all sorts of interesting things going on here - see how the bite out of the left stone matches the edge of the right one
Friday, 3 September 2010
Bridestones
all sorts of interesting things going on here - see how the bite out of the left stone matches the edge of the right one
Friday, 13 August 2010
Nantwich
.. a sort of Narnia vibe in the l;ast one with the lamppost. When I was taking that photo, a passer by saw me lining up my camera and, curious, turned to look at what I was photographing. His look of interest turned to puzzlement because there was nothing there - except this, that is.
Tuesday, 27 July 2010
Tuesday, 13 July 2010
Lampeter University
Main St David's Building, dusk
From the halls of residence: the dark clouds echo the shape of the trees
The motte and St David's
Cloister fountain
Wednesday, 16 June 2010
Sunday, 13 June 2010
The prospect of distant hills
Hills shape our worlds. It's so natural in Wales to have high ground marking the horizon that I feel a little lost in England's wide open plains. These photos try to capture the romance of hills as being already separate from the here and now as well as being the way out for those that wish to leave. Every now and then you here somebody claim that in medieval times, most villagers never left the parish, but that's probably untrue: I saw a statistic that 25% of the medieval English population would visit London at some point.
Pen Dinas from the north
Cwmpadarn Lane looking south
Saturday, 12 June 2010
Metal
Some people say that wind turbines are engineering structures which have no place in natural (or apparently natural) landscapes. Much the same could be said, of course, for those bridges, windmills, cathedrals and Stonehenges that did so much to clutter up our landscape. But my view is that we have conditioned ourselves to ignore the presence of pylons, aerials and telegraph poles. Here I try to memorialise them as part of the urban scene.
Looking east towards the Aberyswyth Univeristy
The WAG building's cylindrical wind turbine
Looking east towards the Aberyswyth Univeristy
Negative space: the gaps between things
I like to see views as shapes, or areas of texture and colour, which fomr patterns in realtion to each other. Trees are particularly complex -they can be a bland undifferentiated block of colour, or frail fractals of individually-toned leaves. It's surprising to find how often the sky is obscured - you'd imagine it was always there.
Sycamore and Scotch Pine: diiferent shapes, denisteis and colours
Tuesday, 8 June 2010
A short walk - Aberystwyth/Llanbadarn, 8/6/10
Llanbadarn Road, Llanbadarn. (hue altered)
Nettles and beech leaves are almost indistinguishable.
Llanbadarn Road, Llanbadarn. The bush on the chimney breaks up the orderly shape of the houses.
Science Park, Cwmpadarn Lane, Llanbadarn, looking southeast to monument on Pen Dinas. I like the zig-zag of the tiled roof on the left and the corrugations on the right. Strange how the damp mark on the gable end matches the shape of the tree.
National Library of Wales, Aberystwyth. Although the stack buildings
lack the monumental pretensions of the facade, the details of the brickwork stop it being just a rectangular block.
About the skyline project
Whenever I am working with photographs, I find myself cropping heavily ven pictures which have been composed and framed carefully; especially with colour landscape photography, there is too much clutter, and I like to simplify things down to basic shapes and textures. As I walk around urban and rural places, I find my eyes drawn to the horizon; it is the glimpses of sky and the negative spaces formed by silhouettes of buidlings, structures and trees that create the mood of a place.
In these images I hope to present photographs that evoke their specific locations.
In these images I hope to present photographs that evoke their specific locations.
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