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Daniel Meadows is a pioneer of contemporary British documentary practice. A photographer, documentarian and digital storyteller. He returns to the Bodleian library to muse on his life and archive and the power of photography. Photographer Daniel Meadows is a pioneer of contemporary British documentary practice. A photographer, documentarian and digital storyteller, he has spent his life recording British society, challenging the status quo by working in a collaborative way to capture extraordinary aspects of ordinary life through pictures, audio recordings and short movies. Fifty years ago, photographer Daniel Meadows set out in The Free Photographic Omnibus, a Leyland Titan double-decker remodelled as his mobile home, darkroom and gallery. He drove it around towns and villages and offered free portraits to the people he met on his travels. The photographs became a vast and beautiful archive, now safely deposited in the Bodleian Library. In this talk, Daniel Meadows triumphantly returns to muse on his life and work and the power of photography. He shows examples of his archive and reflects on a lifetime of creative work. The Bodleian Library acquired the full Daniel Meadows Archive in 2018.
Thank you for listening to The Exposed Negative Podcast. Running this podcast takes a lot of time and effort, and we hope you have found it helpful and interesting. If you would like to support us by buying us a beer or coffee, or by helping with the running costs of the show, we would greatly appreciate it. Please consider signing up for our Patreon (https://www.patreon.com/exposednegati...) or making a one-time donation through PayPal (https://www.paypal.me/exposednegative). Thank you for your support! Below are the show notes. Mola light modifiers: https://www.mola-light.com/ United Nations of Photography: https://unitednationsofphotography.com/category/audio-2/podcasts-a-photographic-life/ Miles Aldrige: https://milesaldridge.com/ Platon: http://www.platonphoto.com/ Jake Chessum: https://jakechessum.com/ Mark Mattock: https://www.instagram.com/mark_mattock/?hl=en Oliviero Toscani: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oliviero_Toscani William Klein: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Klein_(photographer) Don McCullin: https://donmccullin.com/don-mccullin/ Bruce Webber: http://www.bruceweber.com/ Herb Ritts: https://www.herbritts.com/ Helmut Newton: https://helmut-newton-foundation.org/en/ Corrine Day: https://www.corinneday.com/home/ Leonard Freed: https://www.magnumphotos.com/photographer/leonard-freed/ John Swannell: http://www.johnswannell.com/about-john-swannell/ Terry O'Neil: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Terry_O'Neill_(photographer) Edward Westons Day Books: https://amzn.to/3VG8Jc7 Russell Miller, Magnum book: https://www.wob.com/en-gb/books/russell-miller/magnum/9780436203732?cq_src=google_ads&cq_cmp=18059580451&cq_con=&cq_med=pla&cq_plac=&cq_net=x#GOR003449848 David Eustice: https://www.davideustace.com/ Dennis Stock James Dean photos: https://www.magnumphotos.com/arts-culture/cinema/james-dean-photographed-by-dennis-stock/ Frank Ockenfels III: https://fwo3.com/ On being a photographer: Bill Jay and David Hurn: https://amzn.to/42qGLU0 Landry Major episode of a Photographic Life: https://unitednationsofphotography.com/2023/03/08/podcast-a-photographic-life-episode-plus-photographer-landry-major/ Daniel Meadows the Ten rules of being a photographer: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/a-photographic-life-121-plus-daniel-meadows/id1380344701?i=1000488539660 Bill Jay film https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wd47549knOU And the website for the film is www.donotbendfilm.com A photographic Life on twitter: https://twitter.com/PhotoLifePod A photographic Life on instagram: https://www.instagram.com/photolifepod/ Desert Island Camera iPhone Desert Island Book The Best of Life magazine: https://amzn.to/44yxIlU
Bonjour à toutes et à tous ! L'épisode n°102 des avis d'Alexis est en ligne, une chronique, un tour décortiqué et évalué. Aujourd'hui, nous allons vous parler d'un tour s'appelant "Cerberus Wallet" de Daniel Meadows. Il a reçu la note de 4/4 coeurs et une note de 2/5 étoiles en difficulté. Le PATREON : https://www.patreon.com/lesamisdalexis La chaine des Alexis Reviews : http://www.youtube.com/c/alexisreviews Mon Instagram : https://instagram.com/lesavisdalexis?igshid=YmMyMTA2M2Y= Mon Facebook : https://www.facebook.com/lesavisdalexis/ Si vous avez des questions, je serai ravi d'y répondre ! Bonne écoute :) Hébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.
