I first met documentary film maker Mark Kidel last Summer when he was in Plymouth to film one of my photo shoots with performance artist Francesca Steele – Mark is producing a documentary about Francesca’s bodybuilding performance piece ‘Routine’ – and we’ve met up a few times since with me turning the camera on him more recently. Mark has forged an amazing career producing and directing films on a broad range of subjects including artists as diverse as Ravi Shankar, Mario Lanza, and Tricky, was a founding producer of the groundbreaking BBC arts documentary series ARENA and even collaborated with Peter Gabriel on the concept for a world music festival that eventually grew to become the world famous WOMAD festivals. For more information about Mark Kidel’s work head over to http://www.calliopemedia.co.uk/
Film vs Digital (or) Anachronistic Tendencies
January 27th, 2010 § 1
I think that anyone who started out in the darkroom as opposed to Photoshop can’t help but romanticise about film to some degree; digital technology is so good now but it still lacks that tangibility of analogue. As well as having a very different look and feel to the images themselves the whole process is very different and as much as I love and have embraced digital photography, pushing a Compact Flash card into a slot just isn’t the same as loading a roll of film. I’ve been flirting with using film again for about a year or so after exclusively shooting digital for several years, but it wasn’t until late last year that I decided to start seriously using film again. I’d kept a casual eye out for a used Hasselblad for a long time – probably a couple of years – and with so many photographers jumping ship to digital there’s no shortage of used film cameras for sale at a fraction of the price you’d expect to pay for a pro level digital body alone, and I eventually picked up a 1994 – the year I left school! – 501C.
I’ve always used 35mm systems so medium format has been an interesting learning experience in itself along with the unique idiosyncrasies of the Hasselblad design. Square format, a waist level viewfinder – as well as the flipped view of the viewfinder screen which made me feel drunk at first - and manual focus all combine to provide a completely different way of working to my DSLR, but after the steep initial learning curve I’m enjoying the process as well as mixing cameras and formats; I get bored so easily that I’ve occasionally wondered if I have some degree of ADD, and I’m finding that chopping and changing between such different cameras and formats keeps me focused and creatively inspired. I’m hoping that some clients may ask for film for certain assignments but in the meantime I’m shooting film both for certain personal projects and alongside digital for assignment work where possible and appropriate and at the very least in those instances it’ll give the Art Director another option which is always important, and especially so I think with digital now being so ubiquitous. I actually read an interview with a gallery owner recently where they stated that although they believed that film doesn’t necessarily produce a ‘better’ (that is a subjective word of course…) print it does have a greater perceived value as it’s a disappearing medium. Food for thought.
Music Portrait – Katie Marie
January 22nd, 2010 § 0
Promotional portrait of Devon based singer/songwriter and musician Katie Marie; we shot this in a ruined railway cottage on the edge of what’s now the Plym Valley cycle route on the edge of Dartmoor. Another in a series of recent very wintry outdoor portraits and there was still a little -albeit slushy – snow on the ground at the time. As well as writing and performing on her own albums Katie has just launched her own record label; for more information check out her website HERE
Francesca Steele – Routine/The Pigs Of Today Are The Hams Of Tomorrow
January 15th, 2010 § 0
A few months back I received a phonecall from Francesca Steele – a Plymouth based Performance Artist – who asked me to photograph her for an upcoming book being produced by the Plymouth Arts Centre to coincide with the Pigs Of Today Are The Hams Of Tomorrow performance arts show which is taking place at The Slaughterhouse – a nearly 200 year old dis-used slaughterhouse – at Royal William Yard in Plymouth this month which is being curated by Marina Abramovic. The deadline for the images was extremely tight but we pulled together a two location shoot over the course of two days; one studio shoot with a black background and a second on location at The Slaughterhouse itself; Francesca was great to work with and the images were delivered in time and so far with a lot of very positive feedback so I’m looking forward to seeing the finished book. Francesca’s current project – Routine – has involved her transforming her body within the relatively short space of a year through the adoption of bodybuilding training, diet, and finally competition, and we did another shoot together at Francesca’s first bodybuilding competition – Miss Plymouth 2009 – a few weeks later where I produced documentary photographs both backstage and front of house of the preparation and competition. I decided to do a little Q&A session with Francesca to give a better insight into what the project is all about.
SK: How did this project begin; where did the idea come from?
