Richard Billingham is a photographer and artist, film-maker and educator. His work has often focused on his family and the West Midlands, where he grew up. He now lives in South Wales and holds professorships at Middlesex University and the University of Gloucestershire.
Richard was the first recipient of the1997 Citibank Private Bank Photography Prize, now the Deutsche Börse Photography Prize, and was shortlisted for the 2001 Turner Prize for his photographic work Ray’s a Laugh and his TV and gallery film Fishtank 1998, shot with an amateur camcorder.
Other bodies of work include Zoo, Black Country and extensive photography made in the British Landscape.
His work is held in various public collections including MoMA New York, Metropolitan Museum New York, MoMA San Francisco, The Government Art Collection and the Victoria and Albert Museum and Tate Galleries London.
He wrote and directed the BAFTA nominated feature film, Ray & Liz in 2019. It holds 96% on Rotten Tomatoes and 81% on Metacritic (based on 16 reviews) indicating ‘Universal Acclaim.’
Richard currently has a second feature film in development with the BFI - an adaptation of the contemporary novel At Hawthorn Time by Mellissa Harrison. He is also developing another idea about climate change with Media Cymru and Ffilm Cymru Wales.
He is represented by the Anthony Wilkinson, Gallery London and Casarotto Ramsey and Associates London.