The Black House | Jones, Colin | V&A Explore The Collections (2024)

The Black House | Jones, Colin | V&A Explore The Collections (1)

Photograph
1973-1976 (photographed), 2012 (printed)

Artist/Maker
Jones, Colin (photographer)
Place of origin
Islington(photographed)

From 1973-1976 British photographer Colin Jones (born 1936) documented life inside the Islington-based Harambee housing project for young black people. Jones originally compiled the series for a Sunday Times Magazine article, and controversially titled it 'The Black House', recalling the name the refuge was known by in the media and local community. The house was given this name because of its close proximity to an infamous Black Power commune also called the Black House, led by the British black revolutionary Michael de Freitas or ‘Michael X’ from 1969 to 1970. Jones was looking to play on the negative associations with black power and youth delinquency that the label of ‘The Black House’ suggested. His images instead present youth alienation in the black community as a direct result of these stereotypes.

The V&A acquired three of Jone’s historic photographs from The Black House series as part of the Staying Power project. A photograph by Dennis Morris depicting the original Black House associated with Michael X was also acquired as part of the project. Staying Power is a five year partnership between the V&A and Black Cultural Archives. The project aims to explore black British experience from the 1950s to the 1990s through photographs acquired by the V&A and oral histories conducted by Black Cultural Archives.

Delve deeper

Discover more about this object

readStaying Power: Photographs of Black British ExperienceWorking in partnership with Black Cultural Archives, we identified and acquired photographs taken by black photographers, or which document the lives of black people in Britain, taken between the 1950s – 90s.

Object details

Categories
African DiasporaPhotographsBlack HistoryPoliticsCaribbean
Object type
Photograph
TitleThe Black House(series title)
Materials and techniques

Gelatin silver print. Jones typically used a Leica with a Summicron 35mm f/2 lens to take his photographs for <i>The Black House</i> series. He did not use a meter or any artificial light to create the images. Using minimal equipment like this was less invasive for the people he was photographing.

Photographic PaperGelatin Silver ProcessPhotography
Brief description

Photograph by Colin Jones from the series The Black House, gelatin silver print, London, 1973-76, printed 2012

Physical description

A black and white photograph of two young black men standing in the doorway of a house covered in grafitti with terms like 'BLACK POWER' and 'WAR'.

Dimensions
  • Image width: 47cm
  • Image height: 31cm
  • Paper width: 50.5cm
  • Paper height: 40.5cm
Styles
DocumentaryPhotojournalism
Marks and inscriptions

(Signed and inscribed by artist on verso in pencil, certified and stamped by Autograph ABP verso)

Credit line

Supported by the National Lottery through the Heritage Lottery Fund

Object history

The V&A acquired this photograph as part of the Staying Power project. Staying Power is a five year partnership between the V&A and Black Cultural Archives. The project aims to explore black British experience from the 1950s to the 1990s through photographs acquired by the V&A and oral histories conducted by Black Cultural Archives.

Subjects depicted
Racial PoliticsYouthDoorsGraffitiHarambee
Place depicted
Islington
Associations
Edwards, Herman (Brother)
Summary

From 1973-1976 British photographer Colin Jones (born 1936) documented life inside the Islington-based Harambee housing project for young black people. Jones originally compiled the series for a Sunday Times Magazine article, and controversially titled it 'The Black House', recalling the name the refuge was known by in the media and local community. The house was given this name because of its close proximity to an infamous Black Power commune also called the Black House, led by the British black revolutionary Michael de Freitas or ‘Michael X’ from 1969 to 1970. Jones was looking to play on the negative associations with black power and youth delinquency that the label of ‘The Black House’ suggested. His images instead present youth alienation in the black community as a direct result of these stereotypes.

The V&A acquired three of Jone’s historic photographs from The Black House series as part of the Staying Power project. A photograph by Dennis Morris depicting the original Black House associated with Michael X was also acquired as part of the project. Staying Power is a five year partnership between the V&A and Black Cultural Archives. The project aims to explore black British experience from the 1950s to the 1990s through photographs acquired by the V&A and oral histories conducted by Black Cultural Archives.

Associated objects
  • E.301-2013 (Series)
  • E.302-2013 (Series)
Bibliographic reference

Jones, C., The Black House (Munich: Prestel, 2006), illustrated, unpaginated

Collection
Accession number

E.300-2013

About this object record

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Record createdFebruary 7, 2013
Record URL

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The Black House | Jones, Colin | V&A Explore The Collections (2024)
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