I have given this away for free

Last month I visited the Netherlands Photo Museum in Rotterdam and saw Alfredo Jaar’s The Sound of Silence exhibition. Amongst the exhibition was a huge pile of posters that were given away free to visitors. The poster reads “You do not take a photograph. You make it.” I took two away with me and have framed one and am now giving away the second (seen above) completely free.

To be in with a chance of winning it just leave a comment in the comments section below. At 1.00pm UK time on Friday 22nd March I will pick one person from all those that have commented below. I’ll then send the poster to whoever wins, wherever they are in the world. The poster is 70x 70cms and will be sent unframed in a poster tube by Royal Mail.

Good luck.

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- AND THE WINNER IS!!!!:

Congratulations to Dan Clarke, whose name was drawn out of the small glass bowl at 1.00pm on deadline day:

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New series – Street Artists

At some point earlier in the year I drove past a road that was named after one of the master painters.  Sadly I’ve got no memory of where it was or even to which artist the road was named after but I let out a loud laugh as we drove on. It was such an unremarkably drab British street off a dual carriageway somewhere, sprinkled with low rise grey housing and not a lot else. It was totally at odds with the works of the painter that it was a misguided homage to. It was the kind of place that George Shaw would paint.

It got me thinking about other streets and roads that were named after or in honour of other artists. I knew that there was a street named after Van Gogh in Isleworth to honour the less than a year he spent teaching there. I was also aware of Hogarth Lane, a terrible stretch of road that’s almost impossible to avoid on the way in or out of London and more of an insult than a tribute to the artist that it is named after, who’s former house still stands nearby.

Wheat Field with Cypresses – Vincent Van Gogh.

Van Gogh Close – Isleworth.

I decided to look into other streets named after artists that were within a reachable distance of home and found that there were quite a few and after a bit of planning the idea for Street Artists came to fruition.

I would love to know how the decision-making process behind calling a road through a drab new estate of low rise flats Rossetti Road came about. Was there a local councillor who had dreamt of a life in the arts finally realising his dream by bestowing high culture on the local people of Bermondsey? When naming streets do town planners think that people might be fooled into thinking an area is a bit less shit if it’s named after a 17th century Baroque master?

At some point there must be the realisation that naming a dull unspectacular street after one of Britain’s most famous landscape painters seems like a bit of a cruel joke. Whilst researching this series I discovered that there are usually a few streets near each other named after artists or other notable people from a similar era. In some cases the local council appears to have gone all out and named street after boring street after artists.

The Hay Wain – John Constable

Constable Gardens, Edgware, North London.

These photos aren’t exactly a massive departure from a lot of my other work but the opportunity to show the potential folly of naming somewhere so pedestrian and normal after artists like Van Gogh, Rubens, or Raphael – masters of their craft who created staggeringly beautiful artworks that sell for fortunes – was something I couldn’t resist.

Full list of artists:

William Blake – http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Blake
John Constable – http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Constable
Thomas Gainsborough – http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Gainsborough
William Hogarth – http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Hogarth
Hans Holbein – http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hans_Holbein_the_Younger
Edwin Henry Landseer – http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edwin_Henry_Landseer
L.S. Lowry – http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/L._S._Lowry
John Everett Millais – http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Everett_Millais
Henry Raeburn – http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry_Raeburn
Raphael – http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Raphael
Rembrandt – http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rembrandt
Dante Gabriel Rossetti – http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dante_Gabriel_Rossetti
Peter Paul Rubens – http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peter_Paul_Rubens
Titian – http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Titian
J.M.W. Turner – http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/J._M._W._Turner
Anthony Van Dyck – http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anthony_van_Dyck
Vincent Van Gogh – http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Van_Gogh

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New series coming soon

I’ve been working on a new project for the past few months. Below is an out-take from the series which will hopefully be online within the next week or two.

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New series – Olympic City

Olympic City – London, 2012.

With the Olympics due to take place this year in the city that I’ve lived in for over a decade I had been looking for a way in which I could incorporate it into a photographic project. I’d not had much luck when I saw the words “London 2012” written in isolation from anything connected in any way to the Olympic Games. It struck me that, as well as being synonymous with the Olympics, in its most basic form ‘London 2012’ simply denoted a specific place and a brief period of time.  It also struck me that the reality of London in 2012 was light years away from how it was being portrayed by those hawking this year’s Olympic Games to the rest of the world. After looking around for further ideas as to how I could build a photography series around this vague idea, I stumbled across these words from my main supplier of rage, Boris Johnson, the Mayor of London:

“I want to ensure that London looks its best for the millions of visitors who will come to the capital, and the billions around the globe who will watch the Games broadcast. This is more than just delivering an unforgettable Games from the Opening to the Closing Ceremony. This is about the look and feel of every corner of the capital itself – whether the Host Boroughs, the West End, or the whole of Greater London.”
Boris Johnson – Mayor of London, 2012.

