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Anthony Loyd and the legendary photographer Don McCullin have been to Syria to chronicle the destruction of Palmyra by Islamic State and to see what is changing under the new Syrian regime. Manveen sat down with them at Don's house in Somerset to reflect on war, loss, friendship — and a remarkable career. This podcast was brought to you thanks to the support of readers of The Times and The Sunday Times. Subscribe today: http://thetimes.com/thestoryGuests: Anthony Loyd, Special Correspondent, The Times.Don McCullin, photographer.Host: Manveen Rana.Producers: Kizzy Bray and Edward Drummond.Further reading: Don McCullin, 89, returns to Palmyra: ‘This time will be my last'Clips: Reuters, NY Times.Photo: Anthony Loyd/The Times.Get in touch: thestory@thetimes.com Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Dans L'atelier des médias, le photographe britannique Don McCullin revient sur son parcours hors du commun, en professionnel de l'image fixe qui a traversé la deuxième moitié du XXe siècle et notamment ses conflits. Vietnam, Biafra, Cambodge ou encore Liban… Le photographe britannique Don McCullin, maintenant âgé de 88 ans, a couvert nombre de conflits. Début octobre, il était à Bayeux, pour présider le jury de la 30e édition du prix Bayeux Calvados-Normandie des correspondants de guerre.Pour L'atelier des médias de RFI, Raphaël Krafft a tendu son micro à Don McCullin.Extraits choisis : « Nous faisons ce métier parce que nous essayons de trouver la paix dans le monde. Essayer d'expliquer pourquoi nous avons ces guerres catastrophiques qui éclatent chaque année. Dès que l'une d'elles se termine, une autre commence. Nous essayons d'expliquer ces confrontations mais bon, bien que nous fassions notre métier, ces guerres continuent années après années. »« Au début, je ne m'intéressais qu'au combat entre les hommes. Mais bien sûr, ils n'étaient jamais les victimes eux-mêmes, enfin si, ils le devenaient parfois à la fin. Mais les vraies victimes étaient celles qui n'avaient pas commencé la guerre. Les femmes et les enfants ne commencent pas les guerres mais ils sont les premiers à en souffrir notamment lorsque leurs maisons sont bombardées. L'exemple parfait, c'est Gaza aujourd'hui. »« Vous savez, la photographie a été une drôle d'aventure pour moi parce que j'ai quitté l'école à l'âge de 15 ans, je n'avais aucune éducation et je pensais à cette époque que la photographie resterait un simple et agréable passe-temps dans ma vie. Et je me disais : ne t'en fais pas, personne ne sait que tu n'as pas d'éducation, parle de photographie, c'est tout. Et c'est incroyable à quel point ça a été tout le contraire. J'ai toujours eu une démarche politique dans ma façon de prendre des photos. Même pour les paysages, regardez, ils sont menacés par la pollution et autres. De nos jours, tout est politique. »« Je suis enthousiasmé par mes photographies, enfin, j'étais enthousiasmé par mes photos. Je deviens vieux. Je crois que ma vie de photographe va s'arrêter cette année. »Dans cette émission, vous entendez aussi Michel Guerrin, rédacteur en chef au journal Le Monde, qui a cosigné Don McCullin, le monde dans le viseur, aux éditions des Équateurs. Il raconte Don McCullin et explique en quoi ce Britannique issu d'un milieu populaire a marqué de son empreinte le reportage de guerre et la photographie de la seconde moitié du XXe siècle.Mondoblog audio fait entendre le blogueur camerounais Ecclésiaste Deudjui à propos du permis de conduire dans son pays.
