Sixteen is an age of transition, of developmental, and of social change. An age where college, sixth-form and working life all quickly become very real. A confusing time where you’re no longer considered a child, but also not yet an…
For tourists, Jaywick in Essex is your usual seaside town. Consisting of amusement arcades and a sandy beach, it’s was once a popular destination for Londoners who used to flock there during the summer months. Why then was it voted…
In the remote village of Yar-Sale in Northern Siberia, live a group of elderly women. They were once part of a nomadic community of reindeer herders. However, in their old age, they spend most of their days in seclusion, isolated…
“Being raised by a Sri Lankan father meant pieces of his culture were scattered throughout our home and daily life. I remember hearing the Sinhalese news blaring away on the radio every Sunday morning, eating salmon curry and hoppers at…
…After the waning of modernist fantasies about creatio exnihilo and of the desire for the purity of new beginnings, we have come to read cities and buildings as palimpsests of space, monuments as transformable and transitory, and sculpture as subject…
Chrysalises is a project held together on a shoestring, borne of Tomasi becoming a father and beginning to think about how personal events can easily alter our perception of the world around us. Although Chrysalises spawned from that new-found fatherhood,…
My teenage years are vivid. After a childhood marred by sadness I relished in the independence of being able to rebel. I was shaped by those wild years, though the only physical evidence remaining are the scars on my arms,…
Firstly we’d like to thank everybody who has submitted, let us feature their work and supported us throughout 2018. We’re hoping it’ll be the same every year, but this year we’ve featured more photography than ever before. We’ve interviewed some…
Daniel Harrington is a documentary photographer and recent graduate of the Manchester School of Art based in North London. Combining landscape and portrait photography, his work is concerned with the notion of community and the issues faced by those in…
Marc Wilson’s practice focuses on documenting memories and histories that are set in the landscapes that surround us. Working on two long-form projects over the past 8 years, Marc’s has been working on, ‘The Last Stand’ and is currently working on ‘A wounded landscape’. Daniel Dale had the pleasure of chatting to Marc about his practice, photo books and family.
Earlier this year, North West based photographer, Simon Bray, worked alongside Martin Parr on a commission set by Manchester Art Gallery. After studying Photography at Manchester Polytechnic in 1970-1973, Manchester Art Gallery brought Martin back to work on a series of photographs which would sit alongside work he made in Manchester whilst studying. Although a photographer himself, Simon Bray was invited to work as a producer on the project. We wanted to find out about the role and what it entailed.
Sixteen is an age of transition, of developmental, and of social change. An age where college, sixth-form and working life all quickly become very real. A confusing time where you’re no longer considered a child, but also not yet an…
For tourists, Jaywick in Essex is your usual seaside town. Consisting of amusement arcades and a sandy beach, it’s was once a popular destination for Londoners who used to flock there during the summer months. Why then was it voted…
In the remote village of Yar-Sale in Northern Siberia, live a group of elderly women. They were once part of a nomadic community of reindeer herders. However, in their old age, they spend most of their days in seclusion, isolated…
“Being raised by a Sri Lankan father meant pieces of his culture were scattered throughout our home and daily life. I remember hearing the Sinhalese news blaring away on the radio every Sunday morning, eating salmon curry and hoppers at…
…After the waning of modernist fantasies about creatio exnihilo and of the desire for the purity of new beginnings, we have come to read cities and buildings as palimpsests of space, monuments as transformable and transitory, and sculpture as subject…
Chrysalises is a project held together on a shoestring, borne of Tomasi becoming a father and beginning to think about how personal events can easily alter our perception of the world around us. Although Chrysalises spawned from that new-found fatherhood,…
My teenage years are vivid. After a childhood marred by sadness I relished in the independence of being able to rebel. I was shaped by those wild years, though the only physical evidence remaining are the scars on my arms,…
Firstly we’d like to thank everybody who has submitted, let us feature their work and supported us throughout 2018. We’re hoping it’ll be the same every year, but this year we’ve featured more photography than ever before. We’ve interviewed some…
Marc Wilson’s practice focuses on documenting memories and histories that are set in the landscapes that surround us. Working on two long-form projects over the past 8 years, Marc’s has been working on, ‘The Last Stand’ and is currently working on ‘A wounded landscape’. Daniel Dale had the pleasure of chatting to Marc about his practice, photo books and family.
Earlier this year, North West based photographer, Simon Bray, worked alongside Martin Parr on a commission set by Manchester Art Gallery. After studying Photography at Manchester Polytechnic in 1970-1973, Manchester Art Gallery brought Martin back to work on a series of photographs which would sit alongside work he made in Manchester whilst studying. Although a photographer himself, Simon Bray was invited to work as a producer on the project. We wanted to find out about the role and what it entailed.
Daniel Harrington is a documentary photographer and recent graduate of the Manchester School of Art based in North London. Combining landscape and portrait photography, his work is concerned with the notion of community and the issues faced by those in…
The World Cup represents the largest and arguably the most important football event in the UK. With football being the UK’s most popular sport Then There Was Us brought together 35 photographers from all over to record, document and showcase what football means to so many. From the clubs and pubs to the homes and streets of England, from the expatriates abroad and the big came in Russia, Then There Was Us is proud to showcase a selection of images from an open call during the 2018 World Cup.
This community is not immediately evident if you find yourself passing through. If you scratch beneath the surface a community is thriving, coming together regularly for the betterment of the masses. Local charities such as Fight for Peace have become a figurehead here as they seek to promote non-violent futures for the youths of East London.
A writer, photographer, curator and lecturer based in Bath, England. Colin Pantall’s ideas focus around domestic environments and the interaction between personal, environmental and historical narratives as experienced through his family. This month we got to speak to Colin, about all his role as a photographer and the projects he’s worked on over past few years.
Like all my projects Uncle started out life through familiarity and the fact that we were in each other’s company. He made the task easy and this easiness and generosity lasted for 27 years collaborating until his death in 2014.
Landscapes are seldom just an observation of environment. They’re much more than that: a common causeway between the viewer, the photographer and the place, space, or vista – however you want to call it. Landscapes are recognisable: they don’t require…
Our lives are filled with unremarkable moments and the routine of everyday life, uneventful moments that to most seem dull, boring and monotonous – a humdrum existence of where we are now and where we will be tomorrow. In 2001…