Chef photograph auction to raise money for mental health in hospitality campaign

Chef photograph auction to raise money for mental health in hospitality campaign

Photographs of chefs’ hands will be exhibited and auctioned off in November to fundraise for the Pilot Light campaign.

In collaboration with Pilot Light, which aims to give professional chefs an outlet to discuss stress-related issues, food photographer Joakim Blockstrom will be auctioning off his photographs of the hands of chefs including Pierre Koffman, Phil Howard, Ollie Dabbous and Ravinder Bhogal (pictured).

The event will take place at restaurant and event space Carousel in London’s Marylebone on 12 November.

A number of restaurants have contributed tables and experiences (including a day in the kitchen with Ollie Dabbous followed by tea for two at Hide restaurant) which will also be auctioned off.

Blockstrom said: “Most chefs go through a rocky road before achieving success. And even then, a professional kitchen is an extremely tough environment, both physically and mentally; and while famous chefs’ faces may appear on magazine covers, their hands often reveal a less glamorous story.

“I have been working on a series of photographs in which I take a close look at the hands of chefs, and shine a light on how real, beautiful, scarred, vulnerable and strong they are. Each image will hopefully reveal a part of their personality, and engage visually in the conversation around the strain on mental health in the restaurant world.”

The pictures will be accompanied by quotes from chefs, completing the sentence that sparked the initial idea for the project: “If these hands could speak, the stories they would tell…”

The Pilot Light was funded in November 2017 by chef Andrew Clarke, chef director across Brunswick House and St Leonard’s restaurants in London. The campaign is affiliated with Time to Change, a long-running campaign under mental health charity Mind that addresses the stigma around mental health.

Blockstrom added: “Some of my best friends are chefs, so we often see what happens behind the kitchen doors – and things need to change. This is such an important topic – especially as we hear more and more about depression, addictions and suicides in this industry.”

Article Credit: The Caterer