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We chatted with author and photographer Gilbert McCarragher, who walked us through his career path. What were your childhood interests, and how did you find your way? I hated primary school. I was petrified of the head teacher there. My three brothers and two sisters had preceded me and warned me about her. It felt almost as though I had been forgotten. My contemporaries would move to another class, and I would stay behind. Eventually, the teachers realised I had outgrown the table I was sat at, and they moved me up.
Those years haunted me the whole way through my education. My relationship with school changed at the age of 12 when my mother died. I suddenly realised that if anything was going to change, it was down to me to change it. It did matter, of course, but I pushed forward and eventually moved on to a further education college to get my GCSEs. School did not work for me. My real education started when Channel 4 began broadcasting, not long after my mother died, and I was exposed to a whole new world.
The Tube on a Friday night was a standout. Then there were the late-night shows, like The Eleventh Hour , which exposed me to weird debates and subjects I had no previous idea of. There was such a public uproar about that film. I just knew the film featured naked men frolicking around, which I liked the sound of.
This was Northern Ireland in the s. In the newspapers, everybody was talking about this evil man who would be broadcasting this terrible film on Channel 4 , and they wanted it banned. People enjoyed getting themselves in a twist over it; it gave them something to talk about.
I muddled on at the further education college a few more years. Two years in, one of the tutors asked me if I had thought about going to art school. At that time, we were doing life drawing with fully clothed models. The tutor said I was talented and should give it some thought. It was fantastic; I had some direction.