And there it was, buried somewhere in his re-election manifesto, some empty drivel about making every square inch of London “look and feel” good. It made me wonder what London he lives in. As soon as I read that sentence I thought just how utterly impossible that would be. Dozens of places instantly came to mind that would need years of investment and redevelopment before they’d look and feel anything other than the forgotten and rundown or heavily industrial areas that they currently were. Also, the whole statement is so openly vague that it is meaningless – even the opening words “I want to ensure…” sounds purposefully unclear; it’s not a promise of anything, not a commitment to do anything or even a statement of intent, just something he wants. It’s almost as though he doesn’t realise that he has the power to do exactly what he wishes to see happen.

My overriding issue with Johnson’s statement was with who he wanted to make London look and feel good for. It’s not for people who’ve lived here all their life, not people like me who been here for a decent chunk of their life, or even newcomers to London. It’s for visitors and people watching TV in foreign countries. In his own re-election campaign for the office of Mayor of London Boris Johnson prioritises people who’ll be in the city for (at most) two weeks and other people who won’t even be here at all. These are the people who take preference over the 7 million people who live in the city and this is a man whose sole responsibility in office is making London look and feel good. It isn’t limited to two weeks of the year when everyone’s looking; it’s a year round responsibility and as the elected Mayor it is his duty to the entire population of London to make sure it is something that he strives for daily.

Alongside Johnson’s desire to please everyone but those who live here, it was the presentation of London in the adverts of the Games’ corporate sponsors that made me want to take these photographs. Though entirely predictable the perpetuation of the myth of London in these adverts only serves to ignore the reality of life in the city and only helps to preserve the status quo. I never expected EDF or Coca-Cola to suddenly feel a philanthropic urge to throw billions of pounds at inner city housing or improving the transport infrastructure, but seeing London in this way made me want to depict a London that I recognise, not the one that British Airways served up that makes London look like a Narnia of permanent sunshine and happiness (whilst simultaneously desecrating the sacred memory of Joe Strummer.)

By portraying London in this way it overlooks its history and diversity as well as its complexity. London is not an easy city to live in; it’s expensive, vast, often dirty, overcrowded. Again, I never expected it to be portrayed in any other way than that in which it has been in the run up to the Olympics. But I want people to realise that behind the political glitz and the advertising agency’s depictions of the city there is another London that is being temporarily and purposefully forgotten and that this completely detracts from the city. By ignoring the reality of the city the issues that effect and sometimes blight it are also ignored, and this can only be a detrimental thing.

No city on earth is ever just its landmarks. For a city to exist it needs an infrastructure and more often than not infrastructure is ugly. It will also have a history and it will have areas that get forgotten and neglected as attention and industry drifts away to other parts of town or other parts of the world. New York isn’t just 5th Avenue and Broadway, it’s also Hunts Point and Willets Point; Venice is not just the Grand Canal or the Rialto Bridge, it’s also the Piazzale Roma. In the same way there are large parts of London where the look and feel are unavoidably grim but these places are just as much a part of the city as Buckingham Palace or Tower Bridge and are often an essential part of the fabric of the city.

Of course I’m aware that London is one of the world’s most iconic cities and that it is home to some of the most phenomenal buildings, streets, museums, galleries, and parks that are the envy of the world. I know that people will always be drawn towards London, either as a place to visit or a place to live and that by presenting London in the way that I have I could be just as easily accused of showing a distorted one-sided view of the city as BA and the organisers of the Olympics. My only aim with these photographs has been to offer some balance and some reality as to how London really looks in 2012.

The images used in this blog post are out-takes from the series. On a technical note, this series was shot on 120 film using a Yashicamat LM. The films were processed and scanned by Peak Imaging. I didn’t want to rush this series and wanted to be slightly more methodical in my approach to taking the photos. When shooting with a digital camera I tend to rush and usually end up disappointed with the resulting photos. Shooting on film tends to slow me down and I’ve always been happy with the results I get from this camera, which is why I chose to use it for this series.

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New series – Sticker Politics

I was recently given a book called Badges by Philip Attwood, which documents the collection of badges on display at the British Museum. The book details the earliest known badges worn in the middle ages to those worn in the modern day and explains how over the past century or so badges have become a popular way to indicate an individual’s political or ideological allegiance. In it are examples of badges worn all over the world, from apartheid-era South Africa to supporters of the Solidarity movement in Poland in the 1980s, anti and pro-Vietnam war badges worn in the USA to environmental and anti-nuclear campaigns in Europe in the 1980s.