Greetings Glocal Citizens! This week I'm joined by a longtime friend as we both were about to hit the road for weekend adventures fitting our global missions. Photographer, Dante Bowen Hendricks found his calling as a young boy in Guyana when his uncle gifted him a rotating globe that sparked Dante's fascination with world cultures. After immigrating to Brooklyn as a teen, Dante set aside his passion for photography to work in his family's shipping business. But a trip back home reignited his love for the art. Dante dove into developing his skills, studying at the International Center of Photography. Though he does commercial work digitally, Dante prefers shooting personal projects on film. He's exhibited in New York as well as Baltimore and is new local, New Orleans. He is also a co-contributor along with fellow Brooklyn-bred photographer, Phillip Moi-Thuk-Shung (http://phillipshung.com) to Inferno, a forthcoming book of photo essays. Dance and spiritual traditions are among Dante's favorite subjects. His distinct style retains a sense of childlike wonder, conveying cultures with sensitivity and nuance. Listen as Dante shares his globetrotting journey of discovering both himself and the world through his lens. Where to find Dante? On Instgram (https://www.instagram.com/infernophotos/) On Threads (https://www.threads.net/@infernophotos) On Facebook (https://web.facebook.com/dante.hendrix/photos) On YouTube (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LqlkHEBvjZE) What's Dante reading? Unreasonable Behavior: An Autobiography (https://a.co/d/0gqAzMc) by Don McCullin Slightly Out of Focus (https://a.co/d/48qNcsq) by Robert Capa Ceasar: Life of a Colossus (https://a.co/d/22bftsh) by Adrian Goldsworthy Napolean: A Life (https://a.co/d/aFhI5jz) by Andrew Roberts Other topics of interest: Geography of Guyana (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geography_of_Guyana) About Flatbed Trucking (https://www.saloodo.com/logistics-dictionary/flatbed-truck/#:~:text=The%20flatbed%20truck%20is%20mostly,comparable%20to%20a%20flatbed%20trailer.) Talk like a Trucker (https://www.apexcapitalcorp.com/blog/guide-to-trucker-lingo/) Guyanese Metemgee (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hqat7bLN-j8) About Seawall Sundays (https://exploreguyana.org/seawall/) Fuji GW690 Cameras (https://casualphotophile.com/2016/10/31/fuji-gw690-medium-format-camera-review/) Lika Cameras (https://leica-camera.com/en-int) Kodak Potra (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kodak_Portra) Knotting Hill Carnival (https://nhcarnival.org) Ndyuka People (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ndyuka_people) Chevalier Film (https://www.chevalierfilm.com) Special Guest: Dante Bowen Hendricks.
durée : 03:00:15 - Le 6/9 - par : Mathilde Khlat, Benjamin Dussy, Marion L'hour, Ali Baddou - A 7h50, zoom sur le Prix Bayeux des correspondants de guerre (en partenariat avec France Inter) avec l'un des photographes de guerre les plus reconnus au monde, Don McCullin. Et à 8h20, nous recevons l'historien Vincent Lemire et l'ancien Ministre des Affaires étrangères Hubert Védrine. - invités : Don Mc Cullin, Vincent Lemire, Hubert Védrine - Don Mc Cullin :, Vincent Lemire : Historien, géographe, directeur du Centre de recherche français à Jérusalem, Hubert Védrine : Diplomate, ancien ministre des Affaires étrangères dans le gouvernement Jospin et ancien secrétaire général de la présidence de la République sous François Mitterrand - réalisé par : Marie MéRIER
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
Breathe Pictures Photography Podcast: Documentaries and Interviews
Today, a special episode in which I travel to Farnham in leafy Surrey, England, to speak with former Head Curator at the Imperial War Museum London, Hilary Roberts, who for four decades assisted then led the curation of the most impressive and important collection of conflict photographs in Europe. Eleven million photographs tell the story of conflict internationally and we talk about the responsibility of such a historical task. Also, what makes an iconic photograph, a friendship with Don McCullin, and is ai a danger to the authenticity of photographs moving forward? Just some of the subjects discussed in this episode. See the SHOW PAGE for reference pictures and films. Our thanks to the Extra Milers and mpb.com.