Bonjour à toutes et à tous ! L'épisode n°84 des avis d'Alexis est en ligne, une chronique, un tour décortiqué et évalué. Aujourd'hui, nous allons vous parler d'un tour s'appelant "Infamous". Il a reçu la note de 3/4 coeurs et 2/5 étoiles en difficulté. Le PATREON : https://www.patreon.com/lesamisdalexis La chaine des Alexis Reviews : http://www.youtube.com/c/alexisreviews Mon Instagram : https://instagram.com/lesavisdalexis?igshid=YmMyMTA2M2Y= Mon Facebook : https://www.facebook.com/lesavisdalexis/ Si vous avez des questions, je serai ravi d'y répondre ! Bonne écoute :) Hébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.
In this special episode the first of an irregular series of talks with non-photographers involved with photography, Grant Scott speaks with founder/curator/artist/publisher Craig Atkinson about his publishing project Cafe Royal Books. They discuss the pressures of the long form project, publishing decisions, marketing and the impact Cafe Royal Books has had on British documentary photography. Craig Atkinson/Cafe Royal Books Based in Southport, England, Craig Atkinson is a senior lecturer and researcher at the University of Central Lancashire. He founded Café Royal Books in 2005 and new booklets are published frequently, typically one per week and in short runs of 250 copies which are sold both directly and through bookshops in the UK, Europe, USA, Australia, Japan, Canada and Switzerland. The booklets have a consistent print quality, paper and layout, laid out to a grid system, of usually 36 pages in length, slightly under A5 size and predominantly black & white and affordable. The booklets predominantly document social, historical and cultural change, including themes of youth, leisure, music, protest, race, religion, industry, identity, architecture and fashion, using both previously unpublished work and photographs from archives. It has published work by over 100 photographers, including John Benton-Harris, John Bulmer, John Claridge, John Deakin, Ken Grant, David Hurn, Chris Killip, Daniel Meadows, Tish Murtha, Jim Mortram, Martin Parr, Simon Roberts, Homer Sykes, Ed Templeton, Arthur Tress Janine Wiedel and Grant. In 2022 Café Royal Books held a retrospective exhibition titled Café Royal Books, Documentary, Zines and Subversion of 500 publications and 127 prints of work from those books at the Martin Parr Foundation. www.caferoyalbooks.com Dr.Grant Scott After fifteen years art directing photography books and magazines such as Elle and Tatler, Scott began to work as a photographer for a number of advertising and editorial clients in 2000. Alongside his photographic career Scott has art directed numerous advertising campaigns, worked as a creative director at Sotheby's, art directed foto8magazine, founded his own photographic gallery, edited Professional Photographer magazine and launched his own title for photographers and filmmakers Hungry Eye. He founded the United Nations of Photography in 2012, and is now a Senior Lecturer and Subject Co-ordinator: Photography at Oxford Brookes University, Oxford, and a BBC Radio contributor. Scott is the author of Professional Photography: The New Global Landscape Explained (Routledge 2014), The Essential Student Guide to Professional Photography (Routledge 2015), New Ways of Seeing: The Democratic Language of Photography (Routledge 2019), and What Does Photography Mean To You? (Bluecoat Press 2020). His photography has been published in At Home With The Makers of Style (Thames & Hudson 2006) and Crash Happy: A Night at The Bangers (Cafe Royal Books 2012). His film Do Not Bend: The Photographic Life of Bill Jay was premiered in 2018. Dr. Grant Scott is the founder/curator of United Nations of Photography, a Senior Lecturer and Subject Co-ordinator: Photography at Oxford Brookes University, Oxford, a working photographer, documentary filmmaker, BBC Radio contributor and the author of Professional Photography: The New Global Landscape Explained (Routledge 2014), The Essential Student Guide to Professional Photography (Routledge 2015), New Ways of Seeing: The Democratic Language of Photography (Routledge 2019). His film Do Not Bend: The Photographic Life of Bill Jay was first screened in 2018 www.donotbendfilm.com. He is the presenter of the A Photographic Life and In Search of Bill Jay podcasts. © Grant Scott 2023
