Thursday, 12 April 2012

Tim, our Artist of the Week, reflects on the work of other Shed Creatives

I think that the photographs on the Shed website are fantastic. There are so many really strong images that it is difficult to pick out some to celebrate but I have had a go! I simply liked these pictures because they work well. There are many others that I could have chosen, I hope other people like my choices! Good luck to everybody associated with The Shed.
- Tim Edwards, Artist of the Week


Sunset over Clavell Pier by Graham Wiffen

Sea Weathered 1 by Tricia Scott

Blue Boat by Rob Reeks

Light and Shade Santorini by Caroline Collett

The Cobb Lyme Regis by Benjitas

Evening Stroll West Bay by Ken Jenner


All of these works are for sale in the online Shed Shop, and Tim's own work can be viewed and bought from his own Shed Profile


Wednesday, 11 April 2012

Time Out in the Shed: a cup of Tea with Tim Edwards, our Artist of the Week

As per last week - this is our new feature that allows us to get to know our Artists of the Week a little better! Tim joined us for a virtual cup of tea, and shared a bit about his passion and photographic history. Enjoy!

Timber Wolf amongst Aspens, Alaska, USA
Tim Edwards
What first drew you to photography?
I have always been interested in art and did an A level in this subject back in the 1970’s! Photography was an extension to this interest in art and I was probably a frustrated landscape oil painter. I became really interested in photography trying to get pictures of lovely landscapes to show my parents who had worked hard to be able to send me on Summer trips with the scouts when I was in my early teens. Their little box brownie didn’t allow me to get the results that I could see with my eye and I found that really frustrating!


What is your favourite photographic memory, and why?
I guess my favourite photographic memories come from the time when I first got a 35mm SLR in the late 1970’s and I was able to experiment and get much better results through trial and error. I have never had a lesson and enjoyed learning this way. You will always make mistakes and it’s good to learn like this. Many years later I had some great memories in wild and remote places photographing landscapes and animals.
Pinnacles Desert, Namburg National Park, W. Australia
Tim Edwards
Who is your favourite photographer, and why?
I would like to say something like Henri Cartier Bresson but I never really studied the history of photography. Ansel Adams’ black and white images really appealed to me but I have mostly been influenced by more recent photographers. I cannot really choose a favourite photographer as there are so many that have influenced me. I like American landscape and wildlife photographers like David Muench, Pat O’Hara and Art Wolfe. I really loved the pictures taken by Peter Dombrovkis of the wilder parts of Tasmania. During his lifetime he wanted to record these places from a conservation perspective. Many years ago I went to a photographic talk by John Beatty in North Wales. My wife recently bought me a wonderful ‘retrospective’ book by this influential photographer. I also really enjoy seeing photographs by Laurie Campbell who is another amazing photographer.


What would be your ideal camera, and where would you take it?
I loved using my Pentax LX’s back in the days of Kodachrome and velvia! I had a Pentax 645 and used it for a few years with pleasing results. I would like a medium format landscape camera like this. I don’t know if anything like this exists! I would take it to Pembrokeshire or the Cornish coasts to get to know how it works! I think in future I would like to use a 90 or 100mm macro lens and focus on composition and form.

Tell us what you enjoy most about your own work, and what has inspired you recently.
I think my best pictures have been taken on wild coasts and in the mountains. These are places that I find beautiful and enjoy being in. Whenever I see amazing pictures in books and magazines they inspire me to want to get out and take pictures again.

Maligne Lake, Jasper National Park, Canada
Tim Edwards

Do you have bursts of creativity - and when/where are you most creative?
My bursts of creativity in the past have coincided with being in some wild places. That is all that I need to have to be creative, just be in the right place and wait for the right light.

What are the most important elements of a successful photo?
I think it’s difficult to say what are the most important elements of a successful photograph as photographs come in all ‘shapes and sizes’. There are landscapes where the right type of lighting is crucial or wildlife where an animal can be seen within its environment. Composition and form style photography really needs to appeal to any individual who looks at the picture. Sometimes a picture just ‘works’ and that’s great!

Sunrise over Loch Bad a Ghaill, Ross & Cromerty, Scotland
Tim Edwards

Thanks very much Tim, for taking the time to chat to us. Please visit Tim's Shed Profile to see more of his stunning images - where they are all for sale as well, go on, treat yourself!

And please leave any comments, feedback or responses for Tim on here, in the box below. 

Monday, 9 April 2012

Artist of the Week: Tim Edwards

Dolomites, Italy
Tim Edwards
This week we are happy to present Tim Edwards as our Shed Artist of the Week! Tim has had a lifelong interest in wildlife, and has a passion for photographing wild places. He has travelled far and wide with him camera,  to national parks and wildlife reserves all over the world. He has worked on conservation projects in wild places too, including New Zealand, the UK, and Alaska.


