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East London: Capturing the Spirit of Transformation

May 27, 2026
Brick Lane. East London 2003.

I’ve photographed Brick Lane and the surrounding area for more than forty years, and together these images form an archive of a disappearing London. I’ve always thought of Brick Lane as a kind of stage set, with multiple planes of action unfolding simultaneously. People move in different directions: some aware of each other, others isolated within their own trajectories. The street has a restless, kinetic quality that felt especially characteristic of East London in the early 2000s — a place where identities, economies and histories constantly overlapped and collided.

For Brick Lane in particular, change has been accelerated by its proximity to the financial centres of the City and Canary Wharf. In 2003, the area was at a moment of transition: still visibly working-class and deeply shaped by Bangladeshi immigrant culture, yet increasingly attracting artists, students, nightlife and the first strong waves of gentrification.

Personally, I’m saddened by the way local people have been pushed out through that process. Walking along Brick Lane in the 1980s, I would always run into people I knew. It was a place for the exchange of neighbourhood news, gossip, laughter and protest. Today, much of the street theatre I loved has become corporatised and bland.

Commercial Street c.1991
Taking a rest on Commercial Street. East London, 1991.
Commercial Street c.1991
Commercial Street. East London, 1991.
Canary Wharf. East London 2026.
Passing the chemist on Whitechapel Road. East London 1990.
Davenant House, Old Montague Street, London 1983
Davenant House, Old Montague Street. East London 1983.
Delivering goods in Canary Wharf. East London 2026.
Windsurfing, Isle of Dogs, London 1989
Windsurfing, Isle of Dogs. East London 1989.
Homes for sale, Isle Of Dogs, c.1985
Homes for sale, Isle Of Dogs. East London 1985.
Man moving stuff in an old pram. Vallance Road, East London 1980s.

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