Some of my seaside photos are in the new issue of Grey – an online photography magazine produced by Greek photographer Constantinos Andronis, which features black and white photography (I suppose the name gives it away a bit). I’m very pleased because not only is it a really effective pdf magazine, but there’s some great work in it. So ta very much to Constantinos for asking me to contribute. Here’s a photo from Blackpool, which reminds me to remind you to visit Rank at the Grundy Art Gallery – you’ve got less than two weeks before the exhibition closes.
Archive for August, 2009

For the love of money
August 25, 2009Alas poor Damien, for I know him all too well… I’m not asking £50 million – give us a monkey and it’s yours. I’ve spent the afternoon photographing my collection of cctv ephemera for an article – well it’d be a shame to stop there with the tripod out and the backdrop erected.

I’m not a photographer
August 22, 2009
Here’s one of the Special Branch Camera Club. Last night I was walking through the main public square in Manchester (the one with all the cctv cameras and the mobile police station) some apprentice gangstas decided to kick each other around.
I didn’t take any photos – plod would have probably appeared and arrested me. Anyroadup here’s a group called ‘I’m a Photographer, Not a Terrorist’ where you can go and have a moan about getting stopped.

Rank
August 5, 2009
To some Blackpool is pretty ‘rank’. But Rank is also the name of a new exhibition at The Grundy Art Gallery, which is a few minutes walk from the train station and North Pier. Been to see it today – one of the best exhibitions I’ve seen in ages (in other words it’s given me lots of ideas to rip-off). It’s subtitled Picturing the Social Order and asks:
Who do we think ‘we’ are? How have we imagined the shape of our society? It is the first ever exhibition to examine how British artists – and many others – have represented the shape of their society from the Renaissance to the present. It brings together nearly 100 contributors, placing masterpieces from almost all England’s national collections – the British Library, Tate, British Museum, V&A and Arts Council Collection – next to images made for the urban poor from the Working Class Movement Library, and those for Victorian middle-class collectors from libraries and archives. ‘Rank’ reveals the shape of our society through objects from different social strata, as well as representations of ‘ranks’, ‘classes’, ‘orders’ and ‘estates’.
In the catalogue, Polly Toynbee says: “This timely exhibition is a powerful reminder that although rank, status. class and hierarchy are as much with us now as ever, we have lost the language and the imagery to describe it. It has become the great unmentionable in an era where the right to vote and the imagined opportunity for anyone to make it to the top masquerades as equality”.

Brum-Brum
August 3, 2009
Donned my BSA t-shirt and rode (by train) to Birmingham to Rhubarb-Rhubarb the international photography review/festival/thingy at the Arts Council’s expense (ta again tax payers). The idea behind these kind of events is to show your work to the Great and the Good (not to mention the Bad and the Ugly) and for them to throw things at you – hopefully the things they are throwing are useful ideas, helpful advice and offers of marriage/exhibitions/publications– but sometimes it’s pieces of paper, punches and paving stones. Well I got no offers of marriage (where would you find a half decent wedding photographer at an event like that?) but I didn’t get hit by any paving stones either and got a few people interested in my cctv stuff.
Now if you want to see what Birmingham’s cctv cameras look like you’ll have to go to my flickr stream, so instead, I thought I’d show you the last thing the Town Planners saw just before the good people of our second city (after Manchester) threw them from the car park roof.