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In episode 7 of this new podcast series Grant Scott continues his search for Bill Jay, and documents the opening and closing of the Photo Study Centre in the ICA, London with support from the founder of The Photographer's Gallery, London, Sue Davies, curator William Messer, photographer Daniel Meadows, photographer/photo editor Bryn Campbell and one-time Bill student Mark Trompeteler. William ‘Bill' Jay (12 August 1940 – 10 May 2009) was a photographer, a writer on and advocate of photography, a curator, a magazine and picture editor, lecturer, public speaker and mentor. He was the first editor of Creative Camera Owner magazine, which became Creative Camera magazine (1967–1969) and founder and editor of Albummagazine (1970–1971). Jay established the first gallery dedicated to photography in the UK with the Do Not Bend Gallery, London and the first Director of Photography at the Institute of Contemporary Arts (ICA) in London. Whilst there he founded and directed the first photo-study centre. He studied at the University of New Mexico under Beaumont Newhall and Van Deren Coke and then founded the Photographic Studies programme at Arizona State University, where he taught photography history and criticism for 25 years. Jay is the author of more than twenty books on the history and criticism of photography, four books of his own photography, and roughly 400 essays, lectures and articles. His regular column titled Endnotes was published within Lenswork magazine for a number of years and his own photographs have been widely published, including a solo exhibition at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. www.donotbendfilm.com Thanks to Aaron Bommarito for archive recordings with Bill Jay. All other interviews were conducted by Grant Scott. © Grant Scott 2022
Our introductory arc comes to a close! The Ellison Agents are off, speeding away from the law and into a collision course with the once fought Reddingtons. Will they defeat their foes and find Daniel Meadows? Or will our heroes return to Bastion empty handed? Is it Ghosts? There's only one way to find out - except for that last question, it's 100% not ghosts. If you enjoy the podcast, feel free to follow us on twitter @RolledRealms or on tumblr at rolledrealmspodcast.tumblr.com, post about us using #RolledRealms, or email us at RolledRealms@gmail.comThanks for listening, we'll see you in The Frontier
Join us as Daniel Meadows continues our series in the book of 1 Corinthians with, “1 Corinthians 13”
Join us as Daniel Meadows continues our series in the book of 1 Corinthians with, “1 Corinthians 11:17-34”
Join us as Daniel Meadows continues our series in 1 Corinthians with “1 Corinthians 10:1-13”
Join us for our Easter message by Daniel Meadows looking at “John 20”
Join us as Daniel Meadows continues our series in 1 Corinthians with “1 Corinthians 9:1-12a”
Join us as Daniel Meadows continues our series in 1 Corinthians with “1 Corinthians 8”
The lockdown has got to Kev and he’s watched 1,297 hours of Netflix in one week it seems, we talk one camera one lens choice, how we view our personal photo collections, what we’d stick in a time capsule, which website platform to choose (Squarespace or Wordpress), we talk GAS release, how do you choose what and when to sell? Wacom tablets, how many do you have? Flippy screen gate is back, we talk about editing technique in Lightroom, how do you produce publish on demand books, X-Pro choices and a request for a X-P4. There's second part of our Kev's interview with Daniel Meadows. The book of the week is Ed Kashi’s ‘Three,’ a book of triptychs.
Join us as Daniel Meadows continues our series in 1 Corinthians with “1 Corinthians 7:1-16”
This week, will Fujifilm ever release a 35mm film camera, why is my EVF showing a blue tint/hue, should you ever trust a corrupt memory card, Fujifilm app help please and what is character in a camera; does everything need to be so sharp? Kev’s showbiz wedding stories, photofilms versus slideshows, why Kev could be tempted to the dark side (Apple), X RAW Studio and dynamic range tips. The book of the week is Women Street Photographers, and Daniel Meadows is our guest for part one of a conversation with Mullins.
Join us as Daniel Meadows continues our series in the book of 1 Corinthians with “1 Corinthians 6:1-11”
Join us as we take a some time to look at the book as a whole, rather than in parts. Daniel Meadows facilitates and Jean Goodrich is our passage reader.
Join us as Daniel Meadows continues our series in the book of I Corinthians with “I Corinthians 4:8-21”
Join us as Daniel Meadows continues our series in the Book of Corinthians with “I Corinthians 4:1-7”
Join us as Daniel Meadows continues our Advent series, “Joyful Responses to the Messiah” with his sermon from Luke 2:22-38
Join us as we begin our 2020 Advent series “Joyful Responses to the Messiah” with Daniel Meadows begging our series with, “The Joyful Responses of the Magi” from Matthew 2:1-12.
Join us as Daniel Meadows continues our series in I Corinthians with “I Corinthians 2:10b-16”
Join us as Daniel Meadows continues our series in the book of I Corinthians with “I Corinthians 1:18-31”
Join us as Daniel Meadows introduces us to our new series in the book of I Corinthians with “I Corinthians 1:1-9”
Join us as Daniel Meadows leads us in a time of focusing on the idea of lament(Psalms 34) and praise (Psalms 103).
Join us as Daniel Meadows concludes our series “The Holy One of Israel: In Awe of the God of Isaiah” with Isaiah 61.
