Tuesday, 9 April 2013

A Twisted Type of Silver

Got to show my work as part of a group show at 5th Base Gallery off Brick Lane.
It's hard to be objective about it but I think I would have enjoyed seeing it as a punter, but as it was I got to combine two earlier prints alongside a short film. The other work in the show was all quite intriguing and thoughtful. The text from the show is below.
Big thanks to Jack and Owen who worked super hard putting it all together.





Martin Dixon – Love is Space & Time (i,ii,iii)


Jack Hirons – 3kg of Hay




Jack Hirons – On the Window


Ewa Malgoratza Lachowicz – Collection of Portraits




Owen Lewis – She Never Lost The Things She'd Forgotten


Helena Oliveira – Part of What a Picture is


Frida Petersson – There's a crack in everything, that's how the light gets in


Poppy Roy – The Album Title Was Left Blank



Saturday, 23 March 2013

A week of mildly melancholic photographs

First up "The anxiety of waiting outside the ICA as the Freedom of Photography talk is just about to begin".

  Waiting outside the ICA by mdx
Untitled by mdx






















There was clearly someone of importance about to get on the Metropolitan Line train at Baker Street.

























Untitled by mdx

Somedays you wait on news and know that once you hear it – either way – life will be different.






















Untitled by mdx



The surface of the photograph - one way or another, that's where I seem to be heading for.

Saturday, 16 March 2013

Four iPhone Photographs

Untitled by mdx
Driving back to London on the M4 – I'm not sure the eye ever actually sees speed blur like this but maybe it's just hard to tell - you would need to close and then rapidly open and close your eyes again to snatch the split second. I still like the composition of barrier - foreground and background with trees – like the A303 series.


Untitled by mdx
On the Metropolitan line coming back from college using the Hipstamatics' new tintype preset on the iPhone. It doesn't really work that well but I like the sihouette of me taking it – transformed into a billboard advert.



Untitled by mdx
The kids were jumping around on it before – but now the rain had come and it was left alone to its incongrous blueness.


Untitled by mdx
Tintype app on the iPhone Hipstamatic app.
It's a bit like that optical illusion if you cover the left half of the face you get a new face looking right.

Monday, 4 March 2013

Tintype - does it matter how we get there?

A new day and a new effect for the iPhone's Hipstamatic app. This one, the Tintype Snappak, mimics the look of the early Tintype photographic process. http://gear.hipstamatic.com/snappaks/pak_tintype

A photography blog post at the Guardian http://www.guardian.co.uk/artanddesign/photography-blog/2013/mar/01/hipstamatic-smartphone-photo-antonio-olmos sees photojournalist Antonio Olmos using it to explore the city of Derry – a topic he has covered in a more traditional style in the past. He's ambivalent about its use within photojournalism, the instant nostalgic feel coupled with the foregrounding of an aesthetic over the content. But he concludes by stating "in the end, the only thing that matters is the final photograph; how one reached it is not so important" – and that, seems to be the crux of it, whether or not you believe that to be true.

Meanwhile here's a couple of my iphonehipstamatictontypes from a stroll up to the Co-op on Sunday afternoon.




Sunday, 24 February 2013

Farewell Subways @ Bricklayers Arms Roundabout

The four subways (north, south, east and west) under the Bricklayers Arms roundabout on the Old Kent Road are due to be closed and filled in from 25th Feb 2013. 

I first got news of this when I saw a set of photographs on flickr by London SE1 http://www.flickr.com/photos/se1website/sets/72157632778040017/with/8478728699/

I live just up the road from the roundabout but have only taken the odd photograph there - but with the urgency of only a week to go I set out to document the tunnels, stairwells, ramps  and the roundabout itself, driven by the poignancy that very soon it would no longer be possible to ever walk through them, and before long they would no longer exist - filled full of concrete.

During my time there over the past week I saw very few people passing through the subways and the park itself was mostly empty save for an occasional gathering of Polish drinkers. The tunnels can be lonely, eerie spaces but I've come to enjoy them, the concrete architecture of the ramps and stairwells and their siting within the roundabout. 

This afternoon a few of us pitched up at the roundabout to mark the closure of the subways - here are Deirdre's photos http://www.flickr.com/photos/mcgale/sets/72157632849435206/with/8503812483

So now that the tunnels are set to close I have to begin to figure out what to do with the stack of photographs and video I've amassed...







And finally here's a film clip from the 70's, flying along from Tower Bridge, down Great Dover Street and at about 1:25 there's the roundabout and the concrete structure of the stairwells and ramps http://www.britishpathe.com/video/air-views-se-london

Tuesday, 12 February 2013

analogue two

I haven't taken any medium format since the A303 road trip this time last year. I really enjoyed the pace of having the camera on the tripod, taking light readings and slowly considering the framing. And waiting. The colour printing was more of a struggle but it got there in the end.
So now there's no excuse - the camera's ready and the film's not even out of date.

Sunday, 10 February 2013

analogue one



I borrowed a Kodak slide projector from college and filled it full of 50 year old slides. There's something particular about watching a slide show; on the one hand there are the memories of being forced to sit through interminable shows of family holidays, but then also the dark room immersion that the projected image offers - compared to a computer screen's glare, the whirr of the fan,  the clunk of the carousel - it's an experience not unlike cinema.

