Root Ginger. A Study of Red Hair. An photographic exhibition, book and film project that wants to be is a tribute to a trait that is most common in Scotland and Ireland but is scattered around the world.
Ridiculed, coveted, derided, loved; a study and celebration of red hair
comes to the Idea Generation Gallery
Idea Generation Gallery is pleased to present selected works from the book Root Ginger: A Study of Red Hair by the
photographer Jenny Wicks. An exhibition, book and film project, Root Ginger is a tribute to a trait that is most
common in Scotland and Ireland but is scattered around the world.
Red hair conjures up a plethora of images; from the fiery red head to the pre-Raphaelite muse, the pasty, freckled
man to the angry Scot. Red hair provokes a range of reactions from people. The photographs explore the social
aspect of having red hair and how society views and treats a minority group. For many it is considered the last
bastion of political incorrectness and the anecdotes from the subjects of the pictures often go to prove this.
Photographer Jenny Wicks commented, “I was originally inspired by two of my brother’s children who have red hair.
The book is a tribute to people with hair this colour but it is also an investigation into the genetic lottery that we all
play. Most people are aware the ginger hair gene has a recessive characteristic, which is also true for cystic fibrosis,
both genes run through my family. For this reason I was interested to explore the phenomenon of recessive genes as
well as the human tendency to judge and make snap decisions about people who simply look different to them.”
Jenny’s aim was to capture the otherworldly and beautiful qualities of red hair. Playing on her interest in sub-groups
and sects, the images show that the "every day" and ordinary can quickly became fascinating or exceptional when
they are looked at in isolation.
Nicola Walters, one of the 62 subjects in Root Ginger: A Study of Red Hair, explained that; “being ginger is definitely
something that I have grown into. When I was growing up, it always seemed as if I was in more trouble than anyone
else – just because I was easier to identify! I wouldn’t change if for anything now.”
Eloise Rowley, gallery manager, “There are often a lot of negative connotations surrounding red hair but we wanted
to put on a show that celebrated this hair colour. Elizabeth I, Winston Churchill, Vivienne Westwood and Lily Cole are
just some of the famous red heads and so the subjects of these photographs join a very illustrious group.”
The death of Jenny’s mother in 2007 galvanised her into looking into her family’s past, as she felt a strong link to her
recent history had disappeared with her mother. The aim was to determine who had carried the red hair gene as it
was likely, although, not certain, that she would pass the gene on.
Jenny’s fascination with society’s attitudes to minority groups and in particular red hair, has led to this insightful study
of the phenomenon. Her work explores the biological perspective of a recessive gene; how and why red hair and
pale skin could become so common when the global average is something very different; how we assume we know
more than we really do about our genetic make-up and red hair’s perplexing social stance: is it mockery, learned
behaviour, social conditioning, just a bit of harmless fun or historic, it is after all, just hair.
Proceeds from the project go towards the Cystic Fibrosis Trust.
Private View 17th February, 6.30pm
Idea Generation
11 Chance Street - London
Opening Hours: Monday to Friday: 12pm - 6pm, Saturday & Sunday: 12pm – 5pm
Free admission