La MEP - Maison Européenne de la Photographie - vous propose de revenir sur 5 œuvres de photographes, issues des collections de la MEP, qui se sont engagés dans différentes crises et conflits mondiaux. Cette série « Photographier les crises » s'inscrit dans le cadre de l'exposition consacrée à Boris Mikhaïlov, présentée jusqu'au 15 Janvier à la MEP. Crédits image : Sans-abri irlandais, East End, Londres, c. 1969 © Don McCullin (courtesy Contact Press Images)
For the final episode of this series, Catherine Fairweather talks to renowned photographer, Sir Don McCullin CBE. For the past 50 years he has proved himself a photojournalist without equal, whether documenting the poverty of London's East End, or the horrors of wars in Africa, Asia or the Middle East. Simultaneously he has proved an adroit artist capable of beautifully arranged still lifes, soulful portraits and moving landscapes. He also happens to be Catherine's husband which allows her to ask questions she has never yet asked him - about his reputation as a hard-bitten war photographer, his thirst to learn about new cultures and their very first meeting.
The Vietnam War is one of the twentieth century's most well-known conflicts. It has become a buzzword for military failure, synonymous with the most horrific aspects of irregular warfare between states and guerilla forces, and has had a profound impact on politics and popular culture in the United States and around the world. But why did America get involved in the first place? Who were the Viet Cong and the Viet Minh? Why were there mass peace protests back in the US? And what lessons, if any, can be learned from the conflict? In this episode we were joined by Cerys Matthews - singer, songwriter, author, and BBC Radio 6 broadcaster, alongside Phan Thi Kim Phuc, better known as the ‘Napalm Girl', and renowned photographer Don McCullin. —------ CREDITS: Excerpt from ‘Eisenhower Two Vietnams' https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lPet4zFh4sI&ab_channel=M.D.Jones Excerpt from Lyndon B. Johnson-Speech on Vietnam (September 29, 1967) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9Tf2xGb5Nsg&ab_channel=MCamericanpresident Excerpt from Kennedy Speaks On Vietnam (1962): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Iph_KkKLfcA&ab_channel=BritishPath%C3%A9 Excerpt from Behind The Viet Cong Lines (1965) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s6sPC1YLIdM&ab_channel=NuclearVault Excerpt from NBC News Special Report, January 31, 1968 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wA8n114eYXc&ab_channel=NewsActive3 Excerpt from President Richard Nixon Address to the Nation on the War in Vietnam, November 3, 1969 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RPpOBu2LNCo&ab_channel=RichardNixonPresidentialLibrary Exerpt from 50 years ago: Walter Cronkite calls for the U.S. to get out of Vietnam https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dn2RjahTi3M&ab_channel=CBSEveningNews
“Photographies en guerre“ au musée de l'Armée, hôtel des Invalides, Parisdu 6 avril au 24 juillet 2022Interview de Anthony Petiteau, chef de l'unité conservation, documentation, recherche, musée départemental Albert-Kahn, ancien responsable de la collection de photographies du musée de l'Armée et co-commissaire de l'exposition,par Anne-Frédérique Fer, à Paris, le 1er avril 2022, durée 28'37, durée 19'14.© FranceFineArt.Communiqué de presse Commissariat :Mathilde Benoistel, chargée d'études documentaires, cheffe du département de l'inventaire, de la diffusion et de l'histoire des collections, musée de l'ArméeSylvie Le Ray-Burimi, conservatrice en chef du patrimoine, cheffe du département beaux-arts et patrimoine, musée de l'ArméeLucie Moriceau-Chastagner, chargée d'études documentaires, adjointe à la cheffe du département beaux-arts et patrimoine, responsable de la collection de photographies du musée de l'ArméeAnthony Petiteau, chef de l'unité conservation, documentation, recherche, musée départemental Albert-Kahn, ancien responsable de la collection de photographies du musée de l'ArméeAssistés de : Chloé Boisson, Philomène Bonhomme, Marie Lamassa, Aline Muller, Aurélien NicolePaysages de ruines, chaos des combats, scènes de victoire ou de défaite, portraits de soldats ou de civils…. Les images de la guerre, et singulièrement des guerres passées, imprègnent notre mémoire