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Burned by Don Carlos de Amesquita's Spanish raiders in 1595, plagued by Cholera Morbis in 1832, faced with wholesale destruction at the hands of town planners in 1937 and bombed by the Luftwaffe in the 1940s,

Newlyn's very existence has been under threat so many times it is miracle that enough of the village has survived to allow Barry Sinton to compile a collection of photographs for his new book, Disregarded Territories.Born in London, surrounded by books during his working life in the capital, for a while he worked with publishers Thames & Hudson. He moved to Cornwall six years ago to join the staff of Tate Publications in St Ives.

For the past five years he has lived in Newlyn with his wife Sophie and their children Oliver and Jake, and it was while walking the children around Newlyn that, as he says, "more and more unique aspects of the place revealed themselves to me" and the seeds for his collection of photographs were sown.

Essentially a self-taught photographer, he is quick to acknowledge the help and encouragement he has received from established photographer Nik Strangelove.

The other influence on him has been that of the great French photographer Eugene Atget, who is acclaimed for his photographic documentation of Paris in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. The title of Barry Sinton's book, Disregarded Territories, comes from Gerry Badger's book on the life and times of Eugene Atget.

A collection of images of Newlyn which is decidedly different, as the painter Jeremy Le Grice points out in his perceptive introduction to it.

Le Grice, whose studio is in Newlyn and who is renowned both for his own work and as a champion and trustee of Newlyn Art Gallery, says: "Barry Sinton's eye behind the lens is not focusing on ordinary seaside views. It is rather the implied nature of individual lives that created the man-made terrain within the village that dictates the opening of the shutter.

"Closely linked with those buildings and associated objects are the private byways and narrow alleys that lead deep into the most obscure and often secret aspects of the place.

"All these things themselves create the real and remarkable atmosphere of the village, so the already known views do not need to be repeated by this photographer. He is something of a visual archaeologist who draws together the hidden signs of characteristic activities. They emerge as personal signatures, made manifest by things."

There are 47 such black and white "personal signatures" altogether, shots of "things as they are" - rather like those of Eugene Atget. They are low lit and devoid of people, two factors that suggest they were probably taken in the early morning before the village was fully awake.

From studies of Adit Lane to Foundry Lane, High Mountains to Keel Alley, Chywoone Hill to Old Paul Hill, Fradgan to Fishmarket and St Peter's Hill to the South Pier, they add up, to quote yet again from Jeremy Le Grice's introduction, to being "a straightforward celebration of the fact that the inner core of Newlyn has survived against the odds, and how loveable, magically precious and precarious this is".

An all-Cornwall production number, printed by Headland Printers in Penzance, it is a "must" for all natural born Buccas and anyone who loves Newlyn in particular and Cornwall in general.

Barry Sinton's Disregarded Territories is available from local bookshops, price £9.95. For further information visit the publication section of newlyn.info

article copyright WESTERN MORNING NEWS