Colin Jones was born in London's East End in 1936. Growing up during the Blitz, Colin, who was dyslexic attended 13 different school before being recruited as a dancer by the Festival Ballet. He later joined the Royal Ballet, at a time when Kenneth MacMillan was embarking on some of his most controversial work. Colin has been described as " the prototype for Billy Elliot" as his life journey reads like a Hollywood movie. He toured with the Royal Ballet performing alongside Rudolf Nureyev and Dame Margot Fonteyn, and in Kenneth MacMillan's “The Invitation” with Prima Ballerina Lynn Seymour, whom he later married.
Colin bought his first camera on tour in Japan in 1953, while running an errand for Margot Fonteyn. He started photographing the ballet company, revealing the hard work and dedication required to succeed, and depicting the ballet as it had never been seen before. In 1961 while travelling from Newcastle to Sunderland, Colin spotted a group of people scouring the slag heaps for coal, and skipped his ballet class so that he could photograph them. The following year Colin left the ballet and went to see The Observer Colour Magazine. He was commissioned to cover the burgeoning civil rights movement in Alabama, where his photographs recorded the violent police response to black protests. That was the first of a long and distinguished sequence of photo-documentary assignments, often risky, covering subjects such as Brazil's gold mines, gangs in Jamaica, prostitution in the Philippines, the boy soldiers of the Khmer Rouge, and the Cargo Cults of the New Hebrides who worshipped Prince Phillip. Moving on from the Observer to the Sunday Times Magazine, Colin was working at the heyday of investigative photo-journalism, alongside photographers such as Don McCullin and Philip Jones Griffiths and under the editorship of Harold Evans.
Besides his overseas stories, Colin has documented British social history over the years, including the vanishing industrial working lives of the Northeast("Grafters"), marginalised Afro-Caribbean youth in London ("The Black House") and the high-octane hedonism of Swinging London in the 1960's with his defining images of The Who early in their career ("Maximum Who"). Colin's work has been published in numerous major publications including Life and National Geographic and in magazines of the major UK broadsheets. His work has been exhibited widely at venues that include The Photographers' Gallery in London, The National Portrait Gallery, Tate Modern, and the Hayward.
Colin has been acclaimed for his social documentary photography winning him the accolade of "The George Orwell of Photography". In 1996, Katharine Viner wrote in The Sunday Times Magazine that Colin's "Grafters" photographs "look like something described by Orwell in one of his political essays" and his images of "cloth caps and granite faced dockers, like photographs from the 1930s", would have perfectly illustrated Orwell's "The Road to Wigan Pier".
Colin Jones - The George Orwell of Photgraphy - Project Art Space Bermondsey
Works from his Grafters Series
9th - 14th July 2019 Project Art Sace Bermondsey
Colin jones - The George Orwell of Photography - Lucy Bell Fine Art
Works from his Grafters Series
4th April - 15th june 2019
Beatles to Bowie - National Portrait Gallery
60s Exposed
December 2009 - January 2010
Colin Jones
Odyssey II
December 2003
Here We Are: Burberry
Celebrating British Photography
18 September - 1st October 2017
Colin Jones - 50 Years of The Who
Photoaumnales - Beauvais France
20 September - 16 November 2014
History Is Now: Hayward
7 Artists Take On Britain
2015
Made You Look: Dandyism & Black Masculinity
Photographers Gallery
July - September 2016
Tate Modern London
The Black House, London 571 Holloway Road 1973
2016
Beetles+Huxley
An Ideal For Living (Joint exhibition)
27th July – 17th Sept 2016
The Photographers Gallery
Made You Look (Joint Exhibition)
15th July – 25th Sept 2016
Michael Hoppen Gallery
Retrospective
5th May – 1st June 2016
Lucy Bell Gallery
On Ballet
8th July – 8th Aug 2015
Proud Chelsea
A Life With The Royal Ballet
29th Jan – 1st Mar 2015
Proud Camden
50 Years of The Who
6th Feb – 23rd Mar 2014
James Hyman Gallery
Country Matters (Joint Exhibition)
Sept – Nov 2013
Michael Hoppen Gallery
Jerusalem
7th Oct – 12th Nov 2011
Topfoto gallery
The Glory of English Ballet
18th July – 26th Aug 2011
Proud Central
The Who: In the Beginning
24th Sept – 15th Nov 2009
Hoopers Gallery
Classic Dance
October 2008
Michael Hoppen Gallery
The Black House
1st June – 1st July 2007
Britart Gallery
Stars of the East (Joint Exhibition)
1st – 31st Dec 2002
The Photographers Gallery
The Black House
4 May – 4 June 1977
Professor Colin Jones uses traditional darkroom techniques and prints all his own black-and-white images from his darkroom at home.
Silver Gelatin
The traditional process for producing black and white prints is a wet chemical process whereby exposing a piece of paper coated with silver nitrate held together in a gelatin layer to light via a black and white negative film producing a print.
The paper is negative and the film is also negative with two negatives producing a positive image on the paper.Prints produced this way are termed silver gelatin and are most sort after by serious collectors.
No two prints are exactly alike as this is an organic process and each print will be affected by the depletion of the developer, chemical temperature and processing time furthermore if the printer adds or removes light by what is called ‘dodging or burning in’ then this too will produce slightly different effects on each print.
Silver Gelatin
The traditional process for producing black and white prints is a wet chemical process whereby exposing a piece of paper coated with silver nitrate held together in a gelatin layer to light via a black and white negative film producing a print.
The paper is negative and the film is also negative with two negatives producing a positive image on the paper.
Prints produced this way are termed silver gelatin and are most sort after by serious collectors.
No two prints are exactly alike as this is an organic process and each print will be affected by the depletion of the developer, chemical temperature and processing time furthermore if the printer adds or removes light by what is called ‘dodging or burning in’ then this too will produce slightly different effects on each print.