Our ways are not your ways
June 20, 2006
Onto the Streets
June 15, 2006
I’ve got some pictures in the group show, Onto the Streets, which opens next month at Photofusion in Brixton (21 July to 16 September and then touring to Greece and Croatia I think). I’ll put together a web gallery of my pictures and add a link here when I’m a bit less busy. Update: gallery.
Version One
May 21, 2006
I haven’t posted a “gear in pieces” picture for awhile so here’s the next best thing; the first version of an extremely wide angle medium format (6×12cm) camera I’m building. It’s mostly bits bought on ebay with a couple of pieces of plywood in the middle, all held together with lots of tape. It’s missing some niceties and hopefully the final version will have less tape. I’ve put a couple of test rolls through - results to follow assuming there’s something on the film.
Get Closer
May 8, 2006
In case of confusion, see here, or here.
Nearly New
April 26, 2006
The Lure of Surrealism
April 17, 2006
I recently started reading “City Gorged with Dreams: Surrealism and Documentary Photography in Interwar Paris” which ought to be interesting because it’s a study of “surrealist realism”: the exploration of a real-life surreality encountered on the streets of the city. On reaching chapter three - Nadja: a ‘voluntary banality’? - I thought I’d better break off to read the book of the chapter title. I didn’t really take to Breton’s style of writing and although I enjoyed his descriptions of the meetings with Nadja the story had more impact after finishing it, first by reading the introduction (glad that I didn’t read it first) and secondly by filling in details via a quick google and reading this essay, Trailing Nadja by poet, Susan Elmslie.
Coincidences ensued. In a box of booja-booja chocolates, the message (Boojagram No. 17) read, “Practice a reliable attitude towards fish”. I didn’t think much of it, except that it was a little odder than the usual sentiment. However, I then went out and drove over a big fish, maybe a piece of salmon, in the middle of our road and on the return journey noticed a black glove in the middle of another road. Unrelated to this, I walked past a woman who said into her phone, “I get lost if I walk around”.

City Gorged with Dreams by Ian Walker
Looking at a Thing in a Bag
April 8, 2006
5DWII - day five. So, what have we learned about Landscape this week? “It’s just a medium” [JA] or a vessel that we can pour whatever we want into. I’ve mostly been reminded that it’s just another unhelpful label although I have been enjoying making some bad landscape pictures. As labels go, I certainly prefer the term street photography but that’s because I have a very wide open view of what street photography is and can be, whereas some people think it died with HCB or Winogrand. A term with little or no baggage would be ideal but unlikely. Joining ‘urban’ to ‘landscape’ only makes it worse.
Landscape Ongoing
April 7, 2006
5DWII - day four. A sluggish start and then a walk around King’s Cross which hadn’t changed as much as I’d expected - as far as I could tell. We finished the day with a LIP talk by Geoff Dyer on his book, The Ongoing Moment.
The Ongoing Moment
by Geoff Dyer.
A partial, idiosynchratic history of photograpy.
In This Time of Heightened Security
April 5, 2006
5DWII - day three. That phrase is the excuse for everything. I thought I might try it next time I knock over somebody’s beer in a pub. In this time of heightened security… It’s bound to calm the situation instantly. Today we tried to find the spot where I took this picture in 2002 (3.5 years ago), having only the vaguest memory of a one time visit to the area. Amazingly, we found it. It’s funny how pieces of geography fit back together as you approach them.
Cooke
April 5, 2006
5DWII - day two. I forgot to mention that the theme for the week is ‘Landscape’ or ‘Landscape is Dead’ if you want to be provocative. Nigel Cooke at the South London Gallery is well worth seeing. I wasn’t expecting to enjoy this so try not to judge by the web pictures, ignore the references to graffiti (or anything else that might put you off) and make the effort to travel beyond Camberwell. We also went to hear him talk eloquently and entertainingly about his work later at the Tate. So it turns out painting isn’t dead either.
DIY
April 3, 2006
Tulse Hill
March 28, 2006




















