Mik Critchlow Gallery to open at Woodhorn Museum

Woodhorn Museum to become home of the Mik Critchlow collection

Man holding camera and looking in viewfinder


Originally published on 7 March 2025. 

To mark the day of the photographer's 70th birthday (7 March 2025), and two years since his passing, Woodhorn Museum in Northumberland has announced it will open a new gallery dedicated to the acclaimed photographer later this year. 

The Coal Town Collection will showcase more than 100 photographs from Critchlow's Coal Town archive, which first went on display at Woodhorn Museum in November 2021. Chronicling the town and the people of Ashington over four decades, Coal Town provides a rare glimpse inside the town's coalfield communities, and captures periods of major social, economic and political change in Northumberland. Critchlow personally selected each photograph from his archive for the original exhibition. 

The Coal Town Collection will also feature personal items on loan from Critchlow's family, including cameras he collected and used during his career, unseen photographs, and other personal ephemera that provide an insight into the man behind the camera. 

The new exhibition at Woodhorn Museum will celebrate the legacy of Critchlow and his work, and the hugely important role he played in documenting the end of Northumberland's mining history. 

Liz Ritson, Director of Programmes & Engagement at Woodhorn Museum, said: "With a career spanning almost 45 years, Mik's work is one of the most important historical archives we have of the end of deep coal mining in Northumberland. It also captures the short and long-term impact of the industry's closure on coalfield communities. 

"His emotive and deeply personal photographs do more than capture a moment in time; they tell a story of the people and communities he was part of in the town in Ashington. 

"Because of his close connections to the people he photographed, Mik was able to capture deeply personal moments in people's lives. Throughout his career he sensitively documented moments of joy, sadness, and everyday life within the coalfield communities in Ashington. The new gallery celebrating his extraordinary body of his work will give visitors to Woodhorn the opportunity to experience and enjoy his work, in Mik's own words, "...back home where they all belong."

Born and raised in Ashington, Mik Critchlow amassed an archive of over 50,000 pictures during his 44-year photography career. He began photographing the people and street life of his hometown in 1977 after seeing an exhibition by The Ashington Group (also known as the Pitmen Painters). 

Part of a mining family, Mik often referred to coal as being 'in our blood'. His family moved to Northumberland in the mid 1800s to work in the region's coal mines. Mik's grandfather worked at Woodhorn Colliery for 52 years, his father spent 45 years as a miner, and his two brothers also spent 25 years working underground. 

Mik died on his birthday (7 March 1955), aged 68 in Ashington, Northumberland. 

Maureen Critchlow, Mik's wife, said: "Mik saw The Coal Town exhibition as the culmination of his life's work within the area. Even though he's worked on many projects further afield, it was this one spanning over a period of 40 years, that was most special to him. He had a deep understanding and empathy for the people who lived and worked in his home town. 

"Mik had a longstanding association with Woodhorn Museum, having exhibited his work there many times over the years and attending many a Miner's Picnic day. The museum also holds a collection of his original exhibition prints from the 80s in its archive. He would have been honoured to have his work permanently housed in the museum to enable many more people to view it.

"It is fitting therefore for the anniversary of his 70th birthday to coincide with the announcement of the new Mik Critchlow gallery." 

Shona Brown, Mik's daughter added "My Dad had an effortless ability to capture people's emotions and personalities while simply going about their daily life . Quite often when looking back on the mining era, it's easy to automatically think of 'the miners' themselves, and not their families or the effects the devastating loss of the industry had on the wider community.

"The selected images were personally chosen by my Dad back in 2021, capturing community life over four decades and creating a breathtaking display. This permanent home of The Coal Town Collection will ensure not only that his legacy lives on, but also the memories and subjects in the images. It's been a pleasure working closely with the talented team at Woodhorn Museum and I am confident that he would be delighted with the end result." 

Mik Critchlow's work has also been exhibited and published by Side Gallery, Amber-Side Collection, Brunel University, Durham Art Gallery, Arts Council England, Northern Arts, The British Journal of Photography, and Creative Camera. In 2019, his third solo book, Coal Town - which features a collection of images from the exhibition - was published. 

Speaking about the Coal Town exhibition in 2021, Mik said: "For the past 44 years I have photographed the town, people and surrounding areas of Ashington, Northumberland, the town in which I was born, educated in and still live.

"Ashington as a community owes its very existence to coal mining, and although the extraction of coal was the major dominant factor in their lives, miners and their families shared many interests. There was always a strong tradition of community life. 

"People would often ask me, 'Why are you photographing me? I'm not royalty', and I would say 'you're my royalty, you're just as important'. I've always told people they're important I was photographing them for history really. 

"After all these many years, I feel that I'm bringing people back to life again, back home where they all belong."

The Coal Town Collection will open at Woodhorn in May 2025. The date will be announced soon. 

From 1 April 2025, North East Museums (formerly Tyne & Wear Archives & Museums) will manage Woodhorn Museum, Hexham Old Gaol, and Morpeth Chantry Bagpipe Museum on behalf of Northumberland County Council. 

For more information, image or interview requests, please contact David Brookbanks on david@ludlowstreet.co.uk or 07948 563 612. 

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