This post has now been moved to my new dedicated print sales blog. Each post will offer different bodies of work for sale under a themed title. A full print description (for example “fibre silver gelatin” or “archivel lightjet” is given under each image including the price which varies depending on rarity, print type and size. Shipping is extra and is priced according to country of destination. Payment can be via paypal or a personal cheque if based in the United Kingdom.
Archive for the ‘South East Asia’ Category
Fibre Print Sale Clearance Sale (updated 06.05.11)
Wednesday, April 20th, 2011The Mercy Project INOCHI
Wednesday, April 13th, 2011Although this book has been out a few weeks I only saw my complimentary copy the other day when arriving back in the UK. I thought I’d scan my page and share the relevant project info on my blog. James is a good friend of mine and the book supports a very worthy cause.
James Whitlow Delano posed one question to photographers he’d met all over the world, after the untimely passing of his sister, Jeanne, and last member of his nuclear family: “share with me one photograph that says to you, `MERCY’”. Such a body of work, he hoped, could contribute in a meaningful, concrete way in the effort to expand awareness about the critical role that enlightened hospice care can play, as it is likely to touch the lives of most families worldwide some time in the course of their lives.
The Mercy Project is a charity photo book project featuring the work of 118 photographers from 28 photographers from Magnum, VII Photo, Noor, National Geographic to emerging talent coming together to create awareness and raise funds for hospice and palliative care.
About my image: Chea Nica (7) right, suffers from severe cerebral palsy, attended to by her older sister Chea Sreynan (9), The Cambodia Trust, Kampong Chhnang Province, Cambodia, 2005. You can see more of this work “Disability in Cambodia: Documenting the work of Cambodia Trust (2005-2007)” here.
You can buy the book from here.
“RodeoGirls” makes The Drawbridge No17/Summer 2010
Thursday, October 28th, 2010A R C H I V E S | new dedicated blog.
Tuesday, October 26th, 2010A brand new online archives of my photographs dating from 1986 – the present day is now set up on its own dedicated blog with 20 new gallery pages: A R C H I V E S
Domain Website Galleries Updated
Tuesday, May 18th, 2010My domain website has now been fully revamped with 4 new galleries. This is a new streamlined version designed by my good friend Neil Chenery. Each thumbnail opens into a full size image that is fully captioned including URL links to my Photoshelter Archive where further images from the same series or body of work can be viewed.
Warp Magazine interview (Issue 25 April 2010)
Monday, April 19th, 2010Chëla Olea of Warp Magazine interviewed me recently here’s the results:
Interview on Spray Blog includes new work.
Thursday, April 8th, 2010I was recently interviewed by Charles Banaszewski of Spray Blog. Screen grabs of the interview are pasted below but please go here for the article itself.
COMING SOON an interview in Warp Magazine (Mexico) this will be in print and not online.
AK Kimoto: Spiders and Sandflies (1977-2010).
Sunday, April 4th, 2010Last week my good friend AK Kimoto passed away whilst en route to the FotoFreo Festival in Perth. AK had spent several years documenting small and isolated communities in Afghanistan. His website showcases a very small fraction of these intimate and sensitive photographs. Go here to visit the site. A tribute to AK is found here put together by Stuart Isett. I’m sure Ak wouldn’t mind me posting this screen grab from his website, along with some photographs I took when we were all together for the Angkor Photo Festival, Cambodia 2007. Rest in peace my friend.
Photoshelter Archive Updated
Monday, February 8th, 2010My online archive Photoshelter has now been completely revamped with new galleries. Please click HERE to visit.
Minotaur now live on Domain Website
Thursday, July 23rd, 2009My full uncut version of the Minotaur project is now live on my site. This marks a change in the look of the site and a hint of what it may evolve into in the next few months. My idea is to simplify my site, having only 3 bodies of work for viewing. The rest of the work will be put in my Photoshelter Archive where it can more easily be seen, referenced and searched. My blogs will work in two ways; Addenda will serve as notice board to notify current projects, reviews and links etc, the key blog site will be Cyphers which will offer a way for people to explore my working/thought processes more – it will include background material to projects, reference images and versions not seen anywhere else – it will cover the last 20 years and of course new work – images will be posted daily (or every few days) building up over time, a much larger picture of how I work and what themes recur in my work. Its function will be educational but delivered in the “bite size” blog format.
Important Note: The images on my website and those that will appear in the Pixies’ Minotaur Box Set are not exactly the same. Some of the images are different depending on their particular context and relationship to other images within the same body of work. It has within it, its own narrative and recurring themes. The bulk of the imagery was shot between August and October 2008, all of it in South East Asia and much of it with the small digital Ricoh GRD2 and the much berated Sigma DP1. Later images were made with the Leica M8.2. Had the M8.2 been available in August instead of November, the project may have taken an entirely different route. I haven’t given up film! Some of the images were shot with Leica M’s. The pairing of images is something that has developed out of my panoramic work and also marks a revisit to very early work made in the mid 80′s when I was documenting Italian Catholic and Greek Orthodox Churches. Revisiting the Pixies’ classic albums has acted like a catalyst for me and triggered renewed interest in themes that I will be reexploring in the next coming months in Europe.

Wound

Joker

Haruko

Terminal






















