WCC Contemporary Photography Group 'Viewpoint' May 2020 Vol. I

Page 1

Volume I



Contents

Bob Oakley - ‘The Spirit of The North’ Peter Young - ‘Closed’ John Hoath - ‘Abstract Photography’ Stewart Bourne - ‘Perceptions of Reality’ Clive Haynes - ‘Home by the Sea’ Dr. Chrales Ashton - ‘Weston out of Season’ Tessa Mills - ‘The Strength of Shadows’ Nigel Reader - ‘The Clock is Ticking’ Eric Williams - ‘Legacy’ Martin Addison - ‘Reality as Fugitive’


Bob Oakley

Spirit of the North East

The industrial areas of Tyneside have a particular attraction for me. Much industry has gone but in the grime, neglect and decay there is for me beauty. I have tried to portray what I feel about the area both from the photographs themselves and the processing. Black & White seems appropriate for an area that for generations was the Coal Capital of the UK. The industrial and commercial pioneers who created the wealth were straight-talking, no-nonsense people with a vision. Many lived in the suburb of Jesmond where they built mansions, villas and churches with the same zeal they displayed in business. Newcastle in particular is re-inventing itself. What remains of the past is a memorial to those rough, tough entrepreneurs.


Bob Oakley 01 - Amble Northumberland.


Bob Oakley 02 - Bridge Jesmond Dene.


Bob Oakley 03 - Wet Day Newcastle Civic Centre.


Bob Oakley 04 - High Level Bridge Newcastle.


Bob Oakley 05 - Tynemouth Coastguard Station.


Bob Oakley 06 - St. James’s Pk Football Stadium.


Bob Oakley 07 - St George’s Jesmond.


Bob Oakley 08 - Dock Gates North Blyth.


Bob Oakley 09 - North Blyth Railway.


Bob Oakley 10 - Tyne Bridge Newcastle.


Bob Oakley 11 - Priorities.


Peter Young Closed

You have the right address. You checked it before you set off. And again, now you’re here. There should be someone in. You’ve rung the bell, more than once, trying not to show your frustration. Now you lean forward, shading your vision by raising your arm and look through the rather grubby window. Signs of life? Well, someone has been here. But no one comes to answer your ring. You look through another window. Nothing moves. You give up and walk on.


Peter Young 01 MacDonalds


Peter Young 02 The Hive


Peter Young 03 Fred’s


Peter Young 04 Pockets


Peter Young 05 Friar Street CafĂŠ


Peter Young 06 Friar Street CafĂŠ


Peter Young 07 Hotel Chocolat


Peter Young 08 Hotel Chocolat


Peter Young 09 Art Shop


Peter Young 10 Hotel Chocolat


Peter Young 11 Patisserie Valerie Chair


John Hoath

Abstract Photography

I am at the moment working on a handmade photo-book. Some of the images to be used are shown here. The book will be entitled ‘Abstract Visions’ and the binding will be Japanese Stab Stitch. I will be using Irish red linen thread for the binding. Some of these images have been seen before at the Club Contemporary meetings. Others have been dredged from my computer catalogue going back some years. I hope to have the book finished in a couple of weeks but it is going slowly at the moment due to construction and design considerations. (Decisions, decisions).


John Hoath 01 The End of the Road


John Hoath 02 Feeling the Warmth


John Hoath 03 Vincent Black Shadow


John Hoath 04 She Loved Tulips


John Hoath 05 Machine No 6


John Hoath 06 Blue Corvette


John Hoath 07 The Petals Fell Early


John Hoath 08 Early Flying Machine


John Hoath 09 The Nuts and Bolts


John Hoath 10 The Devil is in the Detail


John Hoath 11 Black, Grey and Paper White


Stewart Bourne Perceptions of Reality

I am frequently bemused by the world in which I find myself, of people’s perceptions, constructions and maintenance of the ‘reality’ that exists in their minds. As a retired behavioural scientist, I am still both thankful for, and delighted by, this bemusement and will, hopefully, never tire of attempting to peek down the rabbit hole. My photography, such as it is, supports me in this desire. I sometimes ‘see’ things that resonate with me as such glimpses down the rabbit hole in that they seem to indicate more than they are, so I try to make images of them to express this quality. Ruth says that all my images are ‘selfies’, and she may well be correct.


Stewart Bourne 01 Days of future passed


Stewart Bourne 02 Magus


Stewart Bourne 03 exodus


Stewart Bourne 04 Journeys_


Stewart Bourne 05 gestures


Stewart Bourne 06 City of Dreadful Night


Stewart Bourne 07 Babel


Stewart Bourne 08 Once, When We Were Heroes


Stewart Bourne 09 Dementia, the Juggernaut of Subtraction


Stewart Bourne 10 le sifflet magique


Stewart Bourne 11 stranger in a strange land


Clive Haynes Home by the Sea

We’re an island race and the UK is small enough to allow anyone of us to ‘be-beside-the-sea’ within a few hours. However, many of us, even those living near the coast, take our attraction to the sea one more step. We either buy or rent a property at the seaside, which need not be bricks and mortar, or at all grand. Hence the popularity of beach huts as a phenomenon. These jaunty, cheek-by-jowl, tiny dwellings populate seafronts, promenades and beaches in serried ranks, or they’re tucked away between the sand dunes. Often colourful and quirky, many are privately owned, while others are municipally rented-out. They may cost as little as a few pounds per day or change hands at astronomical figures, perhaps as much as a quarter of a million pounds for those in choice locations. This is a selection from a much larger series. The series illustrates how the different styles reflect their owner’s character, their charming quirkiness, and in some cases, their dilapidation. Whether they are a ‘home from home’ or a ‘working-style hut’, they all represent that very British longing ‘to-be-beside-the-sea’, tinged with nostalgia for that golden childhood experience.


