I am a photographer living in the east
of England and am currently completing my BA in photography with the Open
College of the Arts. My background is in
traditional photographic representations of wildlife and landscape, but as I
have progressed through my studies I have begun to question the ways I
represent the world. My current work is
inspired by wilderness and the natural world which I explore by walking. Wilderness or wildness can mean anything from
an untidy garden through to desert; or, according to the Oxford dictionary,
anywhere in its natural state and not civilised, domesticated, tamed,
cultivated or populated. My inspiration
is not the wilderness of wide-open spaces but wilderness on a much smaller
scale. Robert
MacFarlane writes 'I had started
to refocus. I was becoming interested in this understanding of wildness
not as something which was hived off from human life, but which existed
unexpectedly around and within it: in cities, backyards, roadsides, hedges,
field boundaries or spinnies.' The
mountaineer, W.H. Murray, also wrote of the same experience as long ago as
1951. 'Through the very uncertainties of our climb my mind became
unusually observant, embracing many simple things that commonly pass
unregarded. While searching for a handhold the eye would alight on a
blade of grass peeping from a crack, and see the amazing grace of its fluting,
the fresh brightness of its green against the rock; and although the joy was
that of one second the memory lived on.' My work is now beginning to focus on
wilderness on a smaller scale: woodland footpaths or the way an old brick wall
is reclaimed by the wild. It is informed
by photographers and artists such as Eliot Porter, Paul Gaffney, Hamish Fulton
and Richard Long all of whom portray wilderness, often by walking.
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