collective, notamment par le prisme de la photographie. Certains clichés, tels que Raising the Flag on Iwo Jima (Joe Rosenthal) ou Le Drapeau rouge sur le Reichstag (Evgueni Khaldeï), sont même devenus des icônes mondiales. Mais qui sont ceux qui les ont produits ou diffusés ? Dans quelles conditions et pour qui ? Quels sont les ressorts de cette fabrique de l'image de la guerre depuis le milieu du XIXe siècle jusqu'à nos jours ?Le musée de l'Armée présente pour la première fois une exposition consacrée non pas au conflit, mais à la représentation de celui-ci par la photographie, qui va bien au-delà du reportage de guerre. Depuis l'apparition de ce nouveau médium sur un champ de bataille au milieu du XIXe siècle, les rapports entre photographie et guerre sont complexes, relevant de pratiques plurielles (amateurs ou professionnelles), d'intentions et d'usages multiples (informer, documenter, prouver, convaincre, légitimer, tromper, dénoncer, témoigner, se souvenir…) dans les champs les plus variés (militaire, politique, économique, mais aussi social, culturel et esthétique).Plaques de verre, planches, albums, portfolios, portraits, vues stéréoscopiques, petits et grands formats… Du Siège de Rome (1849) à l'actuelle guerre en Syrie, en passant par la guerre de Sécession, la guerre de 1870, les deux conflits mondiaux, la guerre du Vietnam, la Guerre Froide ou encore les guerres de décolonisation, le parcours réunit plus de 300 photographies faisant le récit d'une construction médiatique de la guerre à travers l'image. Photographes amateurs et professionnels y confrontent la singularité de leurs regards et de leurs objectifs, parmi lesquels ceux de Margaret Bourke-White, Gerda Grepp, Lee Miller, Robert Capa, Paul Corcuff, Marc Riboud, Don McCullin, Gilles Caron, Nick Ut, Yan Morvan, Laurent Van der Stockt, Richard Mosse, Émeric Lhuisset ou encore Michel Slomka.[...] Voir Acast.com/privacy pour les informations sur la vie privée et l'opt-out.
In episode 199 UNP founder and curator Grant Scott is in his shed reflecting on creativity, working as a photographer, and if NFTs are the result of a perfect storm or just a passing squall. Plus this week photographer Mike Abrahams 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 1952 in South Africa Abrahams moved to Liverpool in 1955 and grew up there. Aged 12, he discovered the magic of the darkroom under the stairs in a friend's house and became hooked on photography. In 1970 after failing to get into medical school he enrolled on a dentistry course in the hope that he could switch to medicine but he was expelled after just two terms. In 1972 he enrolled on a photography course at the Polytechnic of Central London and discovered Henri Cartier Bresson, Don McCullin, Leonard Freed, Robert Capa and Marc Riboud who had visited the course to show his work which Abrahams found transforming. In 1975 he began working as a freelance photographer with the Times, Sunday Times, Sunday Times Magazine, The Telegraph, The Observer Magazine, and started to work with international magazines and newspapers, covering stories in Southern Africa, Gaza, Cyprus, Israel, Eastern Europe, Northern Ireland, the UK as well as portraits of those in the arts and literature. In 1981 he was a co-founder of Network Photographers the internationally renowned picture agency. His work on Faith - A Journey with Those Who Believe, published in 2000, was the culmination of five years work, documenting the extremes and passion of Christian devotion throughout fourteen countries. Other important assignments have included coverage of the division of Cyprus, the Intifada in the Occupied Territories, the Berlin Wall, the collapse of Communism in Eastern Europe, the rise in the influence of the religious in Israeli politics, the Cult of Assad in Syria, The Jews of Damascus and Bradford's Muslims and The Troubles in Northern Ireland. Awards for this work included the World Press Photo Award in 2000, the book Faith was a finalist in the Design Week Awards and the work has been widely exhibited throughout the UK and Europe. Cafe Royal Books have published six books of his work in 2022 and his work from Northern Ireland was published as Still War - Photographs From The North of Ireland in 1989. His work has been widely exhibited and is held in the Museum of London and Science and Media Museum, London. Abrahams current landscape work has been exploring the relationship between structures and their environment and he is based in London. www.mikeabrahams.com 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). Grant's book What Does Photography Mean to You? including 89 photographers who have contributed to the A Photographic Life podcast is on sale now £9.99 https://bluecoatpress.co.uk/product/what-does-photography-mean-to-you/ © Grant Scott 2022
