Saturday, August 22, 2020
Don McCullin - His exhibition at Tate Liverpool (Sept 20 - May 21)
Wednesday, August 19, 2020
Five of the best - World Photography Day
August 19 is World Photography Day, a day to pay homage to the history of photography, celebrate the present and leave a positive trail for the future. World Photography Day originates from the invention of the daguerreotype, a photographic processes developed by Louis Daguerre. It is arguable as to whether Louis Daguerre got there first but he was certainly a very early bird in the photography stakes.
By now it is estimated that over 20 billion photographs are taken every year throughout the world. That is a lot. In fact if you looked at each one for a second it would take you 636 years (less a couple of days) to see them all. We don't have that much time of course which means we will only be able to see a fraction of the photographs taken.
So to celebrate I have decided to help you and show you five photogrpahs that have caught me eye this year. I hope that you like them.
The one at the top by the way was taken by Amdad Hossain and was a winner in the photojournalist stakes, of a homeless woman in Bangladesh and reminded me of how lucky I was.
Russian photographer Oleg Ershov took this picture which was a winner of the International Landscape Photographer of the year recently. He took it in Cumbria, which shows that us Britons don't have to go far to find winning pictures - we just have to see them...
British photographer Sam Rowley captured these squabbling mice on the London Underground to win the Lumix wildlife prize...again showing that what is around us can be a winner.
This architectural phot by Hazel Parreno of Hintze Hall at the Natural History Museum also caught my eye. It's simplicity belies the detail within the picture.
Sunday, August 16, 2020
Intentional Camera Movement (ICM)
Humber Fish Co., Humber Street
ICM is not new in photography and has often been used in the past to create more complex, dreamlike and painterly images to counter-balance some of the increasing sharply focussed work often on display.
Intentional Camera Movement is what it says and involves the photographer moving the camera during a long exposure to create something slightly other worldly. The impact can be very boring and look like a slightly out of focussed amateur attempt, very abstract or stunningly beautiful and Turneresque. There are some very experienced experts out there who, by their own admission, may take hundreds of shots to get the one or two they are looking for.
I have had my interest renewed in the nature and practie of ICM following a conversation with another photographer, Iain Cairns when we met for a coffee recently and a link he sent me to the work of Andrew S Gray in Northumberland whose work you can see here :- https://andrewsgray.photography/ . Very atmospheric!!
I am miles away from anything like having the skill of Andrew but I also think that increasing my repertoir is as essential as using the full facilities of my camera. So I have set out to practice with ICM and these pictures are the first taken over the last week. I have a long way to go.
I have not attempted to do very much post editing with them as I wish to get the balance right first between what can be seen and what can be hinted at. This essentially means how much or how little movement I get into the shot and that is practice and good luck. The greater the movement the more abstracted the picture. I have certainly learned that having some point of focus helps and that usually minimal movement makes a more understandable picture. Equally a lot of movement can give a very pleasing abstract effect and result in unpredicatble colour swatches in the final photo.
In addition I decided to experiment with a technique I have been using for some time now and utilising my camera's ability to take up to twelve photographs and merge them in-camera to gain an overlayed result. Again I have learned so far to work with two imposed images and ICM but not more.
The basic camera set-up varies depending on the weather. A very bright and sunny day will allow much more play than a dark and stormy one and the colour palette on the final photos will be very different. In order to reduce the light entering the camera you also need a variable Neutral Density Filter. These allow you to make speedy changes to the light entering the lense. I have usually set the ISO on the camera to 100 (which in itself can require a longer exposure) and set the timer to anything from half a second to considerably longer. I can then marginally adjust the ND filter, the timing or the ISO to improve results...but it is hit and miss to some degree although if you stand in one place and take a number of photographs it is likely you will get nearer to the result you want with each picture taken - unless the sun goes in or pops out again!
My experiments have taken me into the city and countryside over the last ten days and you can decide which you like best from these shots below. I will post again on this topic in the coming months as I learn more and use increasingly different methods to achieve my results. Comments are welcomed - and remember if you don't wish to miss any of my blogs you can always pop your email into the top right hand box and then you will get a reminder when I post ! You can also reverse that process if you get fed-up with me!
Landscape with single tree near Elloughton
Thursday, August 13, 2020
Gavin Prest - Book One
Friday, August 7, 2020
Sally Mann
This American photographer grew up in Lexington and studied photography in the late 60's at the Ansel Adams Yosemite workshops and later at colleges in Vermont where she graduated not only with photography as her major but with with an MA in creative writing.
She has long had a reputation for disquieting photographs of familial relationships, of young girls on the cusp of womanhood, of the familiar natural world shown in an unfamiliar and slightly awkward way which draws attention to the often unseen, for the themes of death and decomposition and themes of complex identity in the American South. Her own family feature strongly in her work including her children, the decline of her husband Larry with Muscular Dystrophy and the decaying remains of her much loved greyhound. This is not work for the easily disturbed but her techniques and subject matter repays close attention.
Usually working with an 8x10 bellows camera she has explored many printing processes to suit her work.
A Guggenheim Fellow, named "America's Best Photographer" in 2001 by TIME Magazine and a three time recipient of the National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship she has also had two documentaries made about her work; "Blood Ties" (1994) and "What Remains" (2006) both of which were nominated for major awards. Both can be found online and watched for a small fee. Her work now appears in galleries and museums across the world.
The following is a one hour You Tube interview with Charlie Rose from 2016 which has a really great beginning :-) - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u4jaRBwGVYc
The photos below show the reason for controversy they have caused with accusations of her taken advantage of her children and showing them in provocative poses. Her children very much support her work and have always voted on the photographs she can show. One of the main things I take from her work (apart from the beauty of natural light) is to not be afraid of following your instincts.
Tuesday, August 4, 2020
Calla Lillies
Friday, July 31, 2020
War - Tim Hetherington
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