Tuesday, 23 March 2010

Publication

I recently discovered that iN-PUBLiC's Nick Turpin has launched a biannual periodical called Publication. This incredibly well-produced collection contains images and essays of and about street photography and includes twenty-two images in the form of postcards with the photographer's biog on the reverse. Well worth £14 plus p&p - in my humble opinion - and each sale goes towards producing the next issue.

Liverpool

Whilst up in Lancashire for a shoot yesterday I decided to make a quick detour to Liverpool. Although I was only there for a couple of hours and there wasn't much going on, the light was good.

Friday, 19 March 2010

Japan, October 2008

These are just some random photographs I took while shooting my Aida project in Japan a couple of years ago.

Friday, 12 March 2010

Recent portrait: Gordon Campbell Gray

Gordon Campbell Gray, Chief Executive of Campbell Gray Hotels, photographed for EP Magazine at One Aldwych, London.

Monday, 8 March 2010

Corporate portrait: Simon Jose

Simon Jose, General Manager and Senior Vice President, GlaxoSmithKline UK
   
I used some additional, off-camera lighting for the first time today: one 580EX II (diffused with a Gary Fong Lightsphere) was placed on the floor to the left of the interviewer.

Tuesday, 2 March 2010

Section 44, The DEB and the ICO code

Two images I took at the 'We Own The Streets' demonstration back in January 2008  

It's annoying to be labeled a "Paparazzi" for taking more than one picture of something with a camera any larger than an IXUS, but one can at least understand the thinking behind it. However, thanks to anti-terror legislation - namely Section 44 - more and more photographers are now finding themselves viewed as suspected terror threats, detained while at work and questioned in relation to so-called "hostile surveillance." I have now been questioned and/or prevented from taking photographs on three separate occasions in London.

For more information about Section 44, your rights and the gatherings protesting its implementation, have a look here:


On top of this, our Government is planning to effectively dismantle copyright law in relation to orphan works usage rights and ban non-consensual photography in public. This is obviously going to make it increasingly difficult (if not impossible) for photographers to both control their images online and work in public. 

For more information about the Digital Economy Bill and the The ICO code click here. This law has not yet gone through so there is still time to write to your MP and voice your opposition! 

Strangely, although we may soon be allowed to object to having our souls stolen by street photographers, we still can't seem to do anything about all the CCTV!

Monday, 1 March 2010

New negs

A couple of weeks ago I helped out my friend and fellow 'tog Greg Funnell on an editorial shoot. The brief was to photograph the section of the Metropolitan Police that provides security for the building site that will soon be the 2012 Olympic Park. I carried the lights.

Having run through the brief and loaded the van we were only a couple of minutes into our journey when the police vehicle in which we were traveling was diverted to attend an RTA.

The moped - on fire and wedged beneath the truck's petrol tank - had crashed while overtaking, throwing its rider into the middle of a junction where he lay with what appeared to be a broken leg.

I took these on my M6 and have kept them fairly small for the sake of the injured man.

While on the Olympic site itself I couldn't help but think of Stephen Gill's work, especially his book Archeology in Reverse, which documented the Olympic Park site before the building work got underway.

The last shot shows the frame of the Aquatic Centre.