FOUR CORNERS: FIFTY YEARS OF COMMUNITY FILM AND PHOTOGRAPHY IN EAST LONDON
Image: Family archivist Tanbir Mirza-Baeg at the opening of I Am Who I Am Now: Selections from the Bengali Photo Archive, July 2024. Photo credit: Eleni Parousi
Four Corners turns fifty this year. The organisation has been situated in Roman Road in Bethnal Green, East London since 1975. In the 1970s Tower Hamlets was beset with far-right National Front newspaper sellers, and communities were divided. Squatting was common in this run-down area, and 113 Roman Road was no exception. Here four film school graduates created a filmmaking workshop and cinema space, where they could also produce their own films.

Four Corners shop front, 113 Roman Road, circa 1970s. Photo courtesy of Four Corners, 2025.
Four Corners’ ethos was to make filmmaking accessible, by collaborating with local people to watch, discuss and make films. However, one of its founders recalled that many local people felt that Four Corners was not for them. Despite the organisation’s creative efforts, producing films like On Allotments (1976) and Railman (1976), its work was seen as disconnected from the immediate community. This led Four Corners to rethink its approach. Joanna Davis and Mary Pat Leece advocated for a cinema to encourage “some kind of public activity”, particularly through public screenings, while Wilf Thust emphasised the need for production and education workshops. By 1976, Four Corners had secured funding from Tower Hamlets Council to transform its space into a collaborative creative hub.
Describing these early days, Jo Davis recalled that,
“It was quite hostile – I can’t say it was an easy ride.
There was suspicion [of] who we were and what on earth we were doing there.Gradually we got more and more involved and less and less isolated – it was a very gradual process and very rewarding … through the films and the projects you make absolute contact at a human level and that’s where I think it works.”

Audience members inside Four Corners’ cinema, 113 Roman Road, Tower Hamlets, circa 1980s. Photo courtesy of Four Corners, 2025.
Four Corners’ participatory cinema screenings encouraged critical discussions. Bev Zalcock, a long-time associate of the organisation, shared her memories in a recent oral history interview. She recalled attending a screening of Jean-Luc Godard’s Letter to Jane,1 which was “very sexist”. At a memorable moment Joanna Davis leaned out of the projection booth and asked, “Can we bear this anymore?” Bev referred to this as “a guerrilla intervention from a projectionist”, with the audience, including herself, responding with a resounding “no!”

Behind the scenes on Nighthawks circa 1978. Four Corners co-founder Joanna Davis is operating the camera and Tony Godden (right) played the DJ in the film. Photo © Tony Godden, courtesy of Four Corners, 2025.
From the 1970s to the 1990s, Four Corners offered a space where young people learned filmmaking, creating films such as Don’t Think So. The ‘Screenagers’ project offered school children screenings of matinee blockbusters in the purpose-built cinema and stop-frame animation workshops. There were unemployed filmmaking workshops and free childcare for mothers learning filmmaking. The ground-breaking gay feature film Nighthawks (1978), directed by founder member Ron Peck, was made by a cast of largely amateur actors. Women-only and Black women filmmaker groups met to view and discuss issues of film representation.

A response to films from Four Corners’ archive. Film still from ‘Screenage Kicks’ by an East End Stories project participant, January 2025. Photo courtesy of Four Corners, 2025.
THE BENGALI PHOTO ARCHIVE
Flash forward to 2025, and the ethos of the founder members continues. In this article, we explore the Bengali Photo Archive (BPA), a project which encompasses Four Corners’ collaborative approach by engaging community groups, volunteers, donors, amateur and professional photographers.

Montefiore Centre mural painting, circa 1970s-1980s. Photo: Tom Learmonth, Bengali Photo Archive, courtesy of Four Corners, 2025.
The project emerged through discussions with Swadhinata Trust, the East London secular Bengali heritage organisation, which works to embed British Bengali history in school curriculums. Four Corners had recently partnered with Swadhinata Trust on the project Brick Lane 1978: The Turning Point in 2022. Community archives often spring from activism originating in collective trauma or grief, and we witnessed this from recording oral histories with activists on the Brick Lane project, who recalled experiences of racist violence in the 1970s. The project also identified a lack of photographic archives of everyday East London Bengali life, which led to the creation of the BPA project.

Photo: Mayar Akash, circa 1990s. Bengali Photo Archive, courtesy of Four Corners, 2025.
Our aim was to establish a new collection created by and featuring the Bengali community in Tower Hamlets. We looked at examples of participatory archiving, such as the South Asian American Digital Archive in the USA and UK based Black Country Visual Arts whose models of community archiving, collaborating and exhibiting mirrored our own approach. We partnered with Tower Hamlets Local History Library & Archives to house the digital collection, enabling ongoing public access. Funding was secured from the National Lottery Heritage Fund, Historic England, the National Lottery Community Fund and other trusts.
Twenty-five participants were recruited and trained in archiving skills, Premiere Pro editing, and oral history techniques. Most engaged for three months, with a core group of eight people staying for over 6 months. We aimed to scan 500 photographs but in the end we scanned over 4600! We also conducted oral history interviews and created ten short films made up of oral history recordings and donated images.
Further funding enabled us to develop a website and an exhibition in Four Corners’ gallery, I Am Who I Am Now: Selections from the Bengali Photo Archive, ran in July 2024. It displayed over 275 images and attracted nearly 800 visitors. We also hosted a panel discussion on images and representation, and a walking tour.