Don McCullin: Irreconcilable TruthsLegendary photographer Don McCullin first met Max Hastings in Cambodia in 1970. Here they discuss Sir Don's long career from his time as a war photographer to his recent work in Syria, as well as some of the themes with which they are both familiar: fear, suffering and the terrible cost of war. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
In this episode, Sean talks about a recent trip to London where he may have had his most productive day of photography ever, which is a pretty bold statement. We also talk about the importance of inspirational friends as well as our shared appreciation for the work of Richard Avedon, Don McCullin, and Sally Mann. CONNECT WITH SEANWebsite: http://seantucker.photographyTwitter: @seantuckInstagram: @seantuckYouTube: Sean Tucker CONNECT WITH JEFFERYWebsite: https://jefferysaddoris.comTwitter: @jefferysaddorisInstagram: @jefferysaddoris BE A PART OF THE SHOWYou can listen to Deep Natter live and be a part of the conversations on Tuesdays at 2pm ET on Clubhouse. SUBSCRIBESubscribe to Jeffery Saddoris: Everything in your favorite podcast app to get every show I release in one feed. MUSICHigh Line by DuffmusiqMusic featured in this episode is licensed from Artlist, which is a terrific music licensing platform for YouTubers and filmmakers. Use the following link to get two additional months of Artlist free when you sign up: https://bit.ly/JS_Artlist This post may contain affiliate links. If you use these links to buy something, I may earn a commission. Thanks.
In this episode, Sean talks about a recent trip to London where he may have had his most productive day of photography ever, which is a pretty bold statement. We also talk about the importance of inspirational friends as well as our shared appreciation for the work of Richard Avedon, Don McCullin, and Sally Mann. CONNECT WITH SEANWebsite: http://seantucker.photographyTwitter: @seantuckInstagram: @seantuckYouTube: Sean Tucker CONNECT WITH JEFFERYWebsite: https://jefferysaddoris.comTwitter: @jefferysaddorisInstagram: @jefferysaddoris BE A PART OF THE SHOWYou can listen to Deep Natter live and be a part of the conversations on Tuesdays at 2pm ET on Clubhouse. SUBSCRIBESubscribe to Jeffery Saddoris: Everything in your favorite podcast app to get every show I release in one feed. MUSICHigh Line by DuffmusiqMusic featured in this episode is licensed from Artlist, which is a terrific music licensing platform for YouTubers and filmmakers. Use the following link to get two additional months of Artlist free when you sign up: https://bit.ly/JS_Artlist This post may contain affiliate links. If you use these links to buy something, I may earn a commission. Thanks.Support the show (https://jefferysaddoris.com/#donate)
In this episode, Sean talks about a recent trip to London where he may have had his most productive day of photography ever, which is a pretty bold statement. We also talk about the importance of inspirational friends as well as our shared appreciation for the work of Richard Avedon, Don McCullin, and Sally Mann. CONNECT WITH SEANWebsite: http://seantucker.photographyTwitter: @seantuckInstagram: @seantuckYouTube: Sean Tucker CONNECT WITH JEFFERYWebsite: https://jefferysaddoris.comTwitter: @jefferysaddorisInstagram: @jefferysaddoris BE A PART OF THE SHOWYou can listen to Deep Natter live and be a part of the conversations on Tuesdays at 2pm ET on Clubhouse. SUBSCRIBESubscribe to Jeffery Saddoris: Everything in your favorite podcast app to get every show I release in one feed. MUSICHigh Line by DuffmusiqMusic featured in this episode is licensed from Artlist, which is a terrific music licensing platform for YouTubers and filmmakers. Use the following link to get two additional months of Artlist free when you sign up: https://bit.ly/JS_Artlist This post may contain affiliate links. If you use these links to buy something, I may earn a commission. Thanks.
