Just over a year ago I, along with another photographer Dylan Line got access to a north Birmingham factory to create a project . Trying not to have preconceived ideas, the factory provided a wealth of themes and projects to explore. In fact, too many.
Read MoreMark Britton
I've been a bit behind with client assignments of late, so it was good to finally meet up with singer songwriter Mark Britton for his artist profile images. Mark's first publicity shots were studio based and he wanted to compliment them with the natural look and feel of being on location.
Read MoreThis is rubbish
This is rubbish...
Read MoreBehind the Image #19
Is it right to flip or are you a flop? In camera only or do you crop? I'm a poet and I didn't ....anyway to what level of editing and size adjustment of your image is OK? For some it is the proportions you framed in camera - anything else is cheating, a lowering of the bar for your abilities of composition and framing.
Read MoreBehind the image#18
In my peripheral vision the fingers of a bloody hand was in my next door neighbours front garden. Once the initial shock of my mistake past, the sight of the picture placed so randomly filled my head with questions.
Read MoreBoxes, boxes everywhere.
There's an age old little cat and mouse game between the street scribblers and the authorities; the freedom of expression and the protection of property that is, for me at least, creating an enjoyable side effect: oddly painted squares everywhere.
Read MoreDreamland
The holiday read packed for the trip to Kent this year was Kate Atkinson's Life After Life. It's central premise begs the question - what would you do if you had the chance to live your life over and over again? Small decisions not only change the course of individual lives but also history.
A day with Matt Stuart
OK, it wasn't an exclusive 'hang out with Matt Stuart day' but the next best thing - a Street Photography workshop in conjunction with the Photographers Gallery in London. As postgraduate fees have gone through the roof, I've decided,for now at least, to keep my continual professional development to attending workshops and buying books. And what a valuable day of learning it was!
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Wish you were here..?
Last year I was lucky enough to visit New York and the South of France within the same month. Both trips generated a lot of images as I was wearing the hats of 'intrepid photographer' and family man - sorry that sounds like a first world problem moan...("Oh, you poor thing, how awful for you...") Anyway, I created a mass of images and never edited the French pictures properly, leaving many unseen and unloved.
Read MoreExplore, go further.
To paraphrase the great David Bailey, we all have a truly great image in us, but the difference with him is he will have many, many more. It is rare to get as many great images in one life time as Bailey, but we can aim for more than just the one.
Read MoreBehind the image #16
It is easy to think of portraits, especially of children, is just of their face, to capture that cheeky smile or particular look in their eyes. But they needn’t always be
Read MoreBehind the image#15
This image was added to the Explore gallery ( a sort of the best images of the day from members) on Flickr this weekend. Really, you may ask incredulously? And to be honest, I don't blame you
Read MoreThe Art of the Street Portrait
From the Humans of New York to the discovered photographs of Vivian Maier it seems that more and more people are getting interested in Street Portraiture.
Read MoreBourke's Regulars Online
Thank you all for your attendance, interest and kind words regarding my recent exhibition and project Bourke's Regulars. It has been a fantastic experience to both create and present, and taught me lessons too numerous to go through here.
Read MoreBehind the Image #14
My recent project work has included many portraits of people with challenging lives in difficult circumstances.....which can be rewarding, but also an emotional drain and ever present reminder of it is there but for the grace of an non existent deity go I.
Read MoreThe Photography Show vs ComicCon
Where it's 'At' this time of year is the NEC Birmingham for the second annual Photography Show. It was bigger, bolder, and by the size of the crowds, more popular than ever.
Although the glinty, shiny pieces of kit did make me feel like a magpie on speed, this year I decided to use my time by listening to the talks of some of them all time greats of photography. The talks from Tom Stoddard. Mary Ellen Mark, Susan Meiselas and my personal favourite Martin Parr inspired both awe and 'what's the point' deflation.
Read MoreOpening Night Invite - RSVP
Friday March 27th 6- 9pm
The Old Print Works
506 Moseley Road
Birmingham
B12 9AH
Not everyone does Facebook and Twitter so by good old fashioned blog and email I cordially invite you to the opening night of the some cities some stories documentary photography exhibition.
A profile of the artist and their work on show can be found via some cities - some stories site and a preview of just some of my project is in the Me & I Photography Project section.
'Here, you're a photographer, you'll like this..
......is a sentence I've heard in conjunction with many varied subjects. From steam engines to horses, flowers to motor racing, my love of photography has placed me and these subjects together firmly in the minds of others. That's not to say beautiful images can't be created of these topics - far from it- it's just I'm not the person to do it. And on a recent trip to the Cornish coast, I've realised I'm not made for landscape photography.
I'm not sure if it has anything to do with being born and raised in Birmingham, its furthest from the coast claim and more than its fare share of concrete, but taking photographs of the great outdoors just doesn't come naturally to me. I'm no heathen - I love a brisk walk on the beach and a hillside ramble, but given a choice and a camera, the energy and unpredictability of the urban setting wins every time. So, here are my attempts to put aside my concerns, get out of my comfort zone and bring urban photography to a coastal setting.
Till next time...
Matt Peers
An act of remembrance
A year ago today my Mum died. Her struggle with the effects of vascular dementia came relatively peacefully to an end.
Dementia, I've realised since, is often misunderstood or something, in polite company, from which to shy away. In the media it is Alzheimer that's generally discussed. Many of our ideas of what it is like to suffer and provide care are formed by TV Dramas. A Derek Jacobi type actor usually depicts a character that starts to forget his keys, then his way home, and, in the third act, he heartbreakingly can't remeber his wife of 40 years.
My experience of my Mum's vascular dementia was not like this. Loss of mobility, emergency visits to A&E and the corrosion of a personality is what I witnessed. Just as my youngest son was developing new skills and abilities week by week, the reverse was the case with my Mother. Trips to the local shops and to my home stopped; walking independently, then with the aid of a frame and even standing unsupported were all, one after the other, consigned to the past. Her facial features changed, her voice and vocabulary became clipped; taking the person I knew further and further away in stark, irreversible stages. I'm grateful that my immediate family and I were always remembered, but similarly with Alzheimer sufferers, memories of recent and past times were lost forever.
I started to regularly photograph her at that time, and although I knew others wouldn't want to see the images, they helped me to understand her condition and its effects. Sometimes I could barely see the real her through her condition, other times it receded to the extent I could see and speak to her in some sense of normality. I appreciate people may not wish to remember such times, let alone photograph them, but for me it has been an important part of understanding her dementia; separating it from her as a person and putting her final days in context with the happier times of her life.
More information can be found at: http://www.nhs.uk/Conditions/vascular-dementia/Pages/Introduction.aspx
Donations to help improve the life of sufferers at my Mum's Care Home can be gifted to: https://www.justgiving.com/Broadeningchoices-Forolderpeople
Behind the image #13
The first day of our holiday in an unseasonably warm February half term.
At the time the image symbolised the essence of childhood memories; a family seaside holiday on the beach, sea views, ice cream and uncomplicated good times.
Now, a year on, it is an image full of melancholy and a reminder of a fragile innocence about to be forever broken.
Till next time
Matt Peers