BPA Participants scanning images with a donor at Southern Grove Community Centre, June 2023. Photo courtesy of Four Corners.
The BPA participants were integral to the project, becoming ‘information champions’ of individual collections through meeting donors, conducting oral histories, scanning and cataloguing photographs.
“Being part of the project has enabled me to take my own interest in British Bengali history and take it in more directions and make connections that would’ve been difficult before”. Tanbir Mirza-Baeg, BPA project participant.
Participants were equally involved in the exhibition curation, deciding on themes, editing images and contributing ideas on how the show should look.


BPA participants begin the exhibition layout at a curation session in Four Corners’ gallery, June 2024. Photos courtesy of Four Corners, 2025.

Image: Family archivist Tanbir Mirza-Baeg at the opening of I Am Who I Am Now: Selections from the Bengali Photo Archive, July 2024. Photo: Eleni Parousi.
Outreach to build relationships and trust with donors was central. We set up mobile scanning stations in community centres and relied on word of mouth in the community to get people involved, engaging around 100 individuals and local organisations and nearly 40 donors, both professional and amateur photographers of Bengali and non-Bengali heritage. The images ranged from snapshots to family portraits, photographs documenting work, political events, music, and the arts.
ACHIEVEMENTS
Akila Asad, the joint author of this article, was a volunteer on the BPA project, and is currently working at Four Corners on a paid internship programme as part of The People’s Gallery, also funded by the National Lottery Heritage Fund. She writes:
“I want to share some reflections from visitors to our BPA exhibition, as well as my own thoughts on the overall impact of the collection and exhibition.”
As part of the exhibition, we invited visitors to write their thoughts on postcards, each featuring a photo from the BPA. These postcards were then displayed in the windows of the gallery. This interactive element allowed others to read their reflections, but the primary purpose was to encourage visitors to process what they had seen and create meaningful connections with the archive.


Exterior and interior shots of ‘memory postcards’ during the I Am Who I Am Now: Selections from the Bengali Photo Archive exhibition, July 2024. Photos courtesy of Four Corners, 2025.
The feedback revealed that the exhibition had a strong emotional impact, especially for those of Bangladeshi heritage. For them, the photos represented moments from lives they personally recognised. Many described the emotional impact of seeing images that reminded them of their own families – bringing back ‘’beautiful memories,’’ or filling a gap in their understanding of their parents’ lives growing up in the ‘70s and ‘80s.


‘Memory postcards’ were handwritten by visitors to the I Am Who I Am Now: Selections from the Bengali Photo Archive exhibition, July 2024. The memories were then pegged up in the window for others to read. Images courtesy of Four Corners, 2025.

Group of boys in a classroom, Tower Hamlets, circa 1970s-1980s. Photo: Peter Musgrave. Bengali Photo Archive, courtesy of Four Corners, 2025.
This emotional connection was part of what made the BPA impactful. By capturing everyday moments – family gatherings, celebrations, and the seemingly mundane sense of home life – the collection offered a familiar and personal reflection of British Bangladeshi experiences. These images resonated with exhibition visitors across generations, evoking a shared sense of history and belonging within the Bangladeshi diaspora.

Children’s birthday party, Tower Hamlets, 1998. Photo: Sabina Khan. Bengali Photo Archive, courtesy of Four Corners, 2025.

Children dressed for Eid at home, Tower Hamlets, circa 1995. Photo: Shaira Jahan. Bengali Photo Archive, courtesy of Four Corners, 2025.

Girls among the daffodils, Kew Gardens, Richmond, 1987. Photo: Tanbir Mirza-Baeg. Bengali Photo Archive, courtesy of Four Corners, 2025.
Another achievement of the BPA was the level of control it gave to its contributors, most of whom were of Bangladeshi heritage. While the project invited people to submit photographs and oral histories, what they chose to share was entirely up to them. This open approach allowed people to shape the narrative on their own terms. One visitor remarked on how the exhibition highlighted the “normal aspects of Bengali history,’’ not just the “horrific racist attacks,’’ and portrayed British Bangladeshis as “more human’’ and “not just statistics.’’ That freedom to define what felt important to share created a thorough, more nuanced archive. As another visitor beautifully put it,
“its [sic] so important to not divorce the people from the archive and the archive from the people.’’


‘Memory postcards’ were handwritten by visitors to the I Am Who I Am Now: Selections from the Bengali Photo Archive exhibition, July 2024. The memories were then pegged up in the window for others to read. Images courtesy of Four Corners, 2025.