In episode 121 UNP founder and curator Grant Scott is in his shed considering photographic ethics, common decency, empathy, inclusion and the importance of rules and knowing when to break them. Plus this week photographer Daniel Meadows takes on the challenge of supplying Grant with an audio file no longer than 5 minutes in length in which he answer's the question ‘What Does Photography Mean to You?' Daniel Meadows is an English photographer born in 1952. Meadows studied at Manchester Polytechnic. While a student he was inspired by a lecture by Bill Jay and rented a barber's in 1972, inviting people to come into the Free Photographic Shop to have their photographs taken for no charge. Inspired by what Jay had said about Benjamin Stone's travel around Britain, and for 14 months from 1973 he travelled around England in the Free Photographic Omnibus. Some of this work was published in Meadows' first book, Living Like This, 1975. Meadows went on to photograph the northwest of England and Factory Records in the 1970s and in the 1980s to study the people of a middle-class London suburb of Bromley the latter published as Nattering in Paradise. In 1983 David Hurn invited him to help teach the Documentary Photography course at Newport College of Art and Design. From 1994 he has taught at Cardiff School of Journalism, Media and Cultural Studies. From 2001 to 2006 Meadows was creative director of Capture Wales, a BBC Wales project. The Bodleian Libraries of the University of Oxford acquired his archive in March 2018. In autumn 2019, the Bodleian celebrated the acquisition with an exhibition of Meadows' work, Now and Then, accompanied by a book. www.photobus.co.uk You can also access and subscribe to these podcasts at SoundCloud https://soundcloud.com/unofphoto on iTunes https://itunes.apple.com/gb/podcast/a-photographic-life/id1380344701 on Player FM https://player.fm/series/a-photographic-life and Podbean www.podbean.com/podcast-detail/i6uqx-6d9ad/A-Photographic-Life-Podcast Grant Scott is the founder/curator of United Nations of Photography, a Senior Lecturer and Subject Co-ordinator: Photography at Oxford Brookes University, Oxford, a working photographer, and the author of Professional Photography: The New Global Landscape Explained (Routledge 2014), The Essential Student Guide to Professional Photography (Taylor Francis 2015), New Ways of Seeing: The Democratic Language of Photography (Taylor Francis 2019). His next book What Does Photography Mean to You? will be published in 2021. His documentary film, Do Not Bend: The Photographic Life of Bill Jay can now be seen at www.youtube.com/watch?v=wd47549knOU&t=3915s. © Grant Scott 2020
Join us as Daniel Meadows continues our series “The Holy One of Israel: In Awe of the God of Isaiah” with Isaiah 44:6-23.
Join us as Daniel Meadows continues our series “In Awe of Isaiah’s God The Holy One of Israel” with “Isaiah 49:8-21”
In episode 113 UNP founder and curator Grant Scott is in his shed considering emotional connection, the importance of heroes in our creative lives and ask's "What is the reality of earning a living as a commissioned analogue photographer?" Plus this week photographer Nicholas J. R. White takes on the challenge of supplying Grant with an audio file no longer than 5 minutes in length in which he answer's the question ‘What Does Photography Mean to You?' Nick Wynne was Born in 1971 in Parkgate Wirral in the North West of England. His father was a builder who ran a small firm with his mother and he moved house a lot as a child as his family would buy land build a house, sell and repeat. Nick ran away from his private high school, ended up in a comprehensive school and failed all of his exams except for art. An art teacher in high school introduced him photography and showed him how to make prints on an old enlarger. Nick went onto art collage in Wallasey near Liverpool out of desperation and completed a diploma and a two year BTEC in photography where he was introduced to the photographer Tom Wood. In 1989 Nick travelled to Romania by car and photographed Romanian and Hungarian gypsies before going onto Wolverhampton University to study photography under photographer Nick Hedges but left after a few weeks. He went alone to the United States and hitched from New Jersey before buying a car and travelling to photograph in Arizona State Penitentiary, sleeping rough on petrol station forecourts, he was escorted out of town in New Jersey for vagrancy and spent a day in 'The Pen'. Returning to the UK in 1990/1 Nick applied to Gwent Collage Newport led by photographer Daniel Meadows and left at the end of the course without collecting his certificate or proof he'd ever been there! In 1992/3 he worked on building sites as a labourer, got married and had a child, with three more children following in quick succession. In 1995 he moved to Birkenhead and having bought and sold many properties has returned to Neston, Wirral. Nick has no website but posts his work both new and old on Twitter and Instagram with great passion and regularity. He owns and runs a small fencing firm consisting of himself and one labourer. Twitter: @NickWynne3. Instagram: nicholasthomaswynne If you have enjoyed this podcast why not check out our A Photographic Life Podcast Plus. Created as a learning resource that places the power of learning into the hands of the learner. To suggest where you can go, what you can read, who you can discover and what you can question to further your own knowledge, experience and enjoyment of photography. It will be inspiring, informative and enjoyable! You can find out here: www.patreon.com/aphotographiclifepodcast You can also access and subscribe to these podcasts at SoundCloud https://soundcloud.com/unofphoto on iTunes https://itunes.apple.com/gb/podcast/a-photographic-life/id1380344701 on Player FM https://player.fm/series/a-photographic-life and Podbean www.podbean.com/podcast-detail/i6uqx-6d9ad/A-Photographic-Life-Podcast Grant Scott is the founder/curator of United Nations of Photography, a Senior Lecturer and Subject Co-ordinator: Photography at Oxford Brookes University, Oxford, a working photographer, and the author of Professional Photography: The New Global Landscape Explained (Focal Press 2014) and The Essential Student Guide to Professional Photography (Focal Press 2015). His book New Ways of Seeing: The Democratic Language of Photography was published by Bloomsbury Academic in 2019. His documentary film, Do Not Bend: The Photographic Life of Bill Jay can now be seen at www.youtube.com/watch?v=wd47549knOU&t=3915s. © Grant Scott 2020
Join us as Daniel Meadows continues our series “The Holy One of Israel: In Awe of the God of Isaiah,” with Isaiah 24
Join us as Daniel Meadows continues our new series in the Book of Isaiah with “Isaiah 12 & 24”
LTR!031 – Daniel Meadows of DMD Retouching Boutique Retouching - Premium Post-Production Services Professional retoucher Daniel Meadows talks about all things retouching tools and workflow. Get industry insights from working professionals. Daniel
Professional retoucher Daniel Meadows talks about all things retouching tools and workflow. Get industry insights from working professionals.
Professional retoucher Daniel Meadows shares insights in professional retouching, how he learned retouching with the help of browsing forums, and how to work with advertising agencies.
LTR!030 – Daniel Meadows Retoucher Boutique Retouching - Premium Post-Production Services Professional retoucher Daniel Meadows shares insights in professional retouching, how he learned retouching with the help of browsing forums, and how to work with advertising agencies. Daniel
In episode 86 UNP founder and curator Grant Scott is in his shed considering perceptions of creativity within photography, how the past ten years has impacted photography and the opportunities that technology has given us to tell visual stories and communicate. Plus this week photographer Homer Sykes takes on the challenge of supplying Grant with an audio file no longer than 5 minutes in length in which he answer's the question ‘What Does Photography Mean to You?' If you want to hear more about Homer's friendship with Bill Jay mentioned in this episode and find out why and how Bill Jay was one of the most important people in the evolution of British photography at the end of the 20th Century you can by watching our feature length documentary on Jay's life featuring Homer, Martin Parr, Ralph Gibson, Paul Hill, Anna Ray-Jones, David Hurn, Alex Webb, Brian Griffin and Daniel Meadows here https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wd47549knOU www.donotbendfilm.com You can read the review of Grant's latest book by Cary Benbow here www.fstopmagazine.com/blog/2019/12/book-review-new-ways-of-seeing-the-democratic-language-of-photography-by-grant-scott/ Homer Sykes was born in 1949 and is a Canadian-born British documentary photographer. He was a keen photographer as a teenager, with a darkroom both at home and at boarding school. In 1968 he started a three-year course at the London College of Printing (LCP), and during his first year, went to New York, where he was impressed by the work of photographers - Henri Cartier-Bresson, Bruce Davidson, Lee Friedlander, Robert Frank, Burk Uzzle and Garry Winogrand — that he saw at the Museum of Modern Art. Whilst considering a new photographic project at college, Sykes came across a story on the Britannia Coconut Dancers in an issue of In Britain magazine. This led him to research other local festivals in Britain at the archives of Cecil Sharp House, London. Sykes' photography of these festivals was inspired by that of Sir Benjamin Stone, but he approached them with a modern sensibility and a small-format camera, after absorbing advice from photographer David Hurn, then a part-time lecturer at LCP, as well as other photographers that he met through Hurn, including editor and writer Bill Jay. Sykes moved on to photographing news stories for the Weekend Telegraph, Observer, Sunday Times, Newsweek, Now, Time, and New Society. He worked with various agencies including from 1989 to 2005 with the influential Network Photographers. Sykes also photographed the British landscape for various books but always found time for his own projects including Hunting with Hounds, and On the Road Again, photographs of four North American road trips taken over three decades. Sykes has taught on the Master's course in Photojournalism and Documentary Photography at the London College of Communication and in 2014, the Maison de la photographie Robert Doisneau, Paris, held a major exhibition of Sykes' work from the 1970s. He photographed the glam rock, punk, new wave and other music/fashion scenes of Britain and his work has been consistently published as a series of short narratives by Cafe Royal Books and as a major monograph My British Archive: The Way We Were 1968-1983 by Dewis Lewis in 2018. Homer continues to document the British way of life today and lives in South-West London. www.homersykes.com Grant Scott is the founder/curator of United Nations of Photography, a Senior Lecturer and Subject Co-ordinator: Photography at Oxford Brookes University, Oxford, a working photographer, and the author of Professional Photography: The New Global Landscape Explained (Focal Press 2014) and The Essential Student Guide to Professional Photography (Focal Press 2015). His next book New Ways of Seeing: The Democratic Language of Photography will be published by Bloomsbury Academic in 2019. © Grant Scott 2019
David Ward is one of Britain's most notable landscape photographers. His eye for shape and form is without equal and produces work that is startling in its clarity and intensity. We caught up with David at his 'Overlooked' exhibition which is currently on display at the Joe Cornish Gallery.We chat about his visual motivations, theories about composition and dealing with the smaller details. This is a deep dive into his photographic pursuits, what drives them and how he sees the position of landscape photography in the wider context of art. "David Ward's camera looks deep into the landscape; revealing texture, detail, rhythm and subtleties that most of us miss." - Joe Cornish - - - - - - - - - - - - - In the show we featured an exhibition by Margaret Soraya called ‘Quiet’ at the Bosham Gallery running from October 5th - 14th December which celebrates the untouched beauty of the remote Scottish Isles and how solitude and quiet is a catalyst for creativity. There are various events running alongside the exhibition including a wild swimming talk and taster session! For full details check out the show notes where we’ve listed the dates and events. 3rd Nov - Quiet dip at West Wittering beach - a wild swimming talk and taster 4th Nov - Ladies day workshop - “ Finding solitude through photography” 5th Nov - Introvert / extrovert questionnaire day at Bosham Gallery 30th Nov - Artists talk and afternoon at the Bosham Gallery “ Finding your own creative space” We also mentioned the ‘Distinctly’ exhibition at the Williamson Art Gallery & Museum on the Wirral on until 24th November: “This show takes a unique approach to the depiction of Britain and its distinct landscapes, industries, social and economic changes, cultural traditions, traits and events as seen through the eyes of ten of the most significant and impactful established and emerging photographers working in Britain over the last six decades. The exhibition looks at the gentle, the humorous, the starkness, the beauty and the realities experienced and captured by the photographers around their lives living and working in Britain. Artists: Martin Parr, Chris Killip, Marketa Luskacova, John Myers, Tish Murtha, Niall McDiarmid, Daniel Meadows, Ken Grant, Robert Darch & Kirsty Mackay.” Thanks as ever to WEX Photo Video & Fotospeed for supporting the show. We’ll be back in in a couple of weeks time with the live Q&A from Fotofest 2019 featuring Martin Parr, Rachael Talibart, Nigel Danson and Tom Way.
Photographer, documentarian and digital storyteller Daniel Meadows (b. 1952) has spent a lifetime recording British society, challenging the status quo by working in a collaborative way to capture extraordinary aspects of ordinary life through pictures, audio recordings and short movies.He is best known for his 1973-74 journey around England in the Free Photographic Omnibus when he travelled 10,000 miles in a converted double-decker and made 958 portraits in "free studio" sessions on the streets of 22 different British towns and cities. This is a project he revisited in the 1990s, photographing again some of the subjects of those portraits for his widely published series National Portraits: Now & Then.His pioneering community storytelling project BBC Capture Wales (2001-08) encouraged many hundreds of people across Wales to embrace the arrival of the digital age in pop-up workshops by making their own two minutes of TV, framing their memories and pictures into digital stories, "multimedia sonnets from the people". Capture Wales won a BAFTA Cymru in 2002.Daniel taught the documentary photography course with David Hurn in Newport (1983-94); also photojournalism (1994-2001) and digital storytelling (2000-2012) at Cardiff School of Journalism, Media & Cultural Studies where he also completed his PhD in 2005. In the 1990s he taught photojournalism workshops in the emerging democracies of eastern Europe, also in India and Bangladesh. After 2000 he travelled repeatedly to Australia and the USA lecturing about his pioneering work in participatory media.His photographs and (more recently) his short films have been exhibited widely both in the UK and on the continent of Europe. Solo shows include the ICA London (1975), The Photographers' Gallery London (1987) and the National Media Museum Bradford (2011). His books include: Living Like This – Around Britain in the Seventies (1975,) Nattering In Paradise – A Word from the Suburbs (1987), National Portraits – Photographs from the 1970s (1997), and The Bus – The Free Photographic Omnibus 1973-2001 (2001).A detailed and scholarly overview of Daniel’s early work, Daniel Meadows: Edited Photographs from the 70s and 80s by Val Williams, was published in 2011.His photo-essays done in the industrial north of England in the 1970s are celebrated in the Café Royal Books boxed set edition Eight Stories (2015).The Daniel Meadows Archive was acquired in March 2018 by the Bodleian Library at the University of Oxford, where there is an exhibition of Daniel’s work entitled Daniel Meadows: Now and Then until November 24th this year, and the accompanying book, Now And Then: England 1970 - 2015, was recently published by the Bodleian. On episode 116, Daniel discusses, among other things:- His show at the Bodleian library and how they acquired his entire archive.- His formative experience of boarding school.- Being taught the science of photography at Manchester Poly. And meeting Martin Parr there.- HIs Greame Street project.- Photographing Butlins holiday camp with his friend, Martin Parr - and starting to shoot colour.- The June Street project, also with Martin Parr.- His love for digital storytelling and a loathing for ‘antisocial media’.Memories of his English road trip by double decker bus and of finding some of the people he photographed 25 years later.- Always thinking his work was 'rubbish' and not feeling a success. Referenced:Pete JamesVal WilliamsColin FordTracey MarshallBill BrandtMartin ParrBrian GriffinGarry WinograndDiane ArbusBBC Omnibus documentary Beautiful, Beautiful (1969)Bruce DavidsonIrving PennPaul TrevorCliff Richard Summer HolidayWilliam EgglestonCraig Atkinson’s Cafe Royal Books Website | Instagram | Facebook“I spent a lot of my life wishing that I’d taken pictures like Cartier-Bresson or Diane Arbus or Bill Brandt. And it took me a long while to learn that I’d actually taken pictures like Daniel Meadows.”
Join us as Daniel Meadows continues our series on Spring Mountain Bible Church Core Values with, “Value of the Local Church” With scripture references to Romans 12, Colossians 3:12-17, Ephesians 4:29-32, Hebrews 10:19-25, and 2 Corinthians 8-9. If you would like to review our Core Values please check out our Core Values page under Who […]
Join us as Daniel Meadows continues our new series on Spring Mountain Bible Church Core Values with “Discipleship” from Ephesians 4:17-5:21. If you would like to review our Core Values please check out our Core Values page under Who We Are.
Daniel Meadows sermon delivered to the Sunnyside Foursquare Church has been graciously made available through their YouTube channel, Sunnyside Forsquare. Here is the sermon without the video and below is the video of Daniel’s sermon on the Sunnyside Foursquare YouTube channel.
You may not know his name but you'll know his work. A storyteller through and through, Daniel Meadows' images of 70s Manchester are a fantastic record of the lives of the people living in that area. He also dipped his toe into the seminal late 70s Manchester music scene - a wise man and a delight to talk to.
Join us as Daniel Meadows continues our series on the Core Values of Spring Mountain Bible Church with “The Unity of All Who Have Faith in Jesus Christ – Part 2.” The scripture referenced is from Ephesians 4:1-16. If you would like to review our Core Values please check out our Core Values page under […]
Join us as Daniel Meadows continues our new series on Spring Mountain Bible Church Core Values with “The Unity of All Who Have Faith in Jesus Christ”. The scriptures referenced are from John 17:20-23, 1 Corinthians 12:12-27, and Ephesians 4:1-6. If you would like to review our Core Values please check out our Core Values […]
In this special episode, we take a look back at how Capital Hacking has evolved and influenced our community. Erik and Josh also give a quick update on what they’ve been working on off-the-air, including launching the new PodMax Event (coming soon)! Most important, we would like to welcome a very special member to our team, writer Daniel Meadows from Lightstreet Media. Daniel is a super-fan of the show, a brand advocate, and a content creator. We discuss his future involvement with us and what we’re planning next!
Join us as Daniel Meadows continues our new series on Spring Mountain Bible Church Core Values with “The Unity Of The Spirit & The Diversity Of Gifts In The Body Of Christ” with references to Matthew 10:4-1, Acts 13:1-3, and 1 Corinthians 12. If you would like to review our Core Values please check out […]
Join us as Daniel Meadows concludes our series in the Gospel of Mark with “Mark 16”
Join us as Daniel Meadows continues our series in the Gospel of Mark with ” Mark 14:32-52″
Join us as Daniel Meadows continues our series in the Gospel of Mark with “Mark 14:12-31”
Join us as Daniel Meadows continues our series in the Gospel of Mark with “Mark 14:1-11”
Join us as Daniel Meadows gives our Palm Sunday message titled, “The Death of Christ” from Mark 15:21-39.