The second of the two shorter Christmas and New Year editions where the boys discuss some of their inspirations including Don McCullin's 'In Africa’ book and ‘Extraordinary Women’ by Tom Stoddart. It seems Kev has spent five hours a day watching quick fire tournament chess over the New Year break, while Neale has been touring the site of a suspected nuclear accident on a disused airbase near his home with the family! They talk of photographer inspirations, Kev choosing Frank Horvat who is responsible for suggesting; “Photography is the art of not pushing the button,” and Neale being fascinated by Søren Solkær’s Murmurations study. The full length shows return from next week.
Welcome to episode 113 everybody, hope you are coping well. for those outside the UK, we have come out of the current lockdown. We are now in a tier system that allows different measures and freedoms. To carry on our journey towards learning and education, I wanted to try and get a few people on together. The idea was to talk about some artists and their influences on life and maybe their self too. I’m lucky to have such a kaleidoscope of people I can call on – so this time we have David Collyer and Tobias Beach-Wlyd. Both fabulous people and photographers in their own rights. We have a discussion on a few artists, projects, and photos. What I will do is put these all in the show notes for you, so you can visualise what we are talking about. Everyone did their best to be descriptive as possible anyway so it will be interesting to hear if you follow on. The artists covered in this podcast are Black Star, Don Mccullin, Philip Jones Griffiths, Kate Bellis and Nick Waplington. I’m continually trying to improve my knowledge of the arts and sessions like this are really useful. It’s always good to see a new project and find a new artist to follow. This time of knowledge may help you in your own work in the future. In this one we discuss: Abergavenny bric-a-brac David’s bargain print magnum agency landscapes self documentary work contact sheets double stroke Leica real life middle-class tourists Martin Parr long-form stories Mentioned Point 51 Magazine - https://point51magazine.com/ British Journal of Photography - https://www.1854.photography/ Artists Nick Waplington - http://www.nickwaplington.org/ Don Mccullin - https://donmccullin.com/don-mccullin/ Kate Bellis - http://www.katebellis.com/ Black Star - https://www.blackstar.com/services/index.html Philip Jones Griffiths - https://www.magnumphotos.com/photographer/philip-jones-griffiths/ Podcaster guests David website - https://davidcollyer.wordpress.com/ David Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/david_collyer_photographer/ Tobias Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/tobiasbeachwyld/ Friends For all your c41 developing needs - https://filmdev.co.uk/ Large format cameras, medium format & accessories - https://chroma.camera/ Great and affordable zines from Static Age - https://www.staticage.co.uk/ SPECIAL OFFER During the podcast I mentioned Pete at Static Age is offering a 15% discount, your code is: PHLOG --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/photography-insights/message
En este episodio Oscar habla sobre Angelina Jolie quien dirige una película sobre el legendario Don McCullin, los antecedentes de la fotografía y los retos de la educación fotográfica hoy.
En este episodio Oscar habla sobre Angelina Jolie quien dirige una película sobre el legendario Don McCullin, los antecedentes de la fotografía y los retos de la educación fotográfica hoy.
On this episode we talk with David Jones a Troop Commander in the 1980s who came to the Special OP Troop from 148 (Meiktila) Commando Forward Observation Battery. A specialist Naval Gunfire Support Forward Observation unit within 29 Commando Regiment Royal Artillery of 3 Commando Brigade Royal Marines David covers the Troop Commander's perspective of the unit including how the Troops in 32 and 5 Regt were organised and tasked, the pressures to get more volunteers through selection, the widening of recruitment and the attachment of SAS Captains to the Troop. We will finish off with how two separate troops were brought together to form firstly 73 (Sphinx) Special OP Bty and finally 4/73 (Sphinx) Special OP Bty. On desert island dits David's choice of book is a two part series by Tim Cook At the Sharp End: Canadians Fighting the Great War 1914–1916, Volume One, and: Shock Troops: Canadians Fighting the Great War 1917–1918, Volume Two. His fiction choice is Three Day Road . A book by Joseph Boyden. Finally his choice of film is Das Boot. The team's pick this week is Unreasonable Behaviour the life story of the photographer Don McCullin. Find out about the current serving unit at STA Patrols Special Observer. Follow us on Instagram "the_unconventional_soldier_pod" and Facebook "The Unconventional Soldier Pod" (search for @lateo82). We are also available to download on iTunes, Spotify, Youtube and Google podcasts. Email us: unconventionalsoldier@gmail.com This episode brought to you in association with ISARR a veteran owned company.