BPA participants running an outreach session at Spitalfields City Farm, June 2023. Photo courtesy of Four Corners, 2025.
While the BPA did include stories of resistance – especially from the 1970s, when the Bangladeshi community stood against far-right groups – it also widened the narrative. The archive expanded its scope into the community’s activism in the 1990s, including their resistance to the British National Party (BNP), while also exploring broader themes like migration, work, family and celebration.

TUC Unite Against Racism march and demonstration, Tower Hamlets Photo: Mayar Akash. 1994. Bengali Photo Archive, courtesy of Four Corners, 2025.
To me, this shift in focus helped diversify the narrative of British Bangladeshi history. The ‘70s remain a defining era for the community, but that period can feel distant or disconnected for younger generations. By broadening the archive’s scope, the BPA didn’t just revisit that legacy – it built on it. Including experiences from the ‘80s, ‘90s, and beyond helped create a more continuous narrative. making space for more people to see themselves in the story and encourage a connection to those who came before.
The BPA also brought visibility to the experiences of Bangladeshi women. Their stories are often overlooked – rarely recorded but framed in a limited way, typically focusing on their traditional roles within the family, such as being brought to the UK by their husbands, to care for their children and manage the household. While this portrayal may contain some truth, it fails to capture the full scope of their lives, often reducing them to roles defined in relation to men.
However, efforts to shift this narrative are underway. One notable example is the Stepney Community Trust’s project Home Machinists & Seamstresses, which highlights the economic contributions of Bangladeshi women, many of whom supported their families by sewing from home. The BPA has also made strides in this area. Through my involvement, alongside other volunteers, we conducted interviews with Bangladeshi women, recording stories that went beyond the traditional images of housewives and homemakers.
The oral histories and photographs submitted to the archive reveal a more nuanced portrait of these women. They show Bangladeshi women pursuing education, participating in paid work, and reflecting on their relationships with their parents, as well as their thoughts on life in London’s East End.
We also found there were different perspectives:
“Sad thing was my mum never accepted UK as her home. She hated it. those days when she used to talk about going back and she did go back, didn’t she? She hated the weather. She hated the isolation. Everything. Back in Bangladesh, everybody’s your family. And everybody comes and goes as they like. And it was a different environment for her, and she did not like it. So she promised like one day she will go back forever.’’ Shahnaz Siddiqa-Baeg
By focusing on their voices, the archive not only preserves these narratives but also challenges one-dimensional portrayals, allowing Bangladeshi women to be recognised on their own terms.

Rehana Rahman (right), teaching British-Bangladeshi children at a primary school in Tower Hamlets, circa 1970s-1980s.Photo: Rehana Rahman. Bengali Photo Archive, courtesy of Four Corners, 2025.
Overall, we feel that the project went really well, although its success posed a challenge – we did not anticipate how many people would want to get involved. As news spread and trust was built, more people wanted to submit images to the collection and to share their stories; we simply couldn’t capture them all. This interest continues, and we are looking at possible funding opportunities to expand the scope of the archive and to tour the exhibition. We also wished that we had been able to offer our volunteers some remuneration above travel and refreshments. The reliance on volunteers in our sector is vital, and it is important that funders understand the need to support them financially, to avoid excluding those who cannot afford to dedicate their time for free. Four Corners is keen to take forward this approach on future participatory projects.
THEN AND NOW: HOW THE BENGALI PHOTO ARCHIVE REFLECTS FOUR CORNERS’ HISTORY
Over the past fifty years Four Corners’ creative focus has evolved. In 2003 it expanded its remit to include both film and photography, when it reopened the darkrooms and gallery at 121 Roman Road which were formerly run by arts charity Camerawork2. Four Corners’ history reveals a consistent commitment to its local community. From its early efforts to break down barriers and involve residents in the creative process, to its current workshops, screenings, and community-driven projects, it remains rooted in collaboration and inclusivity.

BPA workshop with mothers and daughters at Mulberry School, Tower Hamlets, May 2024. The workshops were led by artist Jenny Matthews. Participants embroidered over photos printed on canvas and were framed and displayed as part of the exhibition. Photo courtesy of Four Corners, 2025.
Notes:
1. Letter to Jane is a 1972 film directed by Jean-Luc Godard and Jean-Pierre Gorin. Narrated by both Godard and Gorin, the film focuses on a single news photograph of Jane Fonda in Vietnam. Susan Sontag praised the film, however other critics found it misogynistic. Fonda herself later called the
film “a big pile of bullshit.”
2. Camerawork was a radical photography organisation which emerged from the Half Moon Photography Workshop. The Workshop was established in 1975, taking the name Camerawork in 1981, after the influential magazine it published from 1976 until 1985. It moved to Roman Road in Bethnal Green in 1977, close to Four Corners. After Camerawork closed, Four Corners took on their building, where they are based to this day, reopening the gallery and darkrooms and merging both film and photography practice in one organisation. With support from the National Lottery Heritage Fund and other trusts, Four Corners has been researching and documenting both the Camerawork and the Four Corners archives.

