To Somerset House for the excellent (and free) Malick Sidibé show: “The modern eye of Mali”.
Highly recommended: great to see some really big prints of work that I’ve mostly seen online and in small-ish books. Nice soundtrack, too.
22 Saturday Oct 2016
Posted in Diversions
To Somerset House for the excellent (and free) Malick Sidibé show: “The modern eye of Mali”.
Highly recommended: great to see some really big prints of work that I’ve mostly seen online and in small-ish books. Nice soundtrack, too.
28 Sunday Aug 2016
Posted in Down by the river, London, Photography
Tags
cable car, Emirates Air Line, Fuji XT10, Jetty, london, monochrome, photography, River, Silvertown, Thames
Click images for full-size
A breezy and occasionally damp walk along the Thames path, past the Emirates Airline cable car and the old jetty (currently Farmopolis), looking over the river to Silvertown.
14 Sunday Aug 2016
Posted in London, Photography
Tags
Angerstein hotel, antigallican, Charlton, East Greenwich, fire station, Frankie & Benny, Fuji X-E1, Fuji XT10, london, mirror shop, photography, photowalk, pickwicks, rose of denmark, SE London, SE7, south east London, Starbucks, woolwich road

I took my cameras for a walk along Woolwich Road between two landmark pubs, starting at the Angerstein Hotel; passing the landmark shops (‘mirror’, and ‘ass’); the unexplained shipping container of Holmwood Villas; East Greenwich fire station; Pickwick’s pub (recently closed); the motorway service station architectural vibes of Frankie & Benny’s and Starbucks; the Rose of Denmark pub; the out-of-town-shopping-centre-but-in-town incongruous mass of M&S and Sainsbury’s; Valley House (awaiting demolition); and finishing up at The Antigallican. The sun was belting hot and not particularly nice for photography, there was too much traffic, and there are far too many signposts and the like cluttering the view along there, but it was an interesting exercise; I might try it again in the winter.
07 Sunday Aug 2016
Posted in Down by the river
Tags
alex chinneck, bullet from a shooting star, iPhone, london, monochrome, photography, sculpture, Thames

A bit of time to kill before going to Caught by the River Thames in Fulham spent photographing around the Thames path on the north-west corner of Greenwich peninsula. It’d be a lot easier to make decent photos round there if it wasn’t for the miles of metal fencing, but it remains an interesting place to walk and photograph.
The sculpture is Alex Chinneck’s A bullet from a shooting star, part of the The Line – a sculpture trail running across both sides of the river, that I really should investigate more.
31 Sunday Jul 2016
Posted in Diversions, Photography
Tags
black and white, bnw, eurostar, France, Fuji XT10, holiday, lille, monochrome, photography, travel
A great weekend in Lille, travelling by Eurostar from Ebbsfleet International (about which I could get quite evangelical – for its convenience, if not its glamour and sophistication: the train left Lille Europe at 17.36 local time on the way home and we got into our house in SE7 at 18.20).
I visited France a lot as a child and – a bit like with camping the previous weekend – couldn’t imagine at the time that I wouldn’t do so regularly forever, but then through my 20’s and 30’s hardly went at all. It felt good to be back there, and to see my daughter discover Orangina, waffles, pain au chocolat, and all those things that are readily available in London but somehow much better in France. Paris next year, I think.
10 Sunday Jul 2016
Posted in Down by the river, London, Photography
08 Friday Jul 2016
Posted in Photography
Tags
I love everything about this project: the portraits are great, it exemplifies the democracy of photography as an art form, and positively brims with the love of a hobby. Well done to BBC Oxford for putting the video together (a shame that WordPress.com doesn’t seem to allow for embedding of BBC videos, though).
02 Saturday Jul 2016
Posted in Photography
Tags

I bought a Fuji XT10 to replace the X100t I stupidly left on a train. Had a few minutes this evening to snap a few things around the garden to try it out; the shot above being the only one really worth sharing. Wildlife and flower photography is really difficult – it’s amazing what a job the human eye does of filtering out the straggly bits of plants and focusing on the pretty bits without the brain apparently having to think about it.
The camera seems good, anyway. I think I might miss the optical viewfinder that the X100t had, and it is certainly less pocketable, but the chance to use the Fuji f1.4 35mm lens again is definitely worth something, and it feels very well made. More to come over the weekend, hopefully.
23 Saturday Apr 2016
Posted in Photography
Back from the framers’ with a print bought from Brian David Stevens from his Brighter Later series. For this series of diptychs, Stevens circumnavigated the British coast taking shots looking out to see. Having bought the excellent photobook (published by Tartaruga) I decided I wanted a print, in particular of the Durham shots. Is it my favourite because of the way it looks, or because that’s where I grew up? Who cares.
I recommend taking the time to explore Brian’s other work, in particular his latest series exploring Beachy Head – sad and beautiful images.
22 Friday Apr 2016
Posted in Down by the river, London, Photography
Tags
On a brighter-than-expected day last week (my 40th birthday, as it happens), we walked down from Soho in the mid-afternoon – after lunch at Tapas Brindisa and a record-buying splurge in the fantastic Sounds of the Universe – and across Hungerford bridge to get the train home from Waterloo. The clouds were billowing over the Thames, the sunlight glinting off the stone and concrete of Waterloo Bridge and the Southbank centre; London looking freshened up after a stretched-out grey winter.
Earlier in the day we’d been to the Paul Strand exhibition at the V&A, which I’d highly recommend to anyone with even a passing interest in photography or 20th century art. Definitely worth visiting for any photographer who worries about veering from ‘their’ style: Strand changed his approach significantly a number of times through his life (one constant being his exquisite printing).
With the Strand exhibition at the V&A and the Martin Parr-curated Strange & Familiar at the Barbican, London has at least two big photographic exhibitions on at the moment, both of which would reward multiple visits. There’s more to come, too, with the National Portrait Gallery’s Willam Eggleston portraits show later in the year – let me know if you’ve seen any other photography exhibitions that are worth a look!