FS: The idea for the project grew initially from working with [bodybuilder and gym owner] Stuart Core on a different project – Horticultural Healing – a rehabilitation project for clients with acquired brain injury. Stuart collaborated on a series of photographic outcomes to the project, also working with a magician Christopher Howell; the photographer for this project was Manuel Vason – commissioned by Groundwork South West in Plymouth. Also around the same time I had been working at Derriford hospital in the Histopathology lab – which included the cytology unit and also the morgue – here I was working with the body in a dislocated, close up and visual way, using microscopes to examine, and learning more about bodily and cellular structures. With both of these projects on my mind and also at the time feeling a dissatisfaction with elements of my practice, the idea formed to use my own live body as more than a ‘tool’ within my work. To attempt to make the body/life into an artwork, in some sense. I started going to Stuart’s gym – Core Fitness – and felt aware it was unlike most gyms I had been to, and that the atmosphere was quite different. I felt fascinated when I heard men talk about food, and when they were so critical about their physical form and aimed for constant improvement. I talked my idea over with Stuart, and with his and Lewis Breed’s help and consistent advice and support I began to body-build. It took me some time to get around a few aspects of it; as a woman the focus had always been on eating less and losing weight, lots of cardio etc, but to body-build I had to completely change my diet and actually eat all the food I was told too and aim to gain weight. It did take me a while to really understand – and stop fighting what I’d been brought up culturally to believe about my body. To be honest this took me a couple of months – where initially I lost weight rather than gained, but it did eventually sink in! I set the goal of competing in a regional bodybuilding contest to have a goal and timetable to work to. This gave me 8 months of gaining and 4 months dieting down for competition. I gained a stone and a half in my gaining period and lost it during my diet – although my body changed dramatically over the year – and although I was the same weight at the beginning and the end of the year I looked completely different.
SK: How does such a long term project translate into an individual live performance piece; for example the Pigs Of Today Are The Hams Of Tomorrow show which you’ll be appearing in?
FS: Simply – I don’t think it can. I have always thought that one of the biggest and more difficult tasks of being an artist is in the selection of what you show. Obviously with this work, it has become impossible show to everything – and really now this year is coming to an end it feels more that the process of making work has just started rather than finished. Competitive bodybuilding has two main elements - the work that you put into your body, lifestyle, food & exercise – and the showmanship of posing and performing on stage. For the Pigs Of Today Are The Hams Of Tomorrow project, I am going back to my established one-to-one performance practice with some of what I have learnt from the performative side of bodybuilding. I am looking at the piece as a long slow tense piece of choreography where viewers have the opportunity to view one at a time.
SK: What you were aiming to achieve when you started this project; were there specific goals you had when you begun, and if you did do you think you’ve realised them or have they changed during the process?
FS: Apart from the duration act of bodybuilding for a year, there were initially a number of aims or ideas; these were partly to do with data collection and to investigate masculinity and feminity. The data collection I found fell to pieces as I went along. I found the process of bodybuilding itself to kind of wipe it out; it seemed to become irrelevant - and the data really didn’t change much! As I became more immersed in the lifestyle of bodybuilding it seemed less verbal or intellectual – but almost more of a meditative act – more about calm concentration and attitude making it possible to push yourself further and further; which somehow left less room for diary keeping. I was also interested in investigating masculine and feminine beauty; what attributes a female could take on or borrow from masculinity and where these boundaries between feminine and masculine lay in terms of the aesthetic of the body. I gave myself the goal to compete to give me a real objective to work towards and to help me to try to follow the process to the best of my ability, and also for the work to exist in the world of bodybuilding rather than just that of art. During the process most of my goals have changed as I have begun to understand more about competitive bodybuilding and can contemplate more of what its potential is within my art practice. I have decided to continue bodybuilding and competing, and using it as source and fuel for my artwork; I feel a year is really only enough time to get started and I am still enthusiastic and excited about what the future possibilities and dialogues can be for this work.
Francesca Steele will be performing ‘Routine’ at the Pigs Of Today Are The Hams Of Tomorrow taking place at Royal William Yard in Plymouth over the 22nd/23rd/24th of January 2010 with the book publication launch taking place on the 21st.
Plymouth Arts Centre presents The Pigs of Today are the Hams of Tomorrow, a curatorial collaboration with the Marina Abramović Institute for Preservation of Performance Art. The Pigs of Today are the Hams of Tomorrow will stage, document and discuss groundbreaking international performance art in order to examine and sustain the future of the medium. The Pigs of Today are the Hams of Tomorrow takes place over three days at Royal William Yard with performances by six renowned artists and artist-collectives.
This is the first curatorial project of the Marina Abramović Institute. Marina Abramović has pioneered performance art for over four decades on an international scale. Her major retrospective at the Museum of Modern Art, New York, opens in March 2010.
