
11/09/2025
Chris Steele-Perkins, one of Magnum Photos’ most incisive chroniclers of postwar Britain, has died aged 78.
Across five decades, Steele-Perkins shaped the language of British documentary photography – capturing youth subcultures, social upheavals, and moments when history turned on the street. From his early work documenting inner-city struggles in the 1970s, to The Teds (1979), now a landmark of British social documentary, his lens never ridiculed but instead rendered dignity and complexity.
He ranged far beyond Britain, reporting on the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, socio-political crises in Africa and Lebanon, and rural Japan, where he later settled with his wife, photographer Miyako Yamada. His books – from Fuji to England, My England – asked what identity means, weaving together portraits of aristocrats, migrants, and everyday Londoners.
“Photography can’t change anything,” he once said, “but it can stand as a record.”
Magnum announced his death on 08 September, noting he passed peacefully in Tokyo after living with Lewy body dementia. Fellow photographer Homer Sykes remembers him as a peer, competitor, and friend: “We just enjoyed each other’s work, and the business of making it work.”
Read the obituary at the link below.