

When making landscape photographs I tend to start with a very wide view taking in as much of the scene as possible. After a while I begin to settle in to what I am doing and see the micro landscapes and abstracts that I actually find infinitely more interesting than that of the whole. I guess I like details.
A few hours sat at my PC and the cold amnesia
had firmly set in. The collection of images I had made were good. In fact it is
fair to say that an abstract from the set is one of my favourite photographs I
have ever made. I should really find a way of making a nice print of it.




Colne Water is a river that stretches around
five miles from the hamlet of Laneshawbridge, through the town of Colne and
ends in the village of Barrowford. Unlike the Ribble it has a very definite
start and finish. Very much like the Ribble it has a variety of landscape
characteristics from rural through urban fringe, industrial and back to urban
fringe.
It turned out to be a good time to document this
river. Major changes to it were about to happen. Some of the wiers were removed
to allow breeding salmon upstream. No bad thing at least not in my book. Also
permission has just been sought to generate electricity from another part of
the river. Again, in my opinion no bad thing. And then there was also the
demolition of the mill at Waterside.
I tend to take some test shots before I settle
in to producing an essay properly. It quickly became apparent that I had found
a look to the images that I was happy with. This wasn't going to be about big
beautiful landscapes taken during the time of days referred to as the ‘golden
hours’ (that is sunrise and sunset). It wasn't going to be about the wildlife
of the water course and although there would be some small space for it within
the essay the final piece would be more abstract than that.
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Beth Derbyshire & The Ark |
I began shooting the images that would be
included in the final piece without an idea what the final presentation of the
piece would be. In general when I start out shooting an essay, I only have a
vague idea of what the finished piece will be like. This usually evolves and
clears as the process of making photograph continues along. In terms of The
River the final piece would become an audiovisual presentation.
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Model of The Ark |
Some time ago I got involved with Beth Derbyshire’s Ark. This was a converted canal barge that travelled up and
down the Leeds Liverpool Canal showing a multi-screen video installation and
this proved to be an influence on my final piece. Not having access to multiple
screens or projectors I decided that I would create slides with a series of
interchanging images from up and down the river. The soundtrack to the imagery
would be a soundscape created by recording my walk along the river bank. This
hopefully meant that the viewer would be immersed in sights and sounds that I
was seeing and hearing.
The River is made up of around 70 images most of which
are quite abstract or show some small detail often missed by someone walking
along the course of Colne Water. There are some images of the landscape that it
sits in; there are some photographs that document some of the wildlife; some
are quite pretty; others are quite hard to look at.
The River was never going to be a beautiful celebration
of a prized landscape feature. It was always intended to show the viewer how
nature and man affect the landscape in a warts and all manner. I think it
achieves this.
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