The Pigs of Today are the Hams of Tomorrow is a translation of the title of a conceptual piece of writing by Georg Jappe published by KunstForum International in 1978 on the contemporary state of art practice in relation to global political agendas.
Nicolas Roche Portrait in the Irish Independent
January 11th, 2010 § 0
Elinchrom Ranger Quadra First Thoughts
January 8th, 2010 § 15
A few weeks back I decided to bite the bullet and invested in a Ranger Quadra system from Elinchrom after a long period of personal dissatisfaction with my lighting equipment. The problem I’ve had with lighting gear is that I love small flash; I’m a big fan of Nikon speedlights for their compact size, light weight, and the fact that they run on AA batteries – all of which makes them perfect for traveling to and working on location – the downside being that they’re short on power and you’re somewhat limited on the choice of available light modifiers. Last year I decided to step up to big lights with some Bowens Gemini Pro 750 watt heads and packs; the Bowens lights work flawlessly and with power to spare, but the heads are the size and weight of a breeze block and the packs aren’t far behind… Plus never having used mono-light heads with battery packs previously I naively assumed that the modelling light would work with a pack which of course it doesn’t because it would drain too much power; this is a small but important point as one of my frustrations with speedlights was the lack of a modeling light – not because I need to see what the light is doing but because I often find myself working in very low light and can’t actually see the subject; I’ve used everything from a bike headlight to my iPhone on past shoots (just one of many reasons I use a Nikon D3; the auto-focus never lets me down). Elinchrom debuted the Ranger Quadra system last year which bridges the gap between small and big flash; significantly smaller and lighter than the standard Elinchrom Ranger system but still capable of using Elinchrom’s impressive range of light modifiers and with significantly more power and better raw light quality than a speedlight. Plus it features an LED modeling light which due to the low power requirements of LED bulbs allows it to be run from the pack; as far as I’m aware this is the first time this has been done and it’s a huge coup for Elinchrom.
I’ve had the chance to do a couple of shoots with the Ranger Quadra heads and packs now so here are my initial thoughts:
I went for the ‘kit’ option as it’s by far the best way to buy into the Ranger Quadra system; you get two heads, one pack, two batteries, Skyport trigger and all the neccessary cables (plus a carry strap for the pack) etc and it all comes in hard case. I chose the S heads as the flash duration on full power is still 1/1300 which puts it way ahead of the already very fast speedlights. Two heads will run off one pack but it’s an asymmetric power output and you cannot control each head independently; it’s split 66%/33% which gives a two to one ratio; this really limits the use of the second head and so I’ll be adding a second pack at some point. The upside of the asymmetric power distribution however is that if you’re using one head then the ‘A’ socket provides maximum power while the ‘B’ socket gives lower power and a shorter flash duration.
The Ranger Quadra pack is compact and lightweight and features an integrated Skyport receiver as well as a sync socket (jack cable type) for using with Pocket Wizards or any other type of radio trigger (or even a sync cable if you want to go old school…) plus there’s a built in photocell for optical slave triggering. There are plenty of options and settings but I certainly wouldn’t want to try and navigate the menu system without the manual to hand; personally I don’t see this being a big issue as I have a pretty set way of working but if you need or like to chop and change then you may find this frustrating (even something as simple as turning the ready beep off requires going into the menu system).
The heads are very small, and very light; the LED modeling light is a huge plus and works well. On the downside the Quadra specific modifiers are limited and you’ll really want the RQ-EL adaptor which allows the use of use of the excellent range of Elinchrom modifiers. The adaptor replaces both the standard reflector and bracket and provides a heavier duty support for the head; this provides support for any Elinchrom softbox, beauty dish, or octabox up to 100cm. I’ve been using the 100cm Rotalux Softbox and the quality is superb. One problem with adding the adaptor is that the head then won’t fit in the hard case which is perfectly formed for the kit as it’s sold; it’s easy to take the adaptor on and off but add in an extra pack (as mentioned in a previous paragraph) and that lovely hard case becomes redundant and so I’m already considering transferring everything to a shoulder bag or wheely case. The heads do feel a little plastic-y and fragile as you might expect; time will tell if there’s actually any durability issue as a result, but the plastic umbrella mount is a bit of a worry and works on friction alone; not sure if I’d trust it outdoors; certainly not in a strong wind.
The Skyport trigger is very small compared to the Pocket Wizards that I normally use and the remote power control is a really nice feature to have; I’ve heard that they don’t have the range or are as reliable as Pocket Wizard however and this was born out when the Skyport inexplicably stopped working mid-way through a short photo-shoot and I had to switch to my Pocket Wizards. Upon investigation later the Skyport worked as normal so the cause of the failure is still a mystery.