It was the section that looks at British politics and the trade union movement that struck a chord and triggered my Sticker Politics series. Looking at the badges from the UK from the 1980s that oppose cuts to public services and demonising a polarising (and often hated) Conservative Prime Minister made me realise just how similar the politics of today are to the politics of a generation ago. These badges made me think of the stickers I’d seen pasted up across London – on lamp-posts, drain pipes, phone boxes, traffic lights, post-boxes, bus stops, on the underground – calling for a similar protection of public services, and made me think about the wider range of issues that people seem to care enough about to deface public and private property championing a position or cause.


I was also drawn to the medium of the sticker. In times of 24 hour rolling news, social media and PR saturation the idea of putting up a small sticker on a lamp-post seems a very old-fashioned way of highlighting a political cause or message. Yet in terms of the numbers of people that message can reach it still seems to be one that can be fairly successful, depending on where they’re located. One sticker in the series is pasted up outside London Bridge station, which sees over 50million people pass through it each year.

The main bulk of the stickers photographed in the series have an anti-austerity message, which is shaping up to be the most defining issue of modern political times. The National Health Service and public service pensions are very emotive issues, and most of these stickers were photographed on streets that were on the route of protest marches opposed to public service cuts.


As well as anti-austerity politics there are also a number of stickers that highlight specific local, national and international campaigns. Ideally I wanted to capture a broad snapshot of our current political climate, to see how it compares to that of the recent past and also to act as a document which can be looked back upon in the future when times may have changed or when people might still be campaigning on similar issues to those of today.

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New work coming soon

Here’s a recent out-take from one of the latest projects I’m currently working on. I hope to have two new series online soon, both are in the final stages of preparation. Stay tuned.

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An Olympic Legacy

The 2012 London Olympic Games is less than 100 days away. When the announcement that the games were to be held in London was made in 2005 it was greeted with a mixed reaction. Generally, Britain’s athletes and athletics fans were delighted that the games would take place in Britain. Many people who live and work in London or the south east were either a bit more cautious about the whole thing or completely opposed to it. Concerns ranged from the disruption that staging an event of this magnitude would cause to people who live and work in London to the staggering amount of public money that the games would cost to host.

Even in the heady days of 2005, before the advent of sub-prime mortgage based financial ruin and monolithic austerity cuts, many were a little anxious about how the estimated cost of £9 billion that the games was suggested to cost would be funded. At this point it is worth noting that the costs of building the venues and infrastructure are separate from the cost of organising the games. The cost of the new venues such as the new Olympic stadium and the Aquatics centre are publicly funded, whilst the event itself is funded by private money. The London Organising Committee of the Olympic Games and Paralympic Games (a.k.a LOCOG) is a private sector company owned by the British Government.

Being such a global event meant that the Olympics would inevitably be heavily sponsored and it doesn’t take a marketing genius to anticipate that the companies that would be able to afford to sponsor the games include some of the largest brands on the planet. The London Olympics has 11 Worldwide Olympic Partners (including Visa, McDonalds and Coca-cola), 7 Official Olympic Partners (such as Lloyds, EDF and BP) and 7 Official Olympic Supporters (amongst whom are Deloitte and Cadbury). The role of business in funding the Olympics is not something the organisers have tried to hide. Yet it has become impossible to avoid the opinion that the Olympics is as much about creating as huge a profit as possible for the companies that are sponsoring it as it is about athletes competing for medals in events that will be the culmination of years of training and sacrifice in moments that will define their entire lives.

As much as anything the organisers of this Olympics have trumped up the importance of leaving a legacy for London once the games have concluded. Clearly this is an attempt to avoid being stuck with the embarrassment of building huge new venues at great expense that nobody ever uses once the games are over, as reportedly was the case in Athens in 2004, and this is obviously a good idea. But the Olympics are also an attempt to show off London as somewhere companies can come to invest precious money in, and bring with it the magic formula of jobs and growth that post-financial apocalypse London and Britain is so desperate for. This is the legacy that’s meant to benefit Londoners (and, by proxy, the rest of the UK). A few new parks (which will be privately owned), a few new transport routes, and a massive statue do not a legacy make.

