Showing posts with label photos of buildings and urban places. Show all posts
Showing posts with label photos of buildings and urban places. Show all posts

Tuesday, 20 December 2011

Trip to Birmingham

I went to Birmingham to visit the German Christmas market, although first I looked round the city's art gallery.  I really enjoyed their large Pre-Raphaelite collection, and a small but rewarding collection of prints called A Life in Prints: The Tessa Sidey Bequest.  But I suppose like many people I was most charmed by the 1890 painting Dominicans in Feathers by Henry Stacey Marks:


Here are my photos from the day out.  (Edited using the Instagram iPhone app.)



Happy Christmas Birmingham






My new friend!  I bought this big felted Triceratops.  I love his wonky horns.


Friday, 29 July 2011

NT Visit

My lovely and talented schoolfriend Steve is currently acting in Emperor and Galilean at the National Theatre.  He very kindly gave me and Emily a backstage tour after the show.  I ran around the Olivier stage like an idiot, thrilled to be walking in the footsteps of many of my favourite actors.  When Steve took us downstairs to look at the drum mechanism of the revolving stage, I honestly felt like I was meeting a celebrity.









Thursday, 2 June 2011

Sunday, 25 July 2010

Project Morrinho: The South Bank Favela

Look! There's a toytown made of bricks lit up by fairylights by the RFH.


It's Project Morrinho, the South Bank Favela (more info): "It is a collaboration between teenagers from Stockwell Park Estate and young people from the Pereira da Silva favela in Rio de Janeiro, and is a version of the full-sized Morrinho project, a social and cultural project created 12 years ago that aims to challenge the negative perceptions of Brazil's favelas -- namely, that they are entirely dominated by guns, drugs and violence." (Even more info.)

Sunday, 4 July 2010

'Ghost' Tube Station

Aldwych Station Re-Opens for TfL Exhibition: Closed to the commuting public since 1994, Aldwych station is to briefly re-open [for 12 days] for a special exhibition on 'Transforming the Tube'. Only the ticket hall will be accessible...

27 photos under the cut...

Wednesday, 23 June 2010

Chelsea Summer Show

I went to see my friend's exhibit at the Chelsea end-of-year showcase. I was a bit worried about going alone, and hoped I'd be able to find her work with no problem.

I said, 'Is the show clearly signposted?'
'Will it be clear which way I should go?'
Hmm.

Sunday, 23 May 2010

Day Trip to Brighton

I spent a sunny afternoon in Brighton with my friend Chris.
11 photos under the cut...

Saturday, 22 May 2010

Saturday

On Saturday, I managed to get to the latter half of the Save 6Music demo. I was pleased to be there but I wish I'd had a chance to make a banner!


After the demo, there was a free Magic Numbers gig going, but I didn't fancy it. Instead, I went to the Royal Academy to see the Paul Sandby exhibition. Paul Sandby was a watercolourist and engraver who began his career by satirising Hogarth and ended by being nudged out of style by young gun JMW Turner. He spent most of the time in between painting views of the United Kingdom. As many of his contemporaries jaunted off to Europe to paint ancient Roman ruins, Sandby left us with a unique visual record of Britain during his lifetime. The landscapes are calm, ordered and beautiful. But he also had a cheeky sense of humour, so there are often funny characters in his paintings: like a grand vista of rolling green hills with a folly at the top, and if you peer inside the folly, you can see a cad trying to persuade a reluctant woman to have a cuddle. I was also tickled by the painting of an army encampment in Hyde Park which featured, in the bottom left-hand corner, a soldier doing a wee against a tent.

I love stuff like that: quirky details in art which remind us that people in the past were as witty and silly and ribald as we are now. While I was recovering from my laser eye surgery, I spent a lot of time listening to the History of the World in 100 Objects podcast. I was so excited to have my sight return -- it usually lasted about half a day before I needed to go and lie in the dark -- because I was desperate to visit the British Museum and see some of the objects I'd been learning about. It was a little frustrating, as I had to pause and sit on a bench by some Babylonian clay tablets to take my regimen of medicated eye drops... And there was also a tiny, detailed gold chariot, and I peered at the panel text and it said, 'an image of the Egyptian dwarf-god Bes can be seen on the front of this chariot' and I thought resignedly, 'can be seen... pfft.'
Anyway, there was a set of Celtic flagons which had been described in the podcast as 'funny and really rather moving.' I wondered in what way they were moving. The handle is a model of a dog, and there are two dogs moulded onto the lid of the flagon too. They are chained up. On the spout there is a little duck -- so when wine or mead was poured out, it would look as if the duck was swimming away, while the dogs were straining to get at it. And at first I thought that was a funny gimmick, quite charming -- and then it hit me, that these were our ancestors and this was their little joke -- and not a hilarious one, perhaps as chucklesome and surprising as Big Mouth Billy Bass, but still, it was a gag that dated from 450BC and it still made me grin today. It made me think of its makers as living people with a sense of humour, rather than vague, unknowable figures from the distant past. A hand reaches out from the mists of time and you take it, and you find it's holding a hand buzzer. A lame joke by a jolly uncle; one who lived several hundred generations ago, but still family. Bzzt. I welled up; but that could also have been the eyedrops.

