On the Road with the Free Photographic Omnibus around 1970s Britain
- Text by Miss Rosen
- Photography by Daniel Meadows
In spring of 1970, Daniel Meadows saw the Bill Brandt exhibition at the Hayward Gallery in London. The photography show proved a powerful turning point in the British teen’s life.
“I was eighteen and I’d been locked away in boarding schools for ten years. I hadn’t thrived. All I’d learnt was that the price of a ‘privileged’ education was measured in competitiveness, cruelty and muscular Christianity,” Meadows says. “Brandt’s photographs showed me that there was another world; and it was one I wanted to be in.”
Drawing inspiration from Irving Penn’s ‘Worlds in a Small Room’, Meadows opened his first pop-up studio in Manchester’s Moss Side during the spring of 1972, where he honed his practice making portraits and recording people’s stories.
Recognising the photography studio was not an inherently static place, Meadows put the project on wheels, using the camera as a compass to guide him into other worlds. He purchased a red low bridge decker bus for £360 (£3,800 today) and dubbed it the “Free Photographic Omnibus” as a nod to the Latin term “for all the people”.
On September 22, 1973, Meadows set off from York on a 10,000-mile journey across England over 14 months, photographing 958 people and providing each with a free print.
“In the evening, after the day’s portrait session was over, I’d start up the generator, go into my darkroom aboard the bus and make the prints. This often meant that I didn’t get to bed until after midnight,” he remembers. “Next day, people would return to collect their photographs and that would provide me with an opportunity for yet more conversation.”
Meadows recorded conversations with the people he met, keeping a journal of his experiences. When the series was complete, he exhibited and published Living Like This in 1975. Now he returns to where it all began with the recent publication of Book of the Road (Bluecoat Press), bringing together the portraits, photo reportage, interviews, and travel notes for the first time.
“By engineering a stream of random encounters with strangers I discovered just how many interesting conversations there were to be had,” Meadows says. “Originally I made audio recordings so that I could be sure of accurate caption information. But they soon turned into more than that. When the digital age arrived, I discovered that — by using nonlinear video editing — I could realise the ambition of years and combine the sounds with the photographs. Suddenly I was making multimedia sonnets, from the people.”
In one passage, Meadows includes a conversation with “Angry Man” whose main business is proper admonishment. “I don’t want my photograph thank you but keep these children off the car park it’s dangerous,” Angry Man harrumphs at the end of the conversation.
But more often then not, people were keen to collaborate. Meadows kept it short and sweet: “I used to tell people two things: ‘I’m gonna put you in the history books’; and ‘I’m only going to take one picture, so let’s make it a good one’.”
Daniel Meadows’ Book of the Road is out now published by Bluecoat Press.
Enjoyed this article? Like Huck on Facebook or follow us on Twitter.
Support stories like this by becoming a member of Club Huck.
Latest on Huck
Barry Keoghan, Franz Rogowski and Andrea Arnold on ‘Bird’
The new issue of Little White Lies brings Andrea Arnold’s sixth feature to life with a thematic voyage down the Thames estuary.
Written by: Maisy Hunter
“A party is a microcosm of a nation”: Caleb Femi on the decline of the house party
To celebrate the publication of his new collection ‘The Wickedest’, Isaac Muk caught up with Femi to talk more about the work, the future of the shoobs, and discuss why having it large on a Saturday night should be cherished.
Written by: Isaac Muk
Celebrating 20 years of The Mighty Boosh
A new exhibition takes a look behind the scenes of the iconic show two decades after its BBC3 premiere.
Written by: Isaac Muk
We Run Mountains: Black Trail Runners tackle Infinite Trails
Soaking up the altitude and adrenaline at Europe’s flagship trail running event, high in the Austrian Alps, with three rising British runners of colour.
Written by: Phil Young
The organisation levelling the playing field in the music industry
Founded in 2022, The Name Game is committed to helping female, non-binary and trans people navigate the industry.
Written by: Djené Kaba
Vibrant, rebellious portraits of young Cubans
A new photobook captures the young people redefining Cuban identity amidst increased economic and political turbulence on the Caribbean island.
Written by: Isaac Muk