The Stillness of Life
By (Author) Don McCullin
GOST Books
GOST Books
25th January 2026
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Hardback
180
Width 280mm, Height 360mm, Spine 20mm
McCullins has been creating still life arrangements in his garden shed at home in Somerset since the early 1980s.Each still life has been lyrically constructed with the naturalcut flowers (lilies, fox-gloves, gladioli), fruit or fungioften presented alongside beloved mementos of his travels; a bronze dragon from the orient, a junk shop vase, aHindu goddess. He arranges disparate inanimate objects with fruits and flowers as a kind of shrine to pay respectto the idea of transience versus permanence. These self-styled altars act as a homage to beauty, to the changingseasons and the fleeting passage of time.
The landscapes in the book are gathered from throughout McCullins careerfrom early photographs of theIndustrial North of the UK, to India, Africa and more recent images taken closer to home. Shot to enhance a metalliclight, lowering skies and the denuded trees; there can be a sense of foreboding and desolation in the landscapes,as if the photographer were contemplating the aftermath of a battle scene. Vast eternities are suggested in hisexpanses of desert sand and biblical drama in his silver-edged cloudscapes. Any figures in the frame are incidentaland merely contribute to the compositiona departure from the human-focused documentary work for whichMcCullin became known.
Don McCullin (b.1935) grew up in Finsbury Park, London. He began taking photographs during his military serviceand brought his camera back with him to the UK, beginning what would be a life-long commitment to photography.In 1961 McCullin travelled to Berlin just as the wall was going up , and his resulting photographs earned him acontract with The Observer. He went on to work for major British newspapers during some of the most violentconflicts of the late twentieth-century including Vietnam, Biafra, Bangladesh, Lebanon, Northern Ireland and morerecently Iraq and Syria. Whenever he returned home, McCullin would turn his lens on still-life and landscape as akind of therapy and solace. His landscapes have been the subject of solo exhibitions at international galleries, Hauser& Wirth and Hamiltons Gallery, and are held in the collection of V&A, Tate, London where McCullin enjoyed a majorretrospective in 2019