...because she saw the potential in it, but again it became a financial thing. Dewi Lewis nearly did it, it’s not going to disappear. I notice that one of the things that has changed with your photography is the use of negative film. Nearly everybody who does classic landscape has typically shot transparency, Charlie Waite, Joe Cornish, etc and most...
...with Jeff's creative insight and guidance, I came back with a set of images that I was genuinely proud of! The second 'moment' came some 6 years later when I attended a Large Format workshop with Joe Cornish and David Ward. Prior to the workshop, I had envisaged Joe and David on a pedestal, with glowing aura's, looking down on...
...top end of Padley Gorge and I challenged Joe Cornish, David Ward and myself to find three or four photographs but with the proviso that they all had to include a particular, famous Padley tree as a significant compositional element. How did we get on? Read about it below. Joe Cornish at work by David Ward David Ward I...
...it was the words of our Master of Vision Joe Cornish who said that you should photograph what you love and take pictures how you want take them and if they’re any good some people might also be interested in them. So since then I’ve photographed the things I enjoy seeing and in the places I enjoy being and I...
...my mind. I then sat and waded through my expanding library of photography books to see if I could better it. Christopher Burkett, Joe Cornish, Hans Strand, Fay Godwin, Shinzo Maeda, Michael Kenna, John Blakemore, Elliot Porter and many more came and went. I couldn't find an image despite their great appeal that made me feel quite so deeply. It...
We've been wanting to feature Chris Bell for some time. He's a favourite photographer of both myself and Joe Cornish (Joe showed me his book Primal Places some time ago). It's also become a favourite of most people who I've shown the books to. Chris continues the environmental and artistic work of Olegas Truchanas and Peter Dombrovskis. His work has...
...you developed ? I think it was Outdoor Photography magazine which first sparked my interest in landscapes. There have also been many photographers who I admire a lot and who have been an immense source of inspiration and motivation. One of the first books I bought was 'First Light' by Joe Cornish (I think you know him ;-) ). I...
...ideas for photography training (Thu/Fri), Charlie Waite will be talking about his new pictures of Libya and also about where we get our influences from (Thu), Colin Prior about his stunning mountain photography (Fri/Sat), Ben Osbourne about his recent wildlife projects (possibly about shooting for an opera about evolution - Sun) and Joe Cornish talking with Andy Rouse on Saturday...
...Cornish’s experiences in the Polar Regions (although our trip was a lot cheaper we definitely had colder rooms). Joe talks about the unique constraints of photographing from a ship but shows us just what beautiful pictures you can create even so. To finish the cold weather theme this issue, Hans Strand talks about his experiences in the Abisko National Park,...
...say where each photograph had been made. In an era where everyone incontinently shares the GPS location of their photos Fatali’s reluctance to say where he made these images seems almost inconceivable. Of course, the interest of every keen photographer who knew of Fatali’s work was piqued. In the mid-nineties, Joe Cornish was travelling through the desert southwest of the...