Friday, December 24, 2021
The painting above the bed..
Friday, December 17, 2021
Every garden path I ever followed..
I was 17 years old when I first desired and then acquired a photographic print. My photo life had not long begun and I had only developed a handful of films on my own and I had only printed about a dozen or so pictures in the school darkroom, where availability and instruction didn't always go hand in hand. I was coming to the end of the first GCSE course in photography available at our school and it was a lot of fun.
This photograph was pinned up on my friend's bedroom wall in 1987. He told me his friend Eddie took it and it was a new one. He said it was a picture of Eddie himself as a baby, then he pointed at the face in the photo and laughed at it for a long time. They were childhood friends. The photograph was a 12” x 16” black and white print made on multi grade fiber paper and the tones were soft like a pencil drawing and it was pinned to the wall at a wonky angle above a record player. I was immediately enchanted by its strange otherworldliness. At the same time, the prints' seemingly improbable subject matter stood absolutely sentient in the world of the photograph, demanding to be believed by my teenage self. It seemed to claim weight and poise in a familiar, almost benign bucolic space, standing at the end of every garden path I ever followed. I had still yet to discover psychedelic drugs, but when I thought about them, this photograph was assigned their embodiment, then later when I did discover them, my opinion did not change and it remains to this day a trippy picture. The photograph for me is an encounter between our dubious and constructed self image and the invisible photographer looking back at it. It is a secret meeting in a secret place with only us as witness.
I have forgotten how this print came to be in my possession exactly, but I suspect that I badgered my friend until he just gave it to me. I am writing about it now, 34 years later, because I recently found it tucked inside a box of old paperwork I had brought with me to the US from the UK and had been in storage for 6 years. The emulsion on the surface of the print is now cracked and it’s edges are dog eared and torn and it feels more like cloth than paper. It is a fragile and beautiful thing.
The photographer was Eddie Miles, another 17 year old. He attended a different school. At this time we had not yet met, but it did not take us long to do so. We were friends for several years afterwards until our lives swept us up and carried us off in different directions. Eddie and I have not spoken in 25 years, but I did recently scroll into him on Instagram. He looks to be a successful commercial photographer these days and has photographed many celebrities along the way. Maybe this photo was the first of them.. Best wishes to you, Ed and thank you.
Tuesday, December 7, 2021
Divided by glass, steel, rain, silence and darkness..
In the spirit of the previous post, concerning writing, I discovered this post (below) from June 25, 2009. My first solo American journey. The beginning for me. In doing so I've been both encouraged and reminded of the importance of carrying a note book at all times. In the absence of any photographs being taken to accompany the original post, I am aware of just how different a written and photographic account of a personal experience can be. Noticing this highlights a growing desire to find a way to somehow enrich one with the essence of the other, with what could perhaps be described as poetry.
These journal entries have been edited and the photographs included are part of a present and emerging narrative and will find their place elsewhere later.
Saturday, December 4, 2021
The dark lands of my please forgets..
At the best of times I find writing a difficult and draining exercise. This is not just because I am quite a bad dyslexic, but because trying to find the right way to use words to accurately describe thoughts, feelings and ideas, is really difficult. And, when it also involves having to express private abstract thought pathways, using photography as a creative medium, then yes, it is very draining too. With this said, I have, over time learned how to carefully, with expertise, avoid most opportunities to write about my work, but I have been finding out recently, after several glorious years without hardly a word scribed, that I now do not think I can personally move forward as a photographer unless I start writing about my relationship to photography and start getting comfortable doing it.
Once upon a time I would have said something like this: Photography is the only creative medium I have found where I can express myself more clearly and coherently over any other and therefore anything I could possibly write in words about it is going to be somehow less than looking at the work itself, on its own. In the past this immediate inability to find these words would have led me to think that maybe my pictures might not have been enough on their own. The fact that someone needed to ask me about them would have also sent me into a debilitating tailspin of self doubt about my ability as a photographer and later my credibility as a human being. This was once upon a time though and If truth be told, I don't even think this was ever really my truth. What it really was, was my first and original excuse to not have to write about my work.
Monday, November 22, 2021
It gave a name to the ghost in the machine..
This introduction (below) to the photographic artists of Galerie VU appeared in the Autumn issue of Private: International Review of Photographers 2009. I remember reading this text at the time of its publication and I remember how much I felt it resonated with me and how much it seemed to vocalize my own, as yet, unspoken approach to photography in words I did not, up until that point, have. Like a revelation, it gave voice suddenly to the silent, but powerful motivations behind the making of my own pictures and brought a conscious awareness of my emotional and psychological presence at the time of the exposure and the possible impact it could have on the scene I was photographing. It gave a method to the madness of my unconscious process and a clarity to why one image worked for me and another did not. It gave a name to the ghost in the machine and it’s name was my own. It illuminated just how much photography and the self (or sense of it) are actually woven together intricately and inform one another. Most of all though, it highlighted and established, for me, a continued working practice, one which attempts to harmonize my inner life with the outer world, with a camera and in a photograph.
Private: International Review of Photographers Autumn 2009.
Mental Geography.
For more than 10 years, Galerie VU’ has been promoting photographers of various ages, nationalities and inspirations. This issue of PRIVATE magazine, which is dedicated to them, proves it. The portfolios presented here, as diverse as they are, have a common denominator: the notion of “mental geography”. Place’s, spaces and territories are considered, according to a double prospect - that of the artist and that of the world - in their relationship to the spirit.
The mental space is, first of all, a place that exists only in the mind of the photographer. The place – a building, a city, a region or a country – speaks then above all about the artist. The latter tries less to render an account of a geographical reality than to offer a voluntarily biased and incomplete representation, where he or she projects his or her sensibility, memories and imagination, personal mythologies or artistic and literary references. The place, by its strength of attraction or aversion, is invested by the artist who makes it the theater of his or her psychic functioning. These works, necessarily subjective, sometimes enigmatic, always very open, build geographies that eventually break through any territoriality, any local tie and any border, to find their coherence in a game of sensitive or intellectual correspondence, which connect the images between them.
However, the notion of mental space also evokes the place which, by its nature or characteristics, is a creation of specific psychic states. The place exerts then a mental influence on the individual as observed by the photographer. The most evident are the places of power or authority – a classroom for example – where one has to submit to a hierarchy and to assimilate conventions and values. But certain spaces, apparently more harmless, show themselves as oppressive. Following the example of these numerous, contemporary, anonymous, functional and normative non-places as public transportation, private housing estates or group housing. The artist seizes upon this daily alienation. When he or she underlines it, it is not to report it in a direct and documentary way. It is not to explain it. It is rather to make fun of it or make it a kind of symbol. But the artist also criticizes it or attacks it frontally. He or she then arouses reactions and behaviors that challenge standards and allow everyone to reaffirm one’s identity, integrity and freedom.
The Photographers whose work appeared in this issue were; Anders Petersen, Anne-Lise Broyer, Denis Darzacq, Hitcham Benohound, Jean-Christian Bourcart, Jeffrey Silverthorne, JH Enstrom, John Davies, Lars Tunbjork, Laurence Leblanc, Lea Crespi, Mathieu Pernot, Michael Ackerman, Nicolas Comment.