Shot in Soho is an original exhibition held at the Photographers Gallery, running from 18th October 2019 to 9th February 2020. It celebrates Soho’s ‘diverse culture, community and creativity at a time when the area is facing radical transformation’. Soho has always been a safe space, a village of sorts, inside the centre of London. It is not only stomping ground for members of the LGBTQ+ community, but home to immigrants from Italy, China, Hungary and many more.
The buzzing culture in the one square mile area is a muse for many creatives and artists, whether it is film or tv, art or photography, fashion or cabaret. Soho being the founding place of the ‘Soho House’ franchise, an exclusive members only creative hub, based now internationally. After starting in Soho, it has now creeped out to their namesakes, Shoreditch (House), Barcelona (House), and New York to name but a few. Soho must be something special, to house this much creative talent, and the names don’t stop there. This exhibition houses work from artists such as William Klein, Anders Peterson and Corinne Day.
An overall evaluation of the Exhibition would use Queer Theory as a methodology to analyse the works as a whole. The theory notes a resistance to any of society's norms, with a large reference to heteronormativity. Where gay/lesbian studies analyses the explicit same-sex relationships, queer studies faces this and more. It also regards any sexual relation that doesn’t fit normative standards. The exhibition faces many of these topics, hookup culture, sex work and exclusive private members clubs to name a few.
Darragh Soden’s informal-looking collection ‘Looking For Love’ presents a mixture of portraiture and still life, scattered on the wall, hanging from a single pin in each corner. The hanging doesn't follow a pattern, no specific order, just a collection of images to really push the theme of what it’s like to find a partner in the complex LGBTQ+ community. The images show people staring off in other directions, wandering eyes, empty beds, go-go dancers and unidentifiable torsos. This is a general representation of what it is like to date as a gay person. The constant wondering about other people’s sexuality, the lonely nights in bed, and constantly seeking love in bars and clubs surrounded by people with the ‘ideal body type’.