Tim's work reflects his love and respect for the natural world, and each image is a testament to his skill, patience, and commitment - he has never owned a digital camera, so all his images seen here are from slides. His work has been widely published over the last twenty years in a wide variety of books, magazines (including BBC Wildlife), newspapers and calendars.


We'll be hearing from Tim this week, so do keep an eye out for more blog posts, and in the meantime we hope you enjoy this selection of his work to keep you going!


Yesnaby, Orkney Islands
Tim Edwards

Zebra Detail
Tim Edwards

Moraine Lake, Banff National Park, Canada
Tim Edwards


To see more of Tim's work, please visit his Shed Profile, where all his work is for sale.

Saturday, 7 April 2012

Guest blog by Alfredo Lietor, our Artist of the Week


I discovered the shed photography by accident. It happens that I live a few metres from where the Shed Shop in Barcelona is located. One day something in the window shop caught my attention and decided to enter for the first time. The girl there explained me what The Shed Photography was about, it sounded so good to me that when I arrived home that day, I decided to join. A few months have passed since then, and now I'm Artist of the Week!!! I could have never imagined that this would happen, but now i know for sure that it was a good idea to enter the shed that day. 

Now I can only say THANK YOU to Chelsea, Ben, Lauren, and everybody at The Shed for this great opportunity. I'm now involved in the organization of an international art fair in Palma de Mallorca, Flesh Art Fair, and I know how difficult for an artist is to enter the hermetic art world.
Like Ben and Chelsea at The Shed Photography, with Flesh Art Fair we want to give artists an opportunity to showcase and sell their work in an event for artists, made by artists. 

At this moment we are receiving submissions from artists, most of them painters (Photographers where are you?) So If you want to participate, or want to know more about the fair, please visit our websitewww.fleshartfair.com or contact me for more info! It could be really nice to see some Shed photographers there!

Thanks!!!

Alfredo



Thursday, 5 April 2012

Alfredo, our Artist of the Week, reflects on some of his favourite pieces in the Shed Gallery

Here are a few of Alfredo's favourite images, chosen from the Shed Gallery, with his reflections. Enjoy!

I like green photos, from great landscape photography, to plant photography. I love the subject of this image. A nature that takes control again and tries to recover a lost territory. Civilization remains being devoured by an exuberant nature. Ironic. 
Statues
Michelle Frederick

This still life is directly connected to those baroque paintings where you can find layers and layers of symbolism and meaning. The dark inside and the bright outside, light and shadow, life and death. A lot to read from this image.
Autumn Window
Paula Youens

Landscape photography at its best! Love the pictorical appearance of this one. This is a perfect example that most of the time "bad weather" means good weather for photographs. 
Patagonia Mountain, Chile 
Philippa Gedge

I find this one to be a little bit ironic. The superposition of the two layers gives the image a new dimension. Big vs. small. It makes me feel tiny.
Cerise 1
Vibeke Nordtomme

I like the overall "vintage" feeling of this image, but what i most like about this one is that it suggests a lot more than it tells. You can read in this image the story of many lives saved... or not.
Life Raft
Caroline Collett

I love this Landscape in Colour 1 by Charles Hallsworht. From the grainny texture, to the surreal color gradient, the "lo-fi" appearance... A photograph that looks like a painting. 
Landscape in Colour 1
Charles Hallsworth

I like this one, just because I love to photograph stairs. I don't know why, but it's one of my favourite subjects. Maybe because they are really photogenic? In this case I love the texture, the low key, the crop, the absence of humans... all this gives the image a mystery halo very appealing to me.
Painter Gimeno Staircase
Massimiliano Maddalena

I like Jess Douglas' illustrations. I like those isolated urban landscapes lost in the plain background inmensity. 
If Jess finds beauty in the ugly and mundane, I find beauty in her illustrations. 
East Village
Jess Douglas
Who can resist this one?
I love the way Lauren impersonates Che Guevara and by doing so, she adds new meanings to this iconic image. I see a lot of references here, questions about identity, about power and gender, and about Photography itself.
Che Guevara
Lauren Fox

Thank you Alfredo, for sharing these thoughts with us! 

To see Alfredo's own work, please visit his Shed Profile. And to buy the pieces shown here, or any of our Shed Creatives' work, please visit our Shed Shop!


Tuesday, 3 April 2012

Time out in the Shed: A cup of tea with Alfredo Liétor, our Artist of the Week

This is our first week of 'Time out in the Shed' - a new feature that entails us having a virtual cup of tea with our featured Artist of the Week, and finding out a bit more about them!

