In a past life, I was a film teacher, photographer, theatre director and film editor. Now a psychogeographer and Jungian explorer searching for my Anima, and some purpose.
Bertrom.
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The weather has gone pear shaped…
The river rearranged the landscape by night: darkness was a hollow body where the sounds of the world were different from those of day.
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The desire to escape the grip of your own child self, trapped in words and images and most of all the hearts of those who love that long-gone version of you, so much they cannot let you go.
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Nan Youngman.
1906-1995.
From before the war to the mid-1960s she was an influential figure in art education, as a teacher, an author and an impressively efficient organiser of exhibitions.
Kiln at Stoke .
Waste Land, Tredegar, South Wales.
Steelworks, Ebbw Vale.
Tony Ray-Jones (1941-1972).
He left us far too early 😔
Elliott Erwitt.
“It's about time we started to take photography seriously and treat it as a hobby.”
John Schabel.
His portraiture project of anonymous airplane passengers. The New York-based photographer would position his telephoto lens at least 100 yards away from departing planes, waiting to capture the faces of unsuspecting travelers as they patiently wait for takeoff.
Beautiful and evocative images.
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Mimi Plumb.
Since the mid-1970s, Plumb has documented life in the US in a way that anticipates today’s social strife and environmental emergency.
“Mimi’s work is not about climate change, per se, but it is about the experience of what it’s like to live in an unstable world.”
Walker Evans (1903-1975).
“Stare. It is the way to educate your eye.”
Images from 1931 - 1962.
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RHINEEsther Kinsky; translated by Iain GALBRAITH ‘Your eye, the wanderer, sees more.’ —Charles OLSON THE RIVER OF MY CHILDHOOD WAS THE...
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