils of cables used by outside
broadcasters, the ghostly marquees waiting to be populated, the boxes of
food supplies and specially constructed kitchen areas. He met crew who
had been working for days building this miniature village and families
who were starting to arrive at the nearby campsite, with children who
would run in the Junior and Mini events on the Saturday and parents who
take part on the Sunday. Gill found this set up fascinating. "Seeing the
skeleton of the event reminded you of what went into it, how many
things that had to happen to make it function smoothly.”
In many of the photographs, there is little obvious sign of the Great
North Run, perhaps a sponsor’s logo or a cluster of charity balloons.
Gill was keen not to show people what they were expecting. One his
favourite images is of a young man in a white plastic suit at the start
of the run, which captures the anticipation and nervousness felt by so
many. "You can see so much in it. There’s a banana skin at his foot,
he’s wearing new trainers and a white jumpsuit. He’s obviously so
prepared. You can imagine the pasta he had for dinner the night before,
the early start he had. He’s deep in thought about what’s lying ahead of
him.”
There is a significant number of photographs of people standing on
the sidelines, waiting. These spectators may be biding their time while
family finish a run, such as the mother and daughter outside the
Newcastle Law Courts. Others, like the man on the swing bridge, could be
out for the day, taking in the spectacle. There are the people of South
Shields, standing outside their homes as one of the world’s largest
public sporting events passes by their front doors. As they face the
camera, Gill has allowed the subjects’ own gestures and emotions to
creep through without directing them or communicating with them too
much. We realise we recognise these people but have never stopped long
enough to see them before.
The final selection of photographs reflect his interest, with
portraits of the often unseen or unnoticed staff from the kitchen,
security and parking control, alongside shots of spectators and runners.
Instead of trying to capture every aspect of such a large-scale public
event, Gill’s photograph’s offer an insight into the behind the scenes
workings, as if we get to peep backstage at a theatre.