Rare 1916 Rising photographs to go on display in London

Exhibition explores role of photography in the decades leading up to independence

Sackville Street. The ruined building in the background, the DBC Cafe, was used by the rebels to return fire to snipers on the roof of Trinity College. Photograph:  Sean Sexton Collection
Sackville Street. The ruined building in the background, the DBC Cafe, was used by the rebels to return fire to snipers on the roof of Trinity College. Photograph: Sean Sexton Collection

Rare photographs of the events surrounding the Easter Rising, many of them never seen in public before, go on display in London this week in the first major 1916 centenary event in Britain.

Easter Rising 1916, which opens at the Photographers' Gallery on Thursday, features 80 photographs from the collection of London-based collector Sean Sexton.

"At least half of them have never been reproduced before," said the exhibition's curator, Luke Dodd.

The immediate aftermath of the Rising  in Dublin. Photograph: Sean Sexton Collection
The immediate aftermath of the Rising in Dublin. Photograph: Sean Sexton Collection
Holles Street barricade manned by the  5th Leicesters. Photograph: Sean Sexton Collection
Holles Street barricade manned by the 5th Leicesters. Photograph: Sean Sexton Collection

“This man has collected about 1,000 early Irish photographs over the last 50 years here in London and there’s a sizeable amount of them that relate to the key events in Irish history, roughly between 1910 and 1930.”

READ SOME MORE

With the Rising as its focal point, the exhibition explores the role of photography in Ireland’s political and cultural development in the decades before independence. It uses postcards, stereoscopic views, press and military photographs and portraits of executed leaders.

The political events leading up to the Rising are documented, as is its aftermath but, partly because of censorship, there are few photographs of the fighting itself.

Extraordinary sight

“Martial law was introduced so anybody with a camera would have been locked up. What you get immediately afterwards is huge interest but largely in an apolitical way. So there are endless shots around O’Connell Street,” said Dodd.

“There’s the extraordinary sight of the O’Connell monument standing in the midst of absolute devastation. What the Sexton collection has is lots of amateur shots from people who ambled out with their own camera. They’re not particularly sophisticated shots but you get a sense of the absolute shock and awe that people had. They had no idea what had happened.”

Irish nationalists had long used photography for propaganda purposes, with eviction scenes, antiquities and portraits of nationalist heroes becoming highly popular towards the end of the 19th century.

The British authorities understood the political power of photographs too and the exhibition includes a picture issued by the War Office Press Bureau in 1915 to dampen rumours of German support for Irish independence.

Showing a group of Irish soldiers in the British army in the trenches on the western front, it is captioned “The men who disappointed the Kaiser”.

Dodd believes that the Easter Rising radicalised photography in Ireland in the same way as it radicalised politics, putting an end to Home Rule and heralding Sinn Féin’s election victory in 1918.

Photogenic martyrs

“Most of the signatories to the Proclamation were absolutely unknown before that and suddenly there’s a very real cast of very photogenic young martyrs and because they were killed so summarily, within a few months their photographs are on sale all over the place and being hung up in people’s houses,” he said.

“The archetypes that were established photographically like the martyr, the hunger striker, all of those suddenly come into play hugely.”

Dodd says that, although most British visitors to the exhibition will know about the Easter Rising, few will be familiar with the events that led up to it. It is an important moment, however, in the story of how photography came to influence history as well as documenting it.

“It was only a decade before 1916 that photographs became mass-produced. So this is one of the first key events in which photographs played an important role because they were very much in the forefront of changing public opinion afterwards,” he said.

Easter Rising 1916 is at the Photographer's Gallery in London from January 22nd to April 3rd 2016. See thephotographersgallery.org.uk

Denis Staunton

Denis Staunton

Denis Staunton is China Correspondent of The Irish Times