Molten Desire at Wakefield Artwalk



My Molten Desire series from the Dancing with Light collection - will exhibit at Jordans Solicitors during the May + June 2011 Artwalk in Wakefield, alongside Dark Matter, a selection of 'imaginary landscapes' paintings by Paula Tod.

As part of an ongoing fascination with light and time, Molten Desire attempts to explore the essence of being, the ephemeral qualities of movement, as a conversation in light. As with desire, these are framed in fleeting glances, a mere suggestion, a flirtation with all those who pass through the frame.

All prints are Cibrachrome, 29″ x 29″, matted and glass mounted, available for £225.00 each during Artwalk (pick up at Jordans Solicitors). New commissions are welcomed and actively encouraged!

organised chaos
Organised Chaos
£225.00 Buy Now
molten desire
Molten Desire
£225.00 Buy Now
connecting arcs
Connecting Arcs
£225.00 Buy Now
slow dancing in a burning room
Slow Dancing in
a Burning Room
£225.00 Buy Now
dances with light
Dances with Light
£225.00 Buy Now

Many more prints are available for sale or licensing. Please enquire if you like something you see via my flickr account.
One to one, or group photo studio sessions also available via floemedia.

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Horned Creatures in West Leeds


The I Love West Leeds Festival… in a shop was host to a pop up photoshoot with the lovely Charlotte Plowright, myself and Martin Ainsworth. The shoot was styled by Heather Donaldson, with model make-up provided by Natalie Greenwell. Throughout the shoot the scene was a typical day of ordered chaos, with diaphonous sheets wafting in the space heater updrafts, jelly babies on tap to keep our sugar levels up and prevent hyperthermia setting in, and of course, curious Armley folk peeping in through the shop windows as they went about their business! After several hours, it was a wrap and the shots – both video and stills – will form part of the installation and performance film for MASK: Secrets and Revelations, due to launch in Michigan, USA on February 18th, 2011.

After the shoot, the following evening a selection of the photographs were projected in the windows of the shop for local passersby to see, as they busied themselves on their regular commute home. The video ran for approximately an hour and included over 60 images from the previous days photo shoot. Here is a wee snapshot at just a couple.

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beautiful stamping


, originally uploaded by angex.

discovered these absolutely gorgeous images of a set of printing stamps on flickr at one of my contacts streams: angex

perfect for 'signing' your polaroids!

The ResCollecTiVU magazine


ResCollecTiVU is an alternative bi-annual publication and performance series through the RCAH, MSU, and the surrounding community. Looking for dynamic, inventive, and provocative work of all mediums, including poetry, music, photography, theater, media art, video, sound constructions, spoken word art, graphics, dance, installations, paper play, webart, and sculpture.

The publication is open to faculty, staff, students, and community members. The above image is one of eight images submitted, in collaboration with Mark Sullivan for the Fall issue, under the sub category of: Digital History.

In this section we looked at what it means to digitize memories, collections, historical documents, photos, letters, or voices in an effort to preserve them and their stories. This section considers the question of documentary, what would and should we preserve, and why. Submissions may be a film, a comic, sound construction, physical memorabilia, poetry, photography, a script, or even a scene or dance to be performed about the concept or actualization of digital history.

The Fall Issue of the ResCollecTiVU is called "The Makers" and focuses on the empowerment of people and the significance of work that is done in a creative and engaged fashion. This is an opportunity to look at ourselves and our community as makers, and push beyond the accepted popular ideology of what it means to be an "artist" a "writer" a "photographer" and blurring the exact lines of the boxes in which we so often find these endeavors.

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The Long Square Project

Welcome to the 2010 Traveling Panoramic Camera Adventure...

A panorama camera was shared among 16 photographers throughout the USA and the UK and the resulting images and experiences were shared on the long square project flickr group.


Here’s the plan.

Shoot a roll of film with this camera.
After your film is processed, post your results in the pool.

After you are finished shooting your film send the camera to the next person on the list.

However-There is a little twist to this adventure.

We were not to post our 'best' picture to the flickr page until everyone had used the camera.
Posting it after everyone had a chance to use the camera. Becky will let us know when the time comes.
She'll then make a gallery for the best shots and pick a winner from the bunch. The prize will be a goodie box with a panoramic camera, an assortment of film and some other surprises.

Specs for the camera we are using:
28mm fixed two element lens
1/125 shutter f/11
13 x 36 mm panorama mask
*** Please don’t permanently alter the camera in any way.
And please leave the address list in the box with the camera.



The instructions were:

Feel free to use one of the rolls of film included in the box with the camera. If you prefer using your own film that’s okay too. But help yourself to one of the rolls and leave the remaining rolls in the box when you forward it to the next person on the list.

Have fun!

BTW- If you want to shoot more than one roll of your own film, say some B&W or slide stuff, please do!


My fellow adventurers are:

Andy Schmitt NJ
Brian Krummel PA
Peter Schafer WV
Meredith Shinko Ensell OH
Angie Harris OH
David Lindley OH
Bill Bressler MI
Karen Taylor TX
Warren Harold TX
Randy Ray Cathey TX
Diane Martin Peterson ID
Robert Williams NM
Steve Welch NM
Ariel Boston NM
Phil Bebbington UK
Shari Baker UK



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Bill Viola at James Cohan Gallery














Recently read about Bill Viola's show at James Cohan Gallery It is awe inspiring. The show consists of video pieces, for the most part displayed on large panels in darkened rooms. It's hard to describe the effect of those video pieces. I felt as if I was watching photography unfold in a very unexpected way, with image after image after image appearing - but not in the trivial sense of video being just a set of images. If you're curious, check out this video (made for a different occasion), in which the artist explains what you see. Mind-blowing!

Tilt Shift Concept





An ongoing fascination of mine has been illusion and trickery through the medium of photography and video - essentially, time-based mediums - I'm constantly intrigued by how using a few simple tools, one can trick the human mind into seeing something other than reality.

I wanted to know what lay at the root of the phenomena, as well as explore the actual technique.

What makes the brain believe, when viewing an image created of a real life scene, captured using a tilt-shift lens, that it is looking at a miniature model of the scene, and not real life at all?

The term “tilt-shift photography” refers to the method of tilting the camera lens to distort the plane of focus and shifting the lens to distort the perspective. Today, most photographers simply take a digital photograph and apply the tilt-shift distortions via software.

Aerial views of cities are well-suited to tilt-shift photography. The blurring at the edges of the photograph simulates the effect of a macro lens on a much smaller field. Hence, this tricks our brains into believing that we are actually viewing a macro image of a small 'toy town'. Toy towns using the magic of tilt-shift photography!

One of the most difficult aspects of tilt-shift photography is finding the right conditions. The lighting has to be bright and full in order to turn out a convincing finished photo because those are the lighting conditions one would expect to find with a photograph of a true miniature.

The subject matter is just as important as the angle and lighting in tilt-shift photography. If a subject is too complicated or detailed, it isn’t believable as a model. But if it’s too plain, it is difficult to notice the changed perspective.

Using a combination of tilt-shift and time-lapse photography, one can create enchanting Lilliputian worlds where itty-bitty people go about enjoying their leisure time and everyday scenes become detailed little models, a stop-motion animation.

A charming way to get people to take a second look at their surroundings and notice things that they may not ordinarily pay attention to.

Always fascinated with the relationship between time, light and motion in photographic domain, and the ability to trick the human brain into seeing something other than reality, I began explorations in the process of creating tilt-shift imaging, both stills and video.

This is an ongoing fascination which recently came back into focus through some discussion about technique with Martin Ainsworth.