In this episode: Steve McCurry has a new book of never-seen-before photographs, and Anjolina Jolie commits to making a movie about the life of British war photographer Don McCullin, based on his autobiography, Unreasonable Behavior: An Autobiography. Plus, Google Trusted Contacts service ends Dec. 1. Links and Sources: In Search of Elsewhere: Unseen Images by Steve McCurry, Nov. 2020 https://amzn.to/3kFf3MU All Steve McCurry books on Amazon: https://amzn.to/36SZmg2 The Guardian https://www.theguardian.com/travel/gallery/2020/nov/19/steve-mccurry-previously-unseen-images-in-pictures Peta Pixel, "More Photoshopped Photos Emerge in the Steve McCurry Scandal," May 26, 2016, Michael Zhang https://petapixel.com/2016/05/26/photoshopped-photos-emerge-steve-mccurry-scandal/ Unreasonable Behavior: An Autobiography, by Don McCullin, June, 2017 https://amzn.to/333eUwH Don McCullin's website https://donmccullin.com/don-mccullin/ Wikipedia, "Don McCullin" https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Don_McCullin Contains Amazon Affiliate links: I may earn a small commission on qualifying purchases. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/keith-dotson/support
In this episode: Steve McCurry has a new book of never-seen-before photographs, and Anjolina Jolie commits to making a movie about the life of British war photographer Don McCullin, based on his autobiography, Unreasonable Behavior: An Autobiography. Plus, Google Trusted Contacts service ends Dec. 1. Links and Sources: In Search of Elsewhere: Unseen Images by Steve McCurry, Nov. 2020 https://amzn.to/3kFf3MU All Steve McCurry books on Amazon: https://amzn.to/36SZmg2 The Guardian https://www.theguardian.com/travel/gallery/2020/nov/19/steve-mccurry-previously-unseen-images-in-pictures Peta Pixel, "More Photoshopped Photos Emerge in the Steve McCurry Scandal," May 26, 2016, Michael Zhang https://petapixel.com/2016/05/26/photoshopped-photos-emerge-steve-mccurry-scandal/ Unreasonable Behavior: An Autobiography, by Don McCullin, June, 2017 https://amzn.to/333eUwH Don McCullin's website https://donmccullin.com/don-mccullin/ Wikipedia, "Don McCullin" https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Don_McCullin Contains Amazon Affiliate links: I may earn a small commission on qualifying purchases. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/keith-dotson/support
Colin Grant is the author of Homecoming (2019); Negro with a Hat: The Rise and Fall of Marcus Garvey (2008), I and I: The Natural Mystics Marley, Tosh and Wailer (2011), Bageye at the Wheel (2012). Homecoming draws on over a hundred first-hand interviews, archival recordings and memoirs by the women and men who came to Britain from the West Indies between the late 1940s and the early 1960s. In their own words, we witness the transition from the optimism of the first post-war arrivals to the race riots of the late 1950s. Homecoming is an unforgettable portrait of a generation, which brilliantly illuminates an essential and much-misunderstood chapter of our history. Colin Grant is an author and teaches creative non-fiction writing, most recently for Arvon and Sierra Nevada College. Grant is also a historian, Associate Fellow in the Centre for Caribbean Studies and producer for BBC Radio. He joined the BBC in 1991, and has worked as a TV script editor and radio producer of arts and science programmes on radio 4 and the World Service. He has written and directed plays including The Clinic, based on the lives of the photojournalists, Tim Page and Don McCullin. Grant has also written and produced several radio drama-documentaries. 5x15 brings together five outstanding individuals to tell of their lives, passions and inspirations. There are only two rules - no scripts and only 15 minutes each. Learn more about 5x15 events: 5x15stories.com Twitter: www.twitter.com/5x15stories Facebook: www.facebook.com/5x15stories Instagram: www.instagram.com/5x15stories