I was intrigued as to just how much power the 400 Ws pack would give me in practical terms and fortunately I got to find out pretty quickly; this band portrait was shot at F14 ISO 200 with a single head and softbox at full power and backed up enough to provide an even light across all five subjects. Power can be adjusted by 1/10th of a stop up to one full stop per push via the settings menu, and if you like shooting at large apertures the pack dials down very low via the ‘B’ power output. I haven’t tested it thoroughly at the low end yet but I have taken photos at F2.8 ISO 200 which is much lower than I can dial my Bowens 750W heads down to without backing them up and losing the softness.
So is the Ranger Quadra system any good? Well, yes but that’s not really the point. Lights – like camera bodies and lenses – are just tools and whether they work well can be largely irrelevant; they need to be the correct tool for the job; that’s to say that they need to be best tool for the kind of work you do and the images you want to produce. I have to travel a lot with my equipment; often on planes and trains and usually without an assistant, as well as hiking around on outdoor location shoots so my gear needs to be light and portable, plus I need to be able to set it up anywhere so it can’t be reliant on AC power. Typically I don’t need huge amounts of power. So while the Ranger Quadra isn’t perfect (what is?), it’s a great system that strikes the right balance between small and big flash; and before Elinchrom stepped in with the Quadra that gap used to be pretty huge.
Band Photography – Brotherhood of the Lake
January 6th, 2010 § 1
Music has played such a huge role in shaping me and my work and so my one big regret so far is that I don’t get to photograph many bands and musicians; well 2010 is going to be different… My first shoot of the year was with Brotherhood of the Lake; a Devon based band ‘intent on creating innovative, heavy music based around solid song writing and an energetic live show’ to create promotional portraits of the group. The band were great to work with despite the freezing temperatures and biting wind on location at Dartmoor as well as the usual down-time between set-ups and locations of which we squeezed in three in total with a few different options.
I’d already tech scouted the first two locations and knew exactly what images I wanted from each but I also had a third location in mind if time allowed; fortunately not only did we have the time but the band knew of somewhere close-by that fitted exactly what I needed; an old ruined manor house hidden away in the woods near Burrator that provided a dark grey stone backdrop and shade from the winter sun.
The guys had been killing time with a bag of Mega Sour Apple Sweets and a video camera; Rusty (guitarist) kindly offered me one but I thought better of it and figured I’d rather steal their idea and photograph each of them choking one down. I thought Rob (vocalist) was going to lose his lunch.
Check out the Brotherhood of the Lake MySpace Page for more info and a teaser for their forthcoming album debut Iron Sails.
Oli Beckingsale For Shred Magazine
December 10th, 2009 § 0

Issue 51 of Shred magazine is now available featuring my photos of British cross-country mountain bike legend and Giant Global Team rider Oli Beckingsale on the cover and illustrating the feature interview; I shot these images way back in the summer in Oli’s hometown of Bristol and it’s great to finally see them in print. Read on-line or order a good old fashioned hard-copy HERE or pick one up from any good UK bike shop.



RaceFace Fall/Winter Jacket Adverts
December 7th, 2009 § 0
Holga 120N vs Nikon D3
December 4th, 2009 § 1

I’ve been meaning to experiment a little more with the Holga 120N since I picked one up nearly a year ago; if you’re unfamiliar with Holga they’re a Chinese company that produce 120 film format ‘toy’ cameras that feature not only a plastic body but also a plastic lens; the cheap construction produces photographs that have a distinctive quality (or lack of it), plus you never know what you’re going to get back from the lab. I specifically ordered the Holga 120N as it features a hotshoe for mounting a flash, with the intention of hooking it up to some lights; there’s something pretty hilarious about plugging a Pocket Wizard radio transceiver into the hotshoe of a camera that costs less than £20 including shipping from China, and then syncing it with a 750 watt flash head and power pack… The frame on the left is (obviously…) from the Holga, shot on Kodak Tri-X 400 and straight out of the film scanner (no additional post production), while the right hand frame is from the Nikon D3. The subject is Devon based artist Clem So who’s a huge talent and was a great pleasure to work with; we got a lot of great images from the shoot so I’ll blog some more about my sitting with him in due course.
Update: finally got a decent scan of the Holga/Tri-X negative (the above was a lo-res scan straight from the lab); what a difference… You can really see the Holga weirdness on this; looks like something from a drunken dream.






















