In the shadow of Grenfell Tower
In the shadow of Grenfell Tower
Sarah M. Lee
June 26, 2017
I was working with my writer colleague and frequent collaborator, Laura Barton. We wanted to travel across the city on the shortest and hottest night of the year and take its atmospheric temperature.
Starting at midnight, we walked through Notting Hill Gate where, despite being mid week, many office workers continued drinking on the streets, and lovers lingered not wanting to go home to their hot apartments. There were also hints of the recent, terrible fire in the ubiquitous ‘missing’ posters seen in every shop and pub window.
Then we walked towards the devastated remains of Grenfell Tower. The mood was somber. Survivors were on the streets unable to sleep, haunted by what they had seen.
Later we crossed town towards Camden and Hackney where, in the early hours of the morning, late night drinkers were more relaxed enjoying the unusual warmth.
As dawn approached at 4am, we caught a bus towards Westminster Bridge to watch the sunrise from the same spot where William Wordsworth wrote his famous poem Lines composed upon Westminster Bridge. By that time, the hard-working, working classes who have to rise before dawn to get to their jobs were already crossing the city. I was moved by an Afro-Caribbean woman on the bus, quietly engrossed in her bible.
Working with the M10 was a joy. I shot these images mostly with the 50mm 1.4 lens. There was very little light and I had to set the ISO as high as 8000, which would never have been possible on the earlier versions of the M. In my opinion, the M10 is the perfect rangefinder."
Sarah M. Lee+-
Sarah studied English Literature at University College London (UCL) in the late 1990s and used the time not spent in libraries to train herself as a photographer.
She was offered a freelance position at the Guardian in 2000, and has continued to work for the Guardian and Observer ever since. Lee specialises in portraiture, features and the Arts but is interested in all photography that focuses on people, and our shared human experience.
She lives in London with her husband and their dog. More