An interview with South London photographer Alex Harley.
Alex Harley is a fine example of the kind of creative talent that inhabit South East London;equal parts photographer, sales assistant and club promoter, our buddy Al does it all.
A hard working, creatively minded photography student, Al's
blog functions both as a personal work journal a crucial insight into the lives of our fair town's youngest and freshest.
We caught up with him in one of his less busy moments to find out just a little more about who he is and what makes him tick.
Hey there! Who are you and what do you do?
Hey My names Alex Harley and I'm a photography student, part time denim specialist for Levis, part time lighting assistant for Studio Private and club promoter.
You're originally from Kent, what was it that initially drew you to South London?
I actually made a last minute decision to come to London, it was originally university that brought me here and a lot of my friends that I had met in UCA art college in Kent moved here too.
You've been living in South London for a number of years now, what do you have to say about the creative scene in this part of London, how does it compare to other places you have lived and studied?
I think there's always been a creative scene about this part of London, I just think its a case of we're adapting or growing into it at the moment. But in comparison to other places that I've lived there's just so much to grasp and make use of. If you put in the effort to find out what's going on you'll be constantly spoilt for choice.
Where's your favourite place to eat South of the river?
My favourite place to eat has to be the only place I really eat 'out' South of the river and that's Goldsmiths Cafe. It's a regular cafe with terrible tea and cheap fried breakfasts. What more would you want on a hangover and a budget.
South London is a place with a bit of a reputation, some people either love it, hate it or are scared to death of it; what are your best and worst experiences of South London, do you think there's any clout to the negative opinions people have of it?

South London is like any other part of London when you really get down to the facts, shit happens. Sure it has a reputation but so does everywhere else. If you put yourself in the situation enough times when bad shit is likely to happen then bad shit is likely to happen eventually. Sometimes its unavoidable. I've walked dark streets late at night in South London for years but the only time I've been mugged is on East London's busy Brick Lane. But then again, I know others who have not been so fortunate. Just do everything you can, with out trying too hard, to not make yourself an easy target.
How much, if at all, would you say your surroundings inspire and inform your photography?
Well I would love to go into documentary photography. Catching moments in time that would have been forgotten if not captured by my lens. People are my inspiration, peoples stories and their decisions. So South London is a very inspirational place for me as there are a ridiculous mix of individuals to observe everyday.
Young people and their exploits are a recurring theme in your work, what is it in particular that draws you to the subject of youth?
Again like I said, its creating these moments in time with a camera. When it was first invented people laughed at the fact of even considering an image 'art' (many still do). The camera and the images it produced were purely scientific recordings. I see the camera as a tool, a tool to record and observe. The youth that I interact with on a daily/nightly basis catch my eye more than anything else in this moment in time. Yeah sure I have a certain style that I like to keep fluent (my blog) but its my projects that really capture my main aims.
Also I find it interesting, and I'll try and word this with out sounding cheesy, how todays generation react to the lens. As little as 40 years ago someone would produce a camera and people would huddle together knowing how important that single image would probably be. Now everyone pretty much has one in their pocket. That racks my brains sometimes.
Outside of London, where are some of your favourite places to shoot?
My Grandparents house really inspires me to shoot, theres so many photographs from over the last 70 years or so all over the walls, all different formats, different cameras etc. It drives me insane the amount of memories lie with in these flat old crinkling 2D images. So I'm always hopped up on inspiration when I'm around that area in Hastings. But more as well is a obvious one but when I travel, anywhere when its unfamiliar. Even if its 20 miles in a direction I've never been before I photograph things that probably don't need to be.

You're one half of the creative force behind Fuck The White Board, a club night that's gotten a lot of positive press and drawn in some great talent from South East and even bands from across the pond, how did the night get started?
Well it started out with me trying out some college Gillian Wearing inspired project on clubbers really back in 2006. I started heading to these places in Kent asking them to write on a whiteboard whatever they were thinking. The club asked for the photos and used them as their actual photographs for the night and put them online. I started getting paid to do it round clubs in the Medway area. Then when I moved to London my friend Russ Tannen had more than enough contacts to keep it going around London with me.
So we headed from night to night with a camera and a whiteboard getting people to write stupid shit so we could get drunk for free and paid. We turned some heads at Time Out magazine as well and got a double page spread feature about us, claiming we were 'the future of club photography'. We decided to put the best images on a blog and had a launch night for the website and it rammed out, we had a queue for the whole night. That was nearly two years ago and now we have run nights all over London and have two monthly nights in major establishments in East London.
Russ has an incredible ear for new music so that is really our back bone.
Where do you hope to see it go in the future?
We have some serious shit planned for 2011. We were recently approached by The Roundhouse in Camden to host our 2nd birthday there instead of The Macbeth in Hoxton. They offered us a generous budget if we could offer some amazing upcoming bands. We got the night and its coming up in February and it stands to be one of the biggest parties in London on that night. Time Out magazine are constantly backing us so hopefully we'll turn the right heads and take another step up the ladder.