Dave Hendley.
Posted: July 29, 2016 Filed under: Parks, Transport, Vanishings | Tags: Big Joe Gibbs, Central St Martin's, Dave Hendley, Gregory Isaacs, Leica street photography, Pablove Black, Tokyo Camera Style 6 CommentsPiccadilly Line 2013. © Estate of Dave Hendley.
David Secombe:
There are times when The London Column feels like an obituary strand; and last week saw the death of another contributor, one who also happened to be a very dear friend.
King’s Cross Station, 2011. © Estate of Dave Hendley.
Dave Hendley was many things: a photographer, a DJ, teacher, printer, art director, reggae fanatic, mountain bike aficionado, snappy dresser, record collector, record label founder, Leica collector, writer, seaside-dweller, bon viveur … yet he was never a dilettante, he was fully authentic in every one of his diverse activities. I knew him through photography. We were first introduced, sometime in the late 1980s, by our mutual friend the late John Driscoll, as we belonged to a scene that centred around the darkrooms, photographic suppliers and pubs of Clerkenwell and Shoreditch. At that time Dave was a printer and sometime freelance photographer. I didn’t learn the extent of his involvement in music until much later, when he casually showed me a box of prints of portraits of reggae stars that he had taken in the 1970s. It turned out that this unassuming, softly-spoken Londoner was a very considerable force in the reggae scene and played a key role in the dissemination of the music. (Radio 1 Extra played its own tribute to Dave a few days ago, a broadcast that filled a few gaps in my understanding of his musical activities.) Dave’s Jamaican portraits are wonderful and are their own testament to his devotion to reggae.
Paul Dixon aka Pablove Black – Kingston, Jamaica 1979. © Estate of Dave Hendley.
Gregory Isaacs, Kingston, Jamaica, 1977. © Estate of Dave Hendley.
Big Joe – Joe Gibbs Studio, Kingston, Jamaica 1977. © Estate of Dave Hendley.
Over the years, I became used to Dave often having a slightly downbeat take on life; but this may have been due to the fact that we talked about photography rather than music (music never let him down). But photography was a way of being for Dave and he re-engaged with the medium when he went to work as a lecturer at Central St Martin’s. Dave’s natural enthusiasm and generosity found a natural outlet in teaching and perhaps as a result he rediscovered his joy of taking pictures. Around the same time he met his partner Kaori who introduced him to Japan, a country he came to love almost as much as he loved Kaori.
Narita Airport, Tokyo 2015. © Estate of Dave Hendley.
Arcade south of Shin Sekai, Osaka, 2013. © Estate of Dave Hendley.
It took me a while to catch up with developments but I gradually realised that Dave Hendley had become one of the most contented people I knew. His life on the north Kent coast struck me as nothing short of idyllic. I don’t think I’ve ever seen anyone look so totally at peace as Dave was in his garden in Tankerton – or, for that matter, in the bar of the Continental Hotel. And, finally, his work was gaining wider recognition. His Jamaican portraits are being collected into a book and his street photography is being celebrated in Japan, and both of these developments were sources of great satisfaction to him.
In St.James’s Park (early 1970s). © Estate of Dave Hendley.
Amongst Dave’s thousands of photos, this particular one is a special favourite of mine. A picture of two men on a bench in a London park that shows what photography is capable of revealing, or appearing to reveal. We don’t know what the actual relationship between the two men in the photo really is but Dave gives us a novel’s worth of speculation. It manages to be poignant, sinister and hilarious all at the same time, a Pinter play condensed into a twelve by nine and a half inch print.
Dave Hendley in the ‘Tokyo Camera Style’ pages of Nippon Camera, Dec. 2014.
Everyone who knew Dave will have their favourite image of him: working in a darkroom maybe, teaching at St Martin’s certainly, DJ-ing somewhere, riding his bike in the Forest of Blean, wandering a city street with Leicas at the ready, and so on. But whatever he was doing he was always reliably, quintessentially Dave, and he was always exhilarating company. For me he was simply the perfect English gentleman. Decent, level headed, kind, understatedly elegant and elegantly understated, knowledgeable but unpretentious, modest but capable, gently melancholic yet wildly enthusiastic, local yet international – constantly, uniquely himself, whether he was in Tokyo, Trenchtown or Tankerton. He even lived in a bungalow, and you can’t get more English than that. We need more like him in the world; but of course there could only ever be one.
Dave as drawn by Aoi, Kitanoda, Osaka 2014. © Estate of Dave Hendley.
… for The London Column.
See also:
Dave Hendley Tumblr, rm409, CSM Camera Style.
Dave on The London Column: