“She Seemed Ok, But Who Knows How The Rest Of Her Night Panned Out”
Professional Photography|March/April 2017

A Sunday Times stalwart for nearly two decades, photojournalist Peter Dench has produced more than his fair share of honest, and at times startling imagery for the broadsheet, capturing the best and worst of contemporary Britain.

Natalie Denton
“She Seemed Ok, But Who Knows How The Rest Of Her Night Panned Out”

One of his more controversial magazine covers has thrown the spotlight on a national student campaign aimed at reducing sexual harassment. “Looking at my work, you can see there’s a lot of Britishness in it and a lot along the theme of alcohol,” says the 44-year-old. “So they knew that this commission would really suit me.”

Teamed with journalist Katie Glass, Peter Dench headed to freshers’ weeks in Brighton and Bristol to investigate ‘The new rules of sex at University’. The impetus had been an ‘I Heart Consent’ campaign, spearheaded by the National Union of Students to provoke discussions about sexual consent at UK universities, after it was reported sexual harassment on campus had reached epidemic levels.

“We were there to find out whether people actually knew what the ‘new rules’ were, how clear the guidelines were, and whether that behaviour was being adhered to on a boozy night out,” he explains.

The cover shot was taken in Brighton on an Olympus OMD-EM5II and the equivalent of a 35mm lens (17mm) with flash, in the early hours of the morning. “We’d been to a freshers’ event at the end of the Brighton pier, and we were walking from there to a freshers’ event at a nightclub when we bumped into this girl featured on the cover. Her name is Sophie Weir.

This story is from the March/April 2017 edition of Professional Photography.

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This story is from the March/April 2017 edition of Professional Photography.

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