Clive Haynes Home by the Sea 01


Clive Haynes Home by the Sea 02


Clive Haynes Home by the Sea 03


Clive Haynes Home by the Sea 04


Clive Haynes Home by the Sea 05


Clive Haynes Home by the Sea 06


Clive Haynes Home by the Sea 07


Clive Haynes Home by the Sea 08


Clive Haynes Home by the Sea 09


Clive Haynes Home by the Sea 10


Clive Haynes Home by the Sea 11


Dr. Charles Ashton Weston Out of Season

A March day in Weston started with a little colour in the sky but rapidly became monochrome. Here is a selection of what I found as I wandered around the town. This was at the beginning of the Covid 19 crisis and there was apprehension in the air.


Charles Ashton 01 Weston Dawn


Charles Ashton 02 A real gent


Charles Ashton 03 Keith Richards Lookalike


Charles Ashton 04 Gloria


Charles Ashton 05 Off to Scramble


Charles Ashton 06 A man and his dog


Charles Ashton 07 On the Way to the Beach


Charles Ashton 08 Vinyl Gloves for an old Skinhead


Charles Ashton 09 The Shelter


Charles Ashton 10 Looks meaner than he is


Charles Ashton 11 Under the Pier


Tessa Mills Shadow Strength

Following on from my fascination of 'Light in Dark Places', I have selected these images which rely upon the shadows as the subject matter. A case of darkness being explored and celebrated! These are all from my holiday in Northern Spain last year. The windows in village houses were all heavily barred because they frequently run bulls through the village centre.


Tessa Mills Shadow Strength 01


Tessa Mills – Shadow Strength 02


Tessa Mills – Shadow Strength 03


Tessa Mills - Shadow Strength 04


Tessa Mills - Shadow Strength 05


Tessa Mills - Shadow Strength 06


Tessa Mills - Shadow Strength 07


Tessa Mills - Shadow Strength 08


Tessa Mills - Shadow Strength 09


Tessa Mills - Shadow Strength 10


Tessa Mills - Shadow Strength 11


Nigel Reader The Clock is Ticking

This is from a series I started 2007 when I worked in central Birmingham. I found the city architecture and public spaces interesting and took photographs as and when I could. I used film, for a variety of reasons, including a desire to force a more considered approach as well as striving for a more documentary or reportage style. I also wanted to record time passing and change within the city and the consequent disappearance of some aspects of it. Creating something permanent (photographic negatives) as opposed to ephemeral (digital data) also seemed a fit. Each of these images is now impossible to replicate because in only a few years demolition and change have brought about some element of permanent change.


Nigel Reader 01 The Clock Is Ticking


Nigel Reader 02 Council House & Nat West Tower


Nigel Reader 03 Congreve Passage


Nigel Reader 04 Madin Central Library


Nigel Reader 05 Iron Man


Nigel Reader 06 Paradise Place


Nigel Reader 07 Out of City


Nigel Reader 08 Misty Water Feature


Nigel Reader 09 Spirit of Enterprise


Nigel Reader 10 Sun Loungers


Nigel Reader 11 Two More Towers


Eric Williams The Legacy

The Cuban mountain range of Topes de Collantes was the Rest and Recreation centre for the Russian and East German troops who were “helping� Cuba thought the 60s, 70s and 80s. When the Berlin Wall came down in 1989, the troops were withdrawn and the Cubans were left with a legacy of military buildings. Some were refurbished, some were never completed. This set of photographs shows the decrepit nature of some of these buildings and how some are being re-used as hotel accommodation.


Eric Williams 01 Ex-Sanitorium Hotel


Eric Williams 02 60s Decor


Eric Williams 03 Troop Barracks


Eric Williams 04 Spectator Seating


Eric Williams 05 Cuban Chic


Eric Williams 06 50s American Influence


Eric Williams 07 Don’t Look Behind Facade


Eric Williams 08 It Was a Good Idea (1987)


Eric Williams 09 Dereliction


Eric Williams 10 Plants Are Taking Over


Eric Williams 11 Concrete & Rust


Martin Addison Reality as Fugitive

Reality is a fugitive thing in photography and can easily be distorted and changed by using photographic techniques. This set of images all change reality considerably by using multiple exposure in my ‘phone. The subjects are everyday things and they were all taken during my walk along the river near my house (following the ’lockdown’ rules of course)


Martin Addison 01 Self Portrait


Martin Addison 02_


Martin Addison 03_


Martin Addison 04_


Martin Addison 05_


Martin Addison 06 Leaf


Martin Addison 07_


Martin Addison 08_


Martin Addison 09_


Martin Addison 10_


Martin Addison 11_


Worcestershire Camera Club Contemporary Photography Group ‘Viewpoint’ Vol. 1 © May 2020


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.