So here is our chat with Alfredo...
Geometry
Alfredo Liétor
What first drew you to photography?
I was a teenager when my sister started to work as a photo assistant in a studio. She started to buy books about photography, composition, lighting techniques, etc... All those books ended up in my hands. I remember devouring those books, learning without noticing about the fundamentals of photography. 
Later on, i decided to study visual communication at Complutense University in Madrid, and at the same time I enrolled a photography course, so i can say i have formal training in both Theory and practice.
I must say I still love to read photography books!

What is your favourite photographic memory, and why?
Maybe first time I printed my own copies... the moment you observe the paper under the red light and the smell of the chemicals in the dark room, waiting to the latent image to appear... This is a very nostalgic memory as I don't use the dark room anymore.

Who is your favourite photographer, and why?
This is a really difficult question to answer! 
I could mention lots of photographers but as you specifically ask for only one, I'm going to say Henri Cartier-Bresson.He not only took a lot of brilliant photographs, but also built a really nice and candid theory around the capturing process, "The Decisive Moment". You can still perceive his strong influence in the current street photography revival. 

What would be your ideal camera, and where would you take it?
As photographer Chase Jarvis said not long ago, "the best camera is the one that's with you". At this moment, the best camera is the one that's always on my pocket, yes, my mobile phone camera!
I've been using a point and shoot camera for several years, but then, all of a sudden, smartphones came on scene with bigger and better cameras so now i'm taking more and more pictures with my iPhone. But it's not only about capturing images with your mobile phone, nowadays you can have a complete dark room in your pocket thanks to photo editing mobile applications (just to name one, Snapseed is my favorite at this moment). You can take full control of the whole process, from capture to publishing, anytime, anywhere!

Tell us what you enjoy most about your own work, and what has inspired you recently.
That's another difficult one! Although I like most of the process, there's a moment I really enjoy, and it's the moment i press the shutter button, or being more precise, the lapse of time between the moment i see something that catch my attention, and the moment i finally press the button. Exciting!

I moved to Barcelona from Madrid a year and a half ago. I love street photography. At this moment Barcelona still inspires me a lot. I think it's a very photogenic city, not only because of it's great architecture, outdoors or viewpoints, but also because of the multiple layers you can perceive in the city; from gothic history to Industrial legacy, from mass tourism to local living.

Do you have bursts of creativity - and when/where are you most creative?
Not sure about calling this a "burst of creativity" or maybe the opposite, but sometimes i don't take a single picture for months, then all of a sudden one day i take my camera and start taking pictures again. It's just like a springtime explosion after a long and inactive winter... It's a periodic thing, not necessarily a yearly period but cyclic for sure.

Sometimes I'm not looking for something particular when i walk around the city, but then it can be a certain light, a situation or a person that trigger my attention. Once this happens, I can't stop taking pictures, and I need to capture the creative side of the street ;-)
On the other hand, i spend a lot of time at home in front of my computer, and that's another side of creativity, when you have to check your images, select, reject, edit or even retouch them... I like this too.

What are the most important elements of a successful photo?
I know this may sound topic... but a successful photo should tell a story, or at least suggest it. 
As a language with it's own rules, photography allows you to tell a story in a lot of different ways, so, knowing about light, exposure, composition, point of view, color, subject, etc... and you could tell a story with photography.

Curve
Alfredo Liétor

Thanks for taking the time to chat to us Alfredo! 

To read more about Alfredo, and to see his work, please visit his Shed Portfolio. Alfredo also has a lovely website, and you can follow him on Twitter @AlfredoLietor.

Monday, 2 April 2012

Artist of the Week: Alfredo Liétor

Crossroad
Alfredo Liétor
Our Artist of the Week this week is Alfredo Liétor! Alfredo is a Spanish, Barcelona-based photographer, who has won a series of prizes for his work over the years, and was a finalist in last year's Photography competition at the Centre for Contemporary Culture in Barcelona (CCCB website). His work seems to document absence, and his striking structural images have a sense of emptiness about them, as he rarely includes people, or living things, in his images. This results in a powerful pull, that draws you in, wanting to know what happened here, or where everyone has gone.

Cagliari
Alfredo Liétor 
Car
Alfredo Liétor
Fairground
Alfredo Liétor
Alfredo is currently part of the team setting up an exciting new International art fair - Flesh Art Fair, that will take place this summer in Mallorca, Spain. Do have a look at their website for more info, and we'll be talking to him more about this new project in the next few days. Alfredo also works as an amateur composer, and co-produces 'Grimaldi' - a pop-band based in Barcelona.


We will be hearing more from Alfredo this week, including an interview with him, and his thoughts on some of the work of his fellow Shed Creatives. In the meantime though, please do have a look at his Shed Profile, and also his own, captivating, website: http://www.alfredolietor.com

Prison
Alfredo Liétor