The Today Programme has commissioned internationally renowned photo journalist Nick Danziger to capture Britain at 6am. Each week we will bring you a new theme, from a Belfast mosque to a London meat market. Be sure to return regularly to watch this stunning exhibition unfold.
Glasgow Fish Market
The market begins at 4am. By 6am sellers and customers are beginning to pack up and trickle away. Everyone is in agreement, this market is slowly dying. It’s not just that the fish catch is no longer what it was with depleted stocks in the seas, but it is increasingly difficult to compete with huge supermarket retailers. What’s more, the customer expects much more. He is not prepared to get up in the early hours of the morning and he expects to have his fish delivered to his door. Many of the sellers are despondent, the businesses have often been in the family for several generations and this may well be the last. As the sun rises, Chinese clients are the only ones who remain. Willie explains, “They come straight from the casino. If they’ve been winning, they’ll pay out more.”
Nick was born in London but grew up in Monaco and Switzerland. He developed a taste for adventure and travel from a young age, and, inspired by the comic-strip Belgian reporter Tintin, took off on his first trip to Paris aged 13. Without passport or air ticket he managed to enter the country and travel around, selling sketches to make money.
Nick’s initial ambition was to be an artist, and he attended art school, got an MA and representation from a gallery. But his desire for travel remained - he applied and was awarded a Winston Churchill Memorial Fellowship in 1982 and used it to follow ancient trade routes - he travelled on foot or traditional local transport from Turkey to China and documented his adventures in diaries.
The diaries formed his first book, the best selling Danziger’s Travels , and he never looked back. He has since travelled around the world taking photographs and in 1991 made his first documentary in Afghanistan, War Lives and Videotape, based on children abandoned in the Marastoon mental asylum in Kabul. It was shown as part of the BBC’s video diaries series and won the Prix Italia for best television documentary series.
Nick has since travelled the world taking photographs and making documentaries about the people he has met. He has published four books, including his latest, The British, for which he returned to his roots.