Join us as Daniel Meadows continues our series in the Gospel of Mark with, “Mark 11:27-12:17”
Join us as Daniel Meadows continues our series in the Gospel of Mark with “Mark 10:1-31”
Join us as Daniel Meadows continues our series in the Gospel of Mark with, “Mark 9:30-5”
Join us as Daniel Meadows continues our series in the book of Mark with, “Mark 7:24-37”
In episode 38 UNP founder and curator Grant Scott is in his shed considering our expectations of personal websites and the relationship between insecurity and creativity. Plus this week photographer Robert Darch takes on the challenge of supplying Grant with an audio file no longer than 5 minutes in length in which he answer's the question ‘What Does Photography Mean to You?' Born in Birmingham, England Robert Darch is a photographer, educator & curator based in the South West of England. He holds an MFA with distinction in Photographic Arts and a MA with distinction in Photography & the Book from Plymouth University. He also has a BA with honours in Documentary Photography from Newport, Wales. His photographic practice is motivated by the experience of place, in which the physical geography and material cultures of places merge with impressions from contemporary culture that equally influence perception. From these varied sources, both real and imagined, he constructs narratives that help contextualise a personal response to place. Robert is the Associate Curator at Unveil'd and also created Macula a collective for young photographers based in Exeter, Devon. In 2018 Robert's work was included in Distinctly, a major group exhibition of British Photography, that included work by Martin Parr, Chris Killip, Daniel Meadows, Tish Murtha, Ken Grant, Paul Seawright, Marketa Luscakova, John Myers, Niall McDiarmid & Kirsty Mackay. Robert was one of the winning exhibitors of the British Journal of Photography 2018 Portrait of Britain. He has recently published his first book, The Moor, with Another Place Press. His photography has been published in The Telegraph, The Guardian & The Financial Times. www.robertdarch.com You can also access and subscribe to these podcasts at SoundCloud https://soundcloud.com/unofphoto on iTunes https://itunes.apple.com/gb/podcast/a-photographic-life/id1380344701 on Player FM https://player.fm/series/a-photographic-life and Podbean www.podbean.com/podcast-detail/i6uqx-6d9ad/A-Photographic-Life-Podcast Grant Scott is the founder/curator of United Nations of Photography, a Senior Lecturer in Professional Photography at the University of Gloucestershire, a working photographer, and the author of Professional Photography: The New Global Landscape Explained (Focal Press 2014) and The Essential Student Guide to Professional Photography (Focal Press 2015). His next book New Ways of Seeing: The Democratic Language of Photography will be published by Bloomsbury Academic in 2019. He is currently work on his next documentary film project. He is currently work on his next documentary film project Woke Up This Morning: The Rock n' Roll Thunder of Ray Lowry www.wokeupthismorningfilm.com. His documentary film, Do Not Bend: The Photographic Life of Bill Jay has been screened across the UK and the US in 2018 and will be screened in the US and Canada in 2019. © Grant Scott 2019
Join us as Daniel Meadows continues our series, after our break for Advent, in the Book of Mark with “Mark 6:1-29”
Thanksgiving: The Importance of Giving Thanks | Daniel Meadows
Thanksgiving: The Importance of Giving Thanks | Daniel Meadows
Join us as Daniel Meadows continues our series in the book of Mark with, “Mark 5:1-20”
Join us as Daniel Meadows continues our series in the book of Mark with, “Mark 4:26-41”
Join us as Daniel Meadows continues our series in the book of Mark with “Mark 3:7-35”
Join us as Daniel Meadows continues our series in the Book of Mark with “Mark 2:13-3:6”
Join us as Daniel Meadows continues our new series in the book of Mark with, “Mark 1:1-14”
Join us as Daniel Meadows continues our series in I Corinthians 13 with, “Love Is Kind”
Ffoton talks with photographer, and UK champion of Digital Storytelling, Daniel Meadows. A fellow student at Manchester Poly and close friend of Martin Parr, Daniel is highly repected for his social documentary work across the UK in the 1970-80's and as a teacher at both David Hurn's original Newport course from 1983 and at Cardiff School of Journalism, Media and Cultural Studies for several yeard from 1994. Meadows has an important place in the development of photography and Digital Storytelling in Wales and Ffoton were delighted to capture a fantastic conversation with him.
Join us as Daniel Meadows completes our series, “The Royal We” with, “The Royal We: The Armor of God” from Ephesians 6:10-18.
Join us this week as Daniel Meadows continues our series with, “The Royal We: We Are the Temple of the Holy Spirit” from 1 Corinthians 3:10-17 and Ephesians 2:14-22.
Join us as Daniel Meadows continues our series “The Royal We” with, “They Royal We: We are Salt and Light.”
Join us this week as Daniel Meadows speaks on “The Royal We: Rediscovering Us In A World Of Me”