Richard Billingham translates his ‘80s working class family photography to the big screen
- Text by Adam White
- Photography by Richard Billingham
Artist and photographer Richard Billingham came to fame among a wave of young British artists in the 1990’s with his photography project Ray’s a Laugh. Inspired by his experiences growing up in a council flat in Thatcher-era Birmingham during the 1980s, Billingham’s photographs documented the fluctuating dynamics and struggles of his close-knit family. Twenty years after their publication, Billingham is expanding his work into a feature film, which is currently seeking donors via a fundraising campaign on Kickstarter.
Billingham’s video work initially began as an art installation that screened at galleries worldwide, a short film inspired by the alcoholism of his father. Self-confined to his small, bare bedroom, Ray drinks the days away – listening to Dusty Springfield and watching birds fly past his window.
Inspired by the installation’s warm reception, Billingham then decided to expand the piece into the 40-minute film as it exists today. Titled Ray, the short further explores Ray’s character while introducing two others: his carer Sid, and estranged wife Liz (played by a surprisingly engaging Deirdre Kelly, aka Benefits Street‘s White Dee).
Now a sort of ‘pilot’ for the proposed feature film, to be titled Ray & Liz, Ray is a compelling kitchen sink drama, with the small-scale stakes of a Raymond Carver story, and shot with the quiet voyeurism of vintage Terence Davies – Distant Voices, Still Lives could be its generational ancestor. Cinematographer Daniel Landin, fresh off the Jonathan Glazer masterpiece Under the Skin, also helps make the most banal of locations look extraordinarily beautiful, with one of the most sumptuous colour palettes you’re likely to see in a low-budget art film.
For producer Jacqui Davies, expanding the work into a feature film would not only try and fill an intellectual gap in a market dominated by very commercial work, but also helped open up an entirely new form of storytelling for Billingham. “Installations and art have a reputation for being very steely and cold,” she said during a post-screening Q&A at London’s Arts Club, “while film offers the opportunity of emotion and feeling.”
Billingham himself refers to his filmmaking process as a “reproduction of memory,” one enhanced by the film’s shooting location: the exact same block of flats as the one he grew up in. Despite initial concerns of just how cast, crew and equipment could all fit into a cramped council flat bedroom, Davies rented out a nearly identical flat for filming, one located on the same floor that Billingham spent his childhood.
Designed as the first part of a triptych of interconnected stories, the proposed feature film is currently seeking donors to cover much-needed development work including casting, production design and location scouting.
More information, a list of donor rewards, and a proposal trailer can be found at the Ray & Liz Kickstarter.
Enjoyed this article? Like Huck on Facebook or follow us on Twitter.
You might like
“I didn’t care if I got sacked”: Sleazenation’s Scott King in conversation with Radge’s Meg McWilliams
Radgenation — For our 20th Anniversary Issue, Huck’s editor Josh Jones sits down with the legendary art director and the founder of a new magazine from England’s northeast to talk about taking risks, crafting singular covers and disrupting the middle class dominance of the creative industries.
Written by: Josh Jones
Free-spirited, otherworldly portraits of Mexico City’s queer youth
Birds — Pieter Henket’s new collaborative photobook creates a stage for CDMX’s LGBTQ+ community to express themselves without limitations, styling themselves with wild outfits that subvert gender and tradition.
Written by: Isaac Muk
The suave style and subtle codes of gay San Francisco in the ’70s
Seminal Works — Hal Fischer’s new photobook explores the photographer’s archive, in which he documented the street fashion and culture of the city post-Gay Liberation, and pre-AIDS pandemic.
Written by: Miss Rosen
The stripped, DIY experimentalism of SHOOT zine
Zine Scene — Conceived by photographer Paul Mpagi Sepuya in the ’00s, the publication’s photos injected vulnerability into gay portraiture, and provided a window into the characters of the Brooklyn arts scene. A new photobook collates work made across its seven issues.
Written by: Miss Rosen
Confronting America’s history of violence against student protest
Through A Mirror, Darkly — In May 1970, two separate massacres at American college campuses saw deaths at the hands of the state. Naeem Mohaiemen’s new three-channel film memorialises the brutality.
Written by: Miss Rosen
Joe Bloom’s View From a Bridge
More stories, more human — The artist and creator of the vertical video generation’s most loved storytelling platform explains the process behind creating the show, and the importance of bucking trends.
Written by: Isaac Muk