According to the London 2012 website “The Games will leave a key legacy of national benefits in culture, sport, volunteering, business and tourism”, which sounds a bit vague. What isn’t vague are the rules and regulations that the organisers of the games have put in place to protect the business interests of their sponsors. A 21 page document on ‘brand protection’ stipulates the do’s and don’ts for businesses thinking of cashing in on the Olympics in ways that might infringe on the profits of those sponsoring the games. This goes so far as to state that certain words cannot be used together to imply an association with the Olympics. These are called Listed Expressions. The document states:

“The Listed Expressions are….any two of the words in list A below OR any word in list A with one or more of the words in list B below:

A
Games, Two Thousand and Twelve, 2012, Twenty-Twelve
B
London, medals, sponsors, summer, gold, silver, bronze

For example, the following phrases use the Listed Expressions and someone would be likely to fall foul of the law if they used them without LOCOG’s authorisation:

–– ‘Backing the 2012 Games’
–– ‘Supporting the London Games’”

So if you’re a small company based in London hoping to create a bit of business when the Olympics come to town and wish to create an advert or a promotional offer you cannot use the name of the city in which you’re based in conjunction with the number that depicts what year it is in case you happen to take a few pounds away from Coca-Cola or Visa. My own rather rudimentary research suggests that the total profits in 2010 of the 11 Olympic Worldwide partners came in at just under $90billion. This article in the Guardian shows the extent to which the almighty brands sponsoring the games are being protected by laws and regulations on copyright and what the Olympics organising committee calls ‘ambush marketing’.

Other examples of how the sanctity of the Olympic Games’ sponsors is being kept sacred include allowing McDonalds to be the only branded food in the Olympic Park and Athletes Village. Just imagine for a moment just how much money that guarantees McDonalds over the two weeks that the Olympics is held. Buying Olympic tickets or want some souvenir tat from the official Olympic shops? Then if you’re paying by card it has to be a Visa card (“As a proud sponsor of the London 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Games, only Visa (debit, credit, and prepaid) can be used to purchase tickets.”) Proctor and Gamble (annual profit in 2010 = $12.7billion) have teamed up with the Mayor of London to ask Londoners to volunteer to clean up the city using Flash, Ariel and Febreze, products made by Proctor and Gamble.

Whilst the profiteering enjoyed by some of the globe’s larges businesses that pretend to be at one with the Olympic spirit is unbearable enough, what I find completely at odds with the idea of a legacy is the impact of such protectionism upon the people who live, work or travel in London. We’ve already seen examples of the heavy handed security that make up laws in order to prevent people from taking photos or filming, completely legally, on public land, and this is months away from the start of the games. Transport for London are telling us to prepare for two weeks of travel nightmares when the games take place, whilst some roads, called Games Lanes, will be for the sole use of “athletes, officials, media and others who will make the Games happen.” The people of London are essentially being told to bend over backwards.

In his re-election manifesto, London Mayor Boris Johnson claims “In these difficult economic times, the 2012 Games will now show off this city as the best big city on earth.” You’d expect to be able to take a photograph of a major landmark in the ‘best big city on earth’. You’d also hope that the interests of some of the biggest companies on the planet might not take outright precedent over businesses and companies based in the best big city on earth. Johnson modifies his statement a little later to say “It is critical we use the Games to showcase London as the best big city in the world to invest in.” It’s as though the thinking is that investment automatically equals a better city, which it doesn’t. It’s hard to see how this is anything other than a government body scouting for investment from a selection of global companies who know that they’ll come out with a massive profit at the end of it. In their eyes the promise of new jobs seems to cover the requirements of legacy and improvements to the city, even though there will be no real effect on the people who live here now and will still be here once the Olympics are over and McDonalds, Visa and Coca-Cola have gone home.

Further reading:

Anna Minton – The London Olympics: A Festival of Private Britain.
John Hillary – Reclaiming the Olympics.

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File Magazine

File Magazine asked me to name some of the things about London that inspire me for their Citylikeyou feature. Find out the places that I recommend in the capital here.

http://file-magazine.com/

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Tallinn

A few cameraphone photos from a couple of days spent in Tallinn just before Christmas.

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Print sale – Venice

I have two sets of five 8×10″ hand made prints of Venice for sale. The photos were taken in February 2011 and are printed on Ilford Multigrade IV RC Deluxe pearl paper. Each print is individually signed and numbered. The prints are available for £10 each or as a pair for £17, plus £2 for postage in the UK. (If you’d like to buy from outside of the UK get in touch and I’ll calculate the shipping costs depending on where you are.)

The first photo is taken from the Church of San Giorgio Maggiore and looks across to the basilica of Santa Maria della Salute and the area of Dorsoduro on the southern tip of the main islands of Venice:


The second photo overlooks the Grand Canal in the afternoon sunshine from the famous Rialto Bridge:

If you’d like to buy a print, please email me at james@jamesdaviesphoto.com.
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