Fishing has always been a part of my existence, trips to the shore every weekend with my Nanna and Grandad, obsessing over tales told from family maritime connections.
Read MoreA wander through countries in winter.
Read MoreDocumenting the state of the forest during winter, Watanabe journeys deep and long to capture the diverse visual dynamic inherent to the season often associated with stillness or even death.
Read MoreReading the Landscape shows three states of nature in the primary forests of Indonesia and Malaysia: intact nature, ravaged nature, and artificial nature.
Read MoreIt was a surreal place to be whilst a global pandemic was breaking out, and the chaos I came back to at home just highlighted how remote and peaceful it was on the very Western end of the peninsula.
Read MoreHe rejects superficial beauty and his photographs depict Tsugaru beyond it. His works, which record ever-changing scenery and cultures of his homeland, can also be seen as records of his existence.
Read MoreA moving record of childhood in Britain’s recent past captured in a series of compelling images.
Read MoreThe timeless, deep pull of the ocean is strong; nature is powerful, it will prevail. Dark tides swell and rise, awaiting those who ignore warning signs. Endure and pray not to go under – hope for a lull and weather the storm.
Read MoreIn my childhood free time was spent hour upon goue exploring what seemed like this vast environment. Imagination ran wild, with friends we were explorers, soldiers, tree climbers.
Read MoreAbode where lost bodies roam each searching for its lost one. Vast enough for search to be in vain. Narrow enough for flight to be in vain.
Read MoreThe portraits of schoolchildren on the large centrefolds convey an impression of profound seriousness, which derives perhaps from the continual threat from the untameable forces of nature.
Read MoreA full-time carer for his mother, Jim is, like his subjects, unable to escape from the geographical confines of his hometown and his understanding and sympathy for his struggling neighbours is apparent in every photograph.
Read MoreSqueezed between the A2 and the walls of Greenwick Park lies Folly Pondl a largely forgotten and over-looked little body of water. Once a Victorian boating pond frequented by the ladies and gentlemen of Blackheath it has now returned to nature and is populated by ducks, coots, geese and the occasional rat.
Read MoreTaken during 1986 to 1989, documenting the bustling business hours of the former Kanda Market located in Akihabara.
Read MoreHigh Streets have always been places where you could do your shopping in many and varied independent shops. Recently however, large supermarkets have been nuilt on the outskirts of our towns and as a consequence, with their huge car parks and the ability to buy everything you need in one place, the small independent shops of our high streets have suffered.
Read MoreThe High Fens are one of the last great wildernesses in the Low Countries. It is also the highest area in the Netherlands and Belgium. It is almost 5 degrees colder, there is twice as much rain and on the highest plateaus there is snow about 70 days a year.
Read MoreIt is a spectacular yet sometimes overlooked place and is only recently gaining some of the recognition it deserves as an exceptional destination to visit and for the lucky ones, to live in.
Read MoreThree series of portraits, based on street photographers’ discarded negatives found in the streets of Belo Horizonte between 1992 and 2002. The portraits in this book were made by anonymous “lambe-lambe” photographers in the streets of Belo Horizonte, Brazil.
Read MoreWith him on the journey he had a large-format camera and his fearless curiosity. The series of photos eventuate in an unusual reality relevant perspective, and capture the astonishing non-distance relationship between physicality and nature.
Read MoreA journey through damp lit streets of anonymous cities, an experience that could be frightening – alone, in the dark – but is here infused with poetic sensibility and intrigue.
Read MoreShinrin-Yoku, or forest bathing, is the practice of spending time in the forest for greater health, a strengthened immune system, happiness and a sense of calm.
Read MoreA body of work documenting the Japanese landscape.
Read MoreThe rhythm of the tides, tethered to the waxing and waning of the moon, shapes our very sense of time.
Read MoreSouthwestern features landscapes, portraits and still lifes captured on many walks around South West London over the past ten years.
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