Thursday 25 August 2011

Candid Arts Trust


My 'Ten Seconds' project will be showing at the Candid Arts Trust in London, from 2nd - 11th September 2011. So if you about please do go and check it out.

The Private View is on Thursday 1st September, first floor Gallery from 6-9pm and its FREE, so your all welcome. Unfortunately I wont be there in person, but I will in spirit and on the walls in my pictures!

Featuring new work by:
Alma Haser
Emma Walker
Geoff Bartholomew
Hannah O Hara
Jasmine Cooke
John Maher
Kayung Lai
Khyle Henderson
Kyle Zeto
Louisa Maxwell
Norma Walton
Oliver Watson
Olly Clarke
Rebecca Hallett
Rocio Pe Efe
Ruso Bochorishvili
Tamzin Plummer
Thomas Bacon


Open Daily
12 noon - 6pm


More information at:
http://www.candidarts.com

Wednesday 10 August 2011

Places we go

Last Summer I went traveling around Europe. I traveled to Paris, Amsterdam, Berlin, Prague, Budapest, Haslach (my home town in Germany,) Luxemburg, back to Budapest, Spain, Copenhagen and then back to England. Spain was a very spontaneous visit, to see my Granddad and to get some sun (it had been raining the past weeks in Budapest.) My granddad and I had a few relaxing days together up in the southern mountains of Spain. One day we walked up the mountain overlooking the town of Gaucin where my grandfather lives. I took my pinhole polaroid camera he had given me a few years ago and propped it up on rocks or trees before joining my granddad for a few seconds. The polaroid film is very out of date, and that is why it has a ghostly blue tinge.


(Granddad and I, September 2010)

I decided to do the same kind of series with Pat when he visited. We went to Bath in Somerset one afternoon and took these five polaroids.


(Pat and I, August 2011)

Back to the Darkroom

Last week my friend Pat from Australia came to visit. We both have a big passion for photography and decided to take advantage of my mothers old darkroom equipment which had been abandoned in our studio. There was no dark space we could adapt in our studio, so we moved everything to my mothers new house, into the utility room.
Pat and I both searched high and low for the developing tanks for film, but with no luck. Instead of wasting time we thought we'd spend the time experimenting with Black & White photographic paper. We cut the right sizes and loaded our cameras. I was using my 4x5 Crown Graphic, and Pat was using his 120 pin hole camera. The results were better than we had expected and it was great to be able to run down stairs after shooting and popping the sheets of paper into the trays to see the pictures apear. Man I love being back in the darkroom!

Here are some of the shots I took (all of which have been scanned in and inverted.)

(This is the first portrait I took of Pat, click on the image to see the quality.)

(I'm out of focus, I must have placed my head slightly more forward than Pat.)

(My brother and his girlfriend came by the house so I took a quick portrait of them both, they are brutally honest pictures.)

(The portraits are great but creating scenes of narrative is what I love to do most of all! Click on the image to see larger.)

Now I want to experiment with black & white film and then possibly hand tinting my prints..This was something I did earlier today.

(These are just a pictures I took of the photos with my phone.)


Three golden apples

The story and idea came from the greek myth - "After Atalanta participated in the hunt and received the pelt, her father claimed her as his offspring and wanted her to get married. Although a very beautiful maiden, Atalanta did not particularly want to marry after an oracle told her that she will gain bad luck if she marries. In order to get her a husband, her father made a deal with Atalanta that she would marry anybody who could beat her in a foot race. Atalanta happily agreed, as she could run extremely fast.
She outran many suitors. The one that finally became her husband accomplished this through brains, not speed. Hippomenes (also known as Melanion) knew that he could not win a fair race with Atalanta, so he prayed to Aphrodite for help. The goddess gave him three golden apples (sometimes the fruit was quince instead) and told him to drop them one at a time to distract Atalanta. Sure enough, she quit running long enough to retrieve each golden apple. It took all three apples and all of his speed, but Hippomenes finally succeeded, winning the race and Atalanta's hand."