Over the past few years, Mark Littlejohn has written articles (click here for Mark's articles) and given a talk for us (at the Meeting of Minds conference 2016) and from Saturday 15th February – Saturday 16th May 2020 he'll be having an exhibition of photographs at the Joe Cornish Gallery. On the 21st of March we're organising a mini event...
...the interview would be a good tribute to Richard. Before we get to the interview, I'd like to include this eulogy by Joe Cornish who had met with Richard during his trip to the North East and Scotland. Richard White Few photographers knew or understood black and white as a medium, and the landscape he loved, as Richard White did....
Back in April Joe Cornish and Roly Smith hosted an event at The Joe Cornish gallery, to talk about the launch of their new book 'This Land'. This book brings together the inspiring photographs from Joe Cornish and the countryside writer Roly Smith. The book includes fifty places that Joe and Roly have chosen that represent the variety of landscape...
...result of search engine optimisation, rather than my writing I imagine). Shooting into the Sun Aspect Ratios In Conversation with Joe Cornish There were also some really informative and inspiring videos from Joe Cornish about some of his old & new images and also about post-processing. We're currently transferring these to YouTube so apologies if you can't access them all...
Mark Banks works with Joe Cornish helping to deliver workshops and post processing tuition out of the North Allerton gallery. In most photographers lives there are 'epiphanic’ moments where things become clear, or new directions are formed. What were your two main moments and how did they change your photography? My first epiphany was when I purchased my first DSLR...
This conversation between myself (Joe Cornish) and Tim Parkin was one where we hoped to explore the arrival of the drone in landscape photography and try to understand its impact. Tim is an occasional drone pilot, Joe has never even touched one. Our ruminations briefly explore the idea of aerial photography generally, and then quickly run into the impact of...
...directly or indirectly, as you developed? I get general inspiration from using social networking sites, mainly flickr, and of course the excellent work of the photographers featured in the magazine here. Without question Joe Cornish has always been the driving inspiration for my photography, like so many others. He has that knack of combining the intimate with the wider context...
We recently took a look at a fantastic photograph by Joe Rainbow of Gunwalloe Scales and asked Joe Cornish to critique it and also asked him how he would approach the post processing of it. The results, whilst not far from Joe Rainbow's version, show some interesting aspects of technique and style. The original picture is shown below. You...
...own a camera for the next three years. My life changed dramatically one day on a wander around my local Waterstones when I came across a book that had just been released entitled ‘First Light’ by a guy called Joe Cornish, who I’d never heard of but I decided to have a flick through it anyway. Joe not only showed...
...(With Landscape in Mind) and a book (Joe Cornish, a Photographer at Work) made about him. A reluctant convert to digital imaging, Joe now works with many different digital systems including medium format and technical cameras. He co-leads workshops with David Ward, Antony Spencer and Mark Banks; as well as field work he specialises at in-depth critiquing on aesthetic and...