Armet Francis is a Jamaican-born photographer and publisher who lives in London. He has been documenting and chronicling the lives of people of the African diaspora for more than 40 years and his assignments have included work for The Times Magazine, The Sunday Times Supplement, BBC and Channel 4. He has exhibited worldwide and his work is in collections including those of the Victoria & Albert Museum and the Museum of London. One of his best known photographs is 1964's "Self Portrait in Mirror".
Biography
Armet Francis was born in St Elizabeth, in rural Jamaica in 1945. He was left in the care of his grandparents at the age of three when his parents moved to London, where Francis joined them seven years later in 1955. Interviewed for the British Library's Oral History of British Photography, Francis spoke of growing up as the only black child in a school in London Docklands. After leaving school at 14, he worked for an engineering firm in Bromley, before finding a job as an assistant in a West Endphotographic studio, and going on to forge a career as freelance photographer for fashion magazines and advertising campaigns. He has said: "In 1969 I embarked on a lifetime project.... I was living and working in the first world, materially that is, but becoming more aware of inequalities to the third world, to be more specific the Black World. As a Black photographer I started to realise I had no social documentary images in my work.... I went back in 1969.... I had been away 14 years, it would take another 14 years to make sense of this project." Following his participation at Festac '77 in Lagos, Nigeria, he became devoted to photographing the people of the African diaspora. He became the first Black photographer to have a solo exhibition at The Photographers' Gallery in London when The Black Triangle series was exhibited there in 1983. He published a book also entitled The Black Triangle the following year, and Children of the Black Triangle was produced four years later. He was a contributing photographer in the survey issue of Ten.8 vol. 2, no. 3, 1992, titled Critical Decade: Black British Photography in the 80s. In 1988 Francis was a co-founder of the Association of Black Photographers. He was the official photographer for Africa '05, a major celebration of African arts held throughout 2005 in the UK. Francis was one of three pioneering Jamaican-born photographers – the others being Charlie Phillips and Neil Kenlock – whose work was showcased in the 2005/2006 exhibition Roots to Reckoning at the Museum of London, which in 2009 with the assistance of The Art Fund acquired the "Roots to Reckoning archive", comprising 90 photographs of London's black community from the 1960s to '80s. The British Library conducted an oral history interview with Armet Francis in 2013 for its Oral History of British Photography collection. Photographs by Francis featured prominently in Staying Power, the collaborative project mounted in 2015 by the Victoria and Albert Museum and the Black Cultural Archives. "The arresting first image in the V&A museum is Jamaican photographer Armet Francis’s Self-portrait in Mirror, a curiously intimate and honest image showing Armet setting up his shot directly in front of a mirror," noted the reviewer for Culture Whisper, while Brennavan Sritharan commented in the British Journal of Photography: "Self-portraiture is something of a sub-theme, with Armet Francis' tender yet assertive self-portrait leading the exhibit."
Exhibitions
Solo exhibitions
1983: The Black Triangle: People of the African Diaspora at The Photographers' Gallery, London.
Group exhibitions
1986: Reflections of the Black Experience: 10 Black Photographers at Brixton Art Gallery, London.