Back to Saturday. Having spent the hottest part of the day in the aggressively air-conditioned RA, I went to buy a book from Hatchards with my birthday book token, then had some sushi. After that, I caught a bus to Hyde Park, and sat in the last of the bright sunlight, reading and enjoying the greenery.


When I got home, I found that the water bottle in my bag had leaked all over everything. The only thing it didn't get to was my phone, but everything else was sodden. Including my nice new birthday book, which looked as if it'd been dipped in a bath. I put it in the airing cupboard with some weights on it, but it refused to dry out or unripple itself. Three hours, I managed to keep that nice.

Friday, 23 April 2010

Hipstamatic App

Hipstamatic is a fashionable iPhone app at the moment: you can use it to take photographs that replicate prints from an old-fashioned automatic camera. Leaving aside the inherent pretentiousness of the whole concept, it is a really fun app to use and it takes very pleasing images. Here are a few of my early experiments:









My favourite thing about Hipstamatic -- apart from the unusual and interesting pictures, obviously -- is the noises it makes. I think the shutter click is the same as the one made by the usual iPhone camera, but there's also a little flash button which makes a tiny electronic whine when you activate it, a spot-on perfect copy of the noise old cameras made which I haven't heard in years. The first day I had the app, I kept opening it just to make it do that noise.

However, there is a lack of clarity about the choice of lenses and films on offer. The app comes with a small selection and you're encouraged to buy more at the Hipstamatic online store. But click on that link and look at the product descriptions. For example: 'Ina’s 1969 Film: Ina has a bakery today but 40 years ago she was rocking some pretty serious instant film. Peel away the boring with this fine film.' What on EARTH is that supposed to mean? They're all like that. 'Jimmy Lens: James was cool, but Jimmy could walk through flames. This lens rocks the daylight, the nightife, and everything in between.' So... what -- rounded edges, or...?
And there aren't any big, clear examples of what effect each bit of equipment will have on your photographs, so when the text lets you down, you can't turn to the visual either. You can download an 'owner's manual' PDF which is slightly better, but that still leaves much to be desired too. Answering the questions 'what are you selling, and why should I buy it?' seem like marketing basics to me.
If you Google about, you can find fans of the app who've posted their own demo sheets, comparing all the different lens and film combinations (er, I found one the other day and will link to it if I can find it again) but I think you should be able to find that easily at the shop.

Anyway, I didn't set out to do a proper review, so I'll cut off here -- this is a fun toy, I love how it makes my own photos surprise me, and I can see myself using it quite a lot in future.

Saturday, 17 April 2010

Withnail & I Film Locations

Walked by a couple of locations from the film Withnail & I, and it was beautiful weather so I took some snapshots. They're in Stony Stratford, Bucks.

This was the tea room, although it's actually a pharmacy.

This was the shot in which Monty's car drove into the market square.

Monday, 17 August 2009

Bristol - Part 1

24 photos under the cut...

My brother was interested in seeing the Banksy exhibition at Bristol Museum, so I offered to go with him and we made a weekend of it. We travelled down on the Saturday and spent a day exploring the town, and on the Sunday we saw the exhibition and travelled back. I'd never been to Bristol before, I liked it a lot. The atmosphere of Cambridge, the hills of Edinburgh and the architecture of Bath.

Sunday, 19 July 2009

One and Other

Fourth plinth in Trafalgar Square, today at 3pm.

Friday, 5 June 2009

Wooden Escalator

Wooden escalator! At Greenford Tube station, very west on the Central Line.Some metal parts, though.


You can find out more about the last wooden escalator on the Tube here.
 

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