The Brenizer Method


I spent a good part of the weekend working on my CV for college - something I haven't done for over a decade.  Anyhow, more excitingly here's my first attempt at using the Brenizer Method. DD kindly posed in the rain as I took about 20  shots at a wide aperture and then combined them in Photoshop to give a really shallow depth of field that would only be achievable otherwise using medium format. It's been popularised by New York wedding photographer Ryan Breizer and here's details of how to do it.
http://blog.buiphotos.com/2009/07/the-brenizer-method-explained-with-directions/

Friday, 8 February 2013

taking photographs



there is always

another

photograph

to take

and then

another one

after that

Monday, 4 February 2013

Farewell flickr friends – I'm taking a break

Farewell flickr friends – I'm taking a break by mdx

It's been creeping up on me for a while – tiredness, a sense of malaise around posting my photographs on flickr. Why do I continue to do it? The familiar cycle of taking photographs, editing, uploading and waiting to see what happens – will anyone 'favourite' them or leave a comment? Shall I spend some time favouriting and commenting back on photographs from my 'flickr friends' or flickr strangers whose images intrigue me? There's a lot that keeps me doing it: the joy of taking pictures nearly every day, making decisions about them and watching them change over time, the grit of practice, of mining away at ideas and having something to do with the images, the inspiration from other photographers work. But the flip side is what's become a borderline addiction, endlessly checking who's commented or favourited on what – and then doing the same back. As an activity it's starting to feel like a distraction – from what I'm not yet sure, but I hope to start to find out. So for the moment it's farewell flickr friends – I'm taking a break –

Friday, 11 January 2013

Drifting

It's been a while since I've written anything – been busy putting together a short film: Appearance, for last term's Screen module at college. I've enjoyed putting it together but it seems that (inevitably?) it's pulled my focus away from photography.

For the last few years I've started the new year with a daily practice of taking a photograph on a specific theme. This year I didn't and I feel somewhat cast adrift.But maybe that's not such a bad thing – a period of drifting......


  


Friday, 23 November 2012

Crossing Borders - A Festival of Plates




These 21 handmade plates are the result on an on-going partnership between UNWRA (United Nations Relief and Work Agency) schools in Gaza and Chelsea Community Hospital School in London.

Here's the full story http://www.scoop.it/t/plate-project

Sunday, 18 November 2012

Carry On

street meat by mdx

So many strands and directions going on with the photography at the moment that it's impossible to keep up with writing about it here. (And why even?) But still – here's a lump of meat that I came across the other day lying on the ground. Being a vegetarian I'm ignorant as to what it is - a chop? pork? lamb? but nevertheless there it was, lying on the ground. I posted the photo on Flickr and called it Street Meat - not the most charming title but evocative enough.

The one thing that does seem to be happening is that different projects and areas of enquiry, whether practical or theoretical, seem to be influencing each other and sometimes in surprising ways.

What to do but carry on!

Sunday, 4 November 2012

On the usefulness of blocks

More Blocks by mdx

Blocks come in many shapes and sizes and I wish these were the ones annoying me at the moment –  then I could just look the other way. But maybe it's only a question of scale – a block for one might be a stepping stone for another – and they're also quite handy for building up the pressure – and for stopping things from rolling downhill – oh and for building things – OK bring on the blocks.

Tuesday, 16 October 2012

Analogue – 01

Bears on the Benches by mdx


Got a bunch of old films = some colour and some bw. Shot the first film (Agfa XRG 200 ) on a Konica Auto S2. http://mattsclassiccameras.com/konica_autos2.html
I got it developed at snappy snaps to see wether getting the prints, as in days of old, was part of the equation – but it wasn't (tho maybe I should have picked gloss over the not quite matt).  But looking at them scanned there definitely is a particular quality - here looking sharp and contrasty. The blue / green maybe from it being 5six years out of date.

Monday, 15 October 2012

Films about estates

Films about estates  – as I'm thinking to make something based around our estate – but not at all in a documentary style.


I am Here is a great project on an estate in Haggerstone facing regeneration – lots about it here http://www.fugitiveimages.org.uk/projects/i-am-here/


 


Kind of Solid Concrete by Michael Jaworski documents another estate, Robin Hood Gardens, in east London facing regeneration




I put together David Idowu Peace Day video back in 2010. David Idowu, a local teenager was tragically killed in 2008 – the peace day is an annual remembrance and celebration of positive aspects of our community.
I was kinda lazy and put it together using Animoto http://animoto.com




Saturday, 13 October 2012

PSY - GANGNAM STYLE (강남스타일)

This term we have to make a choice between the contexts of page and screen - and produce either a book or a short film. Seems I have to go down the film route especially as it gives the chance to work with sound and image together. I'm interested to see how it compares to the combining of image and text. I've been looking at music videos as they seem to hold a culturally easily understood combo of sound and image. Here's PSY - GANGNAM STYLE (강남스타일)


 

Saturday, 6 October 2012

ONE DAY IN FLAT IRON SQUARE - the private view party


The private view at the Island Cafe was great fun and despite the torrential rain Deirdre Jonnie Nikki Conal Andrew Tom Charlie Ian Jim Jim Joan Bill Juliet Pips Jo Neil Jo Eduardo Angela Helen Colette and Ann all turned up along with at least 10 children who played outside in the rain getting absolutely soaked and loving every minute of it. The photos are staying up at the cafe for the foreseeable future and it was great having both adults and children enjoying seeing themselves immortalised. Thanks DD for taking the photos on the night. And here's the full series: http://www.martindixon.org.uk/index.php/photography/a-day-in-the-life-of-flat-iron-square/