Bringing his unmistakable eye to a lively collection of anonymous snapshots from the collection of Lee Shulman, Martin Parr assembles a loving, nostalgic portrait of British life in this thoughtfully selected
photobook.
Drawn from a trove of vernacular photographs, this book gathers candid views of British life in the postwar decades, from seaside holidays and backyard gatherings to birthday parties, day trips, and domestic rituals. The images capture people at ease—posing, laughing, squinting into the sun, and absorbed in the small pleasures of everyday life—with an immediacy that feels both familiar and disarming. Guided by Martin Parr's editorial eye, the photographs are shaped into a lively visual sequence that reveals patterns of dress, leisure, class, and habit, bringing humor and affection into sharp focus through the images themselves. Stemming from the UK archive of Lee Shulman's Anonymous Project, these photographs are saturated with color, with exquisite reproductions that preserve rich hues, subtle fades, and tonal quirks, maintaining the distinctive look of mid-century color photography. Thoughtfully edited and paced, the selection transforms intimate moments into a collective portrait, offering a generous and observant view of Britain as seen through the unselfconscious lens of its own family albums.