What does it mean for something to be 鈥榮ublime鈥? The word is Latin in origin, translating as something 鈥榮et or raised aloft, high up鈥. Elsewhere, it鈥檚 defined as the quality of 鈥榞reatness: physical, moral, intellectual, metaphysical, aesthetic, spiritual or artistic.鈥 Perhaps the best-known explanation comes from 18th century philosopher Edmund Burke (1729-1797), who saw it as a kind of pleasurable terror, often associated with dramatic, romantic scenes in nature. A new exhibition and publication from V&A takes this one step further: positioning the idea in relation to industry. It does so through the legacy of humanist photographer Maurice Broomfield (1916-2021).
Broomfield was born into a working class family near Derby, Broomfield, in 1916. He left school aged 15 to take a job as a lathe operator in a Rolls Royce factory, and spent evenings training at Derby College of Art. During WWII, he was a conscientious objector 鈥 serving as a driver for the Friends鈥 Ambulance Service amidst the Blitz. The aftermath of the conflict in Europe provided Broomfield with his first major photographic project, as he visited ruined cities to document the devastation wreaked by fascism. Returning to the UK, the artist and documentarist then established a partnership with Madame Yevonde (1893-1975), a well-known society portrait photographer. This is where V&A’s show begins.
The pair鈥檚 studio in west London attracted Britain鈥檚 mid-century leisure class, but Broomfield鈥檚 passion lay in exploring the industries that had generated much of his sitters鈥 wealth. He was often employed by companies to document the 鈥済olden age鈥 of the machine across the world, from the Ford car plant in Dagenham to a high-tech lighting laboratory in the Netherlands and the De Beers鈥 diamond mines in Sierra Leone. As such, much of his work appeared in company reports prior to being printed for photography exhibitions. Like the work of early 20th century North American Precisionist artists 鈥 Charles Sheeler, for example 鈥 Broomfield鈥檚 images occupy a complex position in relation to the industries they document, serving as records of both splendour and exploitation.
However, what marks Broomfield鈥檚 work apart from that of earlier modernist artists 鈥 who also exalted the machine 鈥 is his emphasis on the role of the human being. His shots generally focus on the operator, miner or other skilled labourer whose dexterity and attention ensures the smooth functioning of the production line, raising them to the status of agent and protagonist in spite of the difficult conditions in which many of them worked. At the same time, industrial processes and inventions are celebrated on their own terms: for their grandiose, sublime and sublime surreal qualities.
Many of the factories Broomfield photographed no longer exist, and the communities they supported have disappeared. As such, his archive of over 30,000 images 鈥 purchased by the V&A shortly before his death in 2010 鈥 is a precious document of global industrial and social history. Highlights of the show include a spectacular image of a half million-volt charge on ceramic insulators for Royal Doulton potteries. Elsewhere, a surreal scene shows a woman inspecting a generator at the English Electric Company.
To accompany the display, the V&A will publish a new book on Broomfield, written by V&A Senior Curator Martin Barnes and with a foreword by the artist鈥檚 son, the influential documentary filmmaker Nick Broomfield. Barnes discusses the life and work of Maurice, whom he came to know whilst transferring his archive from his Hampshire home to the museum.
Maurice Broomfield: Industrial Sublime runs at the V&A until 6 November 2022. Find out more .
Words: Greg Thomas
Image Credits:
1. Maurice Broomfield, Woman Examining a Sample, Shell International, Holland Laboratories, 1968. © Estate of Maurice Broomfield
2. Maurice Broomfield, Testing Ceramic Insulator Pots, Royal Doulton, 1955. © Estate of Maurice Broomfield
3. Maurice Broomfield, North Sea Rig, Gas Council 1967. © Estate of Maurice Broomfield
4. Maurice Broomfield, Wire Manufacture, Somerset Wire Company, Cardiff Factory, 1964. © Estate of Maurice Broomfield
5. Maurice Broomfield, Two Men and Four Tanks, Joseph Crosfield, Warrington 1962 © Estate of Maurice Broomfield







