'Nargis' Auntie' - Portrait of a woman

Date:
24 Aug 2023
Location:
Church Gate, Leicester, City of Leicester
Reference:
HEC01/128/01/09/01/03
Type:
Photograph (Digital)
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Description

In 2022-23 Historic England commissioned several photographers to work with local communities to capture images representative of their local high streets. This formed part of the Picturing High Streets project. In Leicester, Khatun was commissioned as photographer. She wrote the following text to describe her work on the project: "The Picturing High Street’s photo-project is a look at what makes a city great. Photographing shopkeepers, every-day passerbys and facilitating workshops locally, has allowed me to carry out my intent: to champion people and my City.

This body of work was made possible through trust, kindness and a mutual understanding. The intent has always been to preserve: preserve the City, preserve its people, preserve the stories, preserve the kinship, preserve the love we fall in and out of, preserve home. And to be seen. Photography is a powerful means of archiving, and one which is incredibly crucial. It is important for anyone and everyone to have access to a records office, an organised archive system, in which they are able to look up the rich histories of different spaces and places, to see the people that lived in these cities and/or passed through, to see people that look like them, to have their existences and histories validated.

Jamila’s Legacy are a brilliant Mental Health organisation in Leicester, who bring people together to increase awareness and deepen understanding of mental health, especially amongst the South Asian diaspora. We teamed up to explore the notion of archiving, story-telling and memories. We did this through conversation, photo-walks, writing and collaging workshops. We created a space in which we gave power to our existences in Leicester - mapping out journeys we took through the Heritage Action Zones when we were younger, with friends, running errands, needing space. The workshops, which eventually produced collages, honoured these journeys and stories that many had shelved away, assuming their unimportance. The residency was massively influenced by The Handsworth Project and Hidden History - Lost Portraits of Bradford. Initially, I set out to create a structured body of work that focuses more on a set of questions that I pose to individuals, about Leicester, Church Gate and Granby Street. Upon shooting however, I quickly realised that there was more to the project than a standardised question and answer set-up. Photographing all the people I came across, gave me an insight into a Leicester that I hadn’t been privy to before. My understanding of Leicester had always been selective, as it has been curated by my experiences, memories and fondness. This project has shone a light on what Leicester means to different people. For some, it has always been home, for others, it is new. Some people are hoping to just pass through. Some didn’t even choose to be here. Some don’t think much of the HAZ, whilst others are more hopeful. These portraits taught me to remove expectations and any unconscious reservations. Through it, I developed a fresher understanding of what Leicester means to different people, and what it means to me. The accompany text therein, are not interviews, but incorporate the moments before, during and after the image was taken. It is a mixture of myself, and those involved in the photographs..

The portraits sometimes include a netting backdrop, which I bought from Dunelm (who actually started out in Leicester Market, selling curtains, in 1979 - full circle!). It became more than a means of providing neater imagery, but instead, was used to provide a familiar emblem. A loose nod to Leicester’s rich history with textiles, it is a reminder of home, childhood and growing up - some of the prevalent themes in this work. I strongly believe that Leicester City, and the historic streets of Church Gate and Granby Street, would not be what they are without the people that hold it up. The shopkeepers that have faced ongoing hardships, the kids figuring out adolescence, young people wanting to find bigger things, people who find themselves here, people floating through, bustling coffee shops, jewellery shops on quiet roads, barbers with more buzz from the people than the trimmers. Corners and pockets of endless heritage. It all deserves archiving and preservation." The photographer added the following context around this image: "Nargis auntie is an incredibly talented individual. We met during the workshops I facilitated with Jamila’s Legacy.

The day Mumtaz auntie made her archive collage piece, of buying her wedding dress from Granby Street, we found out that Nargis auntie used to work as a tailor at a wedding boutique on Granby Street around the same time. Nargis auntie would quietly make flowers out of scrap pieces of netting, and offer to teach anyone that was interested. She is so sweet and understanding. All of the aunties are. I remember the first couple of Thursdays after the last session feeling rather strange. I spent a few Tuesdays and then a whole lot of Thursdays with a handful of aunties. Some I met almost a year ago, when Rehana Auntie and I organised a meet at the Chaiiwala on Granby Street. I didn’t know if anyone would turn up but we ended up joining three tables. I dragged my mum along and turns out, she knew a few aunties from when they would notice each other brisk auntie-walking in the local park. From there, we would have new faces join; some for a session, some for a few, some until the end. Story-times to photo-walks to collage sessions, the laughs were never-ending. I learnt so much. What Granby St looked like before I was born, what it looked like during the years I have no memories, and during the years I wasn’t as active.

Memories and the quiet resistance, the slow rebellion. Claiming space and stories. These aunties were young once too, younger than me. The trips down to the shops, after school. Coupla quid spent on skirts that parents wouldn’t approve of (sorry Rehana auntie), meeting other friends, walking to work together. Clock-tower always the meeting point. Farida auntie’s panoramic photographic map of the journey her and her family would take to town, through London Road was one of my favourites. I didn’t know if I could lead this workshops and turns out I had no reason to worry, I did no leading. These aunties created a space for me instead. This was the point of it all. Quiet archives. Archives full to the brim. Stories of us, you and I, we. Resistance and rebellion." 'Picturing England's High Streets' commission by QUAD/FORMAT, Historic England and Photoworks.

Images by Khatun assisted by Nawaal Omar.

Content

This is part of the Job: HEC01/128/01/09/01 Picturing High Streets Photographer Residencies - Khatun: Leicester, Portraits; within the Volume: HEC01/128/01/09 Picturing High Streets Photographer Residencies - Khatun: Leicester; within the Sub Series: HEC01/128/01 Picturing High Streets: Photographer Residencies; within the Series: HEC01/128 Picturing High Streets; within the Collection: HEC01 Historic England

Rights

© Khatun

People & Organisations

Photographer: Khatun