Richard Sadler: Coventry post-war photographer 'pre-eminent'
- Published
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Richard Sadler spent 60 years photographing everyday life in Coventry
A photographer who captured Coventry's post-war recovery has died at the age of 92.
Richard Sadler lived through the German bombing of the city and documented the rebuilding of the cathedral.
Dr Ben Kyneswood, of Coventry University, said he was "probably Coventry's pre-eminent post-war photographer".
Sadler captured ordinary life around the city and the poverty that remained, despite Coventry's post-war boom.
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Sadler's photos combined the modern city and everyday life
Jason Scott Tilley from Coventry's Photo Archive Miners, external group, described him as "theatrical" an "extrovert" and "one of these characters who came out of that booming city after the war and made a name for himself".
He said Sadler was special because he was a perfectionist. Dr Kyneswood added that because he was a fine art photographer by trade, he was taught to take one photograph at a time and spent a lot of time framing his photos before he took them.
Michael Pritchard from the British Photographic History website said Sadler was "one of British photography's important post-war figures".
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Richard Sadler trained to be a photographer in 1948 at the Edward Eaves Studio in Leamington
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This man was photographed at the Coventry research centre of fabric-makers Courtaulds
His most famous image is of the American crime photographer Arthur Fellig, known as Weegee, who visited Coventry in 1963 to promote Zenith cameras.
Copies are held in major collections around the world and Dr Kyneswood explained that Weegee was known for his candid style and for getting right up close to the action, and that's mirrored in this photo.
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Copies of Weegee the Famous are held by the National Portrait Gallery and the Victoria & Albert Museum among others.
In his 60-year career, he worked for many of the big local companies, including Jaguar, Wimpey, the University of Derby, Courtaulds, the Royal Shakespeare Company and the Belgrade Theatre.
He also worked with playwright John Wiles on 'Never Had it So Good', a social documentary about the city, performed at Coventry's Belgrade Theatre.
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Richard Sadler's photos captured the newly rebuilt parts of Coventry
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Sadler's photos also documented those parts of the city awaiting regeneration
A body of Sadler's work has been digitized by Dr Kyneswood and colleagues as part of the Photo Miners project. , external
He died at his home in Monmouthshire after a short illness.
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Richard Sadler was Course Director for BA Photography at the University of Derby until 1992
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