Permanent gallery for 'Coal Town' photographer

Mik Critchlow spent four decades capturing the lives of people in Ashington
- Published
A museum is to open a permanent gallery featuring the work of an acclaimed photographer who documented everyday life in north-east England.
The Coal Town Collection, at Woodhorn in Northumberland, will feature the images of Mik Critchlow who spent decades recording the lives of people in his home town of Ashington.
Also on display will be personal items on loan from his family including the cameras he used and unseen photographs.
His wife Maureen said he saw the collection, made up of images he chose himself, as the "culmination of his life's work".
The 100 photographs first went on display at the museum in November 2021, chronicling the town's colliery and the people who worked there before and after the mine was closed.

Mik Critchlow took over 50,000 photographs
Liz Ritson, Director of Programmes at Woodhorn Museum, said: "Mik's work is one of the most important historical archives we have of the end of deep coalmining in Northumberland.
"His deeply personal photographs do more than capture a moment in time; they tell a story of the people and communities he was part of in the town of Ashington."

Mik Critchlow was born into a mining family and many of his images depicted miners
Born into a mining family, Mr Critchlow, who died in 2023, often referred to coal as being "in our blood".
His grandfather worked at Woodhorn Colliery for 52 years, his father spent 45 years as a miner and his two brothers also spent 25 years working underground.

The 100 images in the Coal Town exhibition were all selected by Mik Critchlow
During his career, which began in 1977 after seeing an exhibition by the Pitmen Painters, he accumulated an archive of over 50,000 pictures.
Mrs Critchlow said he would have felt "honoured" to have a permanent exhibition at Woodhorn.

Mik Critchlow's images have been described as "catching a moment in time"
Speaking about the Coal Town exhibition in 2021, Mr Critchlow said: "People would often ask me, 'Why are you photographing me? I'm not royalty', and I would say, 'you're my royalty, you're just as important'."
"I was photographing them for history really."
The Coal Town Collection will open at Woodhorn Museum in May.
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