Since the end of the year is usually the time for me to spend day and night watching British tv dramas (anything with police, villains, Sherlock or Gene Hunt will do), i thought it would be fitting to blog about an exhibition i saw a few days ago at Foto8 gallery.
Dave Thriston and Warren Pyle at an unlicensed boxing match at Oceana, In Kingston Upon Thames. From Jocelyn Bain Hogg, The Family, 2008-2011
Joe Pyle, the leader of the notorious Pyle crime family, at home at 4 a.m. after the boxing match. From Jocelyn Bain Hogg, The Family, 2008-2011
Over 10 years ago, Jocelyn Bain Hogg followed and portrayed the protagonists of organised crime in South London. Gangsters, funerals, big rings, big cigars, diamond-encrusted knuckle duster, more funerals, pimps and prostitutes, etc. His book The Firm pictures them all.
Charlie’s wake at the Horn of Plenty, Bethnal Green. From Jocelyn Bain Hogg, The Firm
Bruce Reynolds at Reg’s graveside, Chingford cemetery. From Jocelyn Bain Hogg, The Firm
Mickey at home with Maria and Chanelle. From Jocelyn Bain Hogg, The Firm
Charlie Kray’s funeral, 19 April 2000, Chingford. From Jocelyn Bain Hogg, The Firm
More recently, as he was working on a project documenting teenage gun and knife crime across Britain, the photographer found himself driven to go back to London gangsterland and have another look at the people who were supplying weapons and drugs to housing estates. The characters he met are the heirs of the gangsters whose every day life Bain Hogg had followed in the late 1990s but if they are the new generation, these men are also aware that the heydays of the British mob are long gone:
Joe Pyle senior and the Kray twins, the old-school Godfathers of British crime, have died since The Firm was completed in 2001 and in 2008 I found a fractured society of British criminals with little or no organization and leadership who are vainly competing, as many businesses have to do, with international competition.
Russians, Albanians, Kosovans and Turks rule the UK underworld now but the indigenous villains still wear their heritage on their sleeves, talking business at unlicenced boxing matches and night clubs and working with their Jamaican brothers – the Yardies – for a slice of the criminal pie.
The Family picks up where The Firm left. Joey Pyle is dead and Joe Pyle Jnr has taken over. Together with brothers Mitch, Warren, Alan (adopted by Joey Pyle to ensure that business would stay in the family should something happen to his son) and associate Teddy Bambam, Joe forms the core of The Family (dubbed by the US press “The Sopranos of Mitcham“.)
Roy “Pretty boy” Shaw and Freddie Foreman at Ceasar’s. From Jocelyn Bain Hogg, The Family, 2008-2011
The Pyle brothers (Mitch, Warren, Joe, Alan and Teddy “Bam Bam”). From Jocelyn Bain Hogg, The Family, 2008-2011
Mitch Pyle, Warren Pyle and family friends pay their respects at the grave of old Joe Pyle in Mitcham Vemetery. From Jocelyn Bain Hogg, The Family, 2008-2011
Teddy Bambam outside the Beauchamp bar in Knightsbridge with his henchman, Rocky, and “J.” West London. From Jocelyn Bain Hogg, The Family, 2008-2011
A party at the Beauchamp Bar with Don John and Lady Alicia. From Jocelyn Bain Hogg, The Family, 2008-2011
Jocelyn Bain Hogg, The Family, 2008-2011
Jocelyn Bain Hogg, The Family, 2008-2011
Teddy Bambam comforts his niece at the funeral of his father, Ossie Inton Barnett. Sreatham, South London. From Jocelyn Bain Hogg, The Family, 2008-2011
Teddy Bambam’s extended family at his father’s wake in Dulwich, Southeast London. From Jocelyn Bain Hogg, The Family, 2008-2011
Jocelyn Bain Hogg, The Family, 2008-2011 (book cover)
One thing is sure: i can’t imagine the men picture above being as soft-spoken as the Krays were in 1965 (let alone being invited by the BBC to talk about their innocence):
You can get the book The Family on amazon UK. At the moment, amazon.com is only selling The Firm.
The Family is exhibited at the Foto8 Gallery until 14 January 2012.