In questa puntata delle Fotonews, celebriamo il primo Maggio e come la fotografia ha raccontato il mondo del lavoro.INFOPer info e per vedere gli scatti dei quali parliamo sono sul sito del podcast -> https://fotoradio.info/2020/05/news_20200526_mayday/APPROFONDIMENTI► su Don McCullin -> https://fotoradio.info/2019/08/guerra_mccullin/► su Eugene Smith -> https://fotoradio.info/2019/08/pittsburgh_smith/CONTATTI:► sito -> https://fotoradio.info/contact/► email -> fotoradio.info at gmail.com► whatsapp -> 351 8013213► Telegram -> https://t.me/fotoradio► canale Telegram -> https://t.me/fotoradioinfo► newsletter -> https://tinyletter.com/fotoradioCREDITS:► FOTO: A.M. Ahad | Don McCullin | Eugene Smith | Walker Evans | Lewis Hine► MUSICA: Don Syke via Epidemic Sound► SUONI: Free Sound► COPERTINA: Max LaRochelle via UnsplashTutti i link ai credits sul sito https://fotoradio.info
This time out, the Photography News team drop yet more creative shooting ideas for you to enjoy at home, with flatlays, smoke patterns and self portraits all on the menu. And we even get outside for five minutes, while somehow evading arrest. Your resident experts, Will Cheung, Roger Payne and Kingsley Singleton, also talk real-world macro photography, the perils of high-resolution sensors, photo-themed TV, films and books to inspire you – and nominate their best-ever SLRs and DSLRs, including iconic camera models from Nikon and Canon. Plus there are special guest appearances from Annie Leibovitz, Don McCullin, Sebastião Salgado, and Alfred Hitchcock. Ansel Adams eat your heart out. Got a pressing photography question? Email podcast@photographynews.co.uk and you could find your question being answered by some of the best in the business. Find out more about Photography News at photographynews.co.uk
Photographer Guy Martin has been part of the Huck creative family from the very beginning. The Cornwall-raised lensman started his career chasing waves and documenting beach culture around the world. Inspired by photojournalists like Don McCullin and Larry Burrows, who had documented the wars of Southeast Asia, in his mid-twenties he began to turn his attention to conflict. Soon he found himself at the heart of The Arab Spring. Following the story from the demonstrations in Tahrir Square to the teeth of the battle for Libya, Guy took the hunt for the defining moment right up to – and almost over – the edge. The experience nearly cost him his life. In this season finale of Joining the Dots, Guy reflects on documenting the horrors of war, experiencing loss – and the lessons learned which helped him get back on his feet, re-focus, and re-build. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Photographer Guy Martin has been part of the Huck creative family from the very beginning. The Cornwall-raised lensman started his career chasing waves and documenting beach culture around the world. Inspired by photojournalists like Don McCullin and Larry Burrows, who had documented the wars of Southeast Asia, in his mid-twenties he began to turn his attention to conflict. Soon he found himself at the heart of The Arab Spring. Following the story from the demonstrations in Tahrir Square to the teeth of the battle for Libya, Guy took the hunt for the defining moment right up to – and almost over – the edge. In this, the first of a two-part episode of Joining the Dots, Guy traces the movement of his life as a surf photographer to a harder-edged existence as a witness to war. It was a journey that nearly cost him his life. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Shooting War contains 18 profiles of photographers exploring their lives as filters between conflict and the general population and the effect they have on us and themselves in this endeavor. Includes such luminaries as Don McCullin, Tim Page, and Ron Haviv.
Mike gets a black friday deal on the Impossible I-1 Camera, reads emails from Gregory Parker (IG greg.parker.photography) about getting good blacks on HP Instant Ink Printers, Toni Skokovic (IG junctionrails) about the podcast, Kevin Dillon (IG ricoh_shooter) about prints through Winkflash, Daniel Novak (IG danielnovakphoto, www.danielnovakphoto.com) sends a donation from the profits of the 135mm Project Zine to the podcast, and Neil Piper of the Soot and Whitewash Podcast (IG neil_piper, IG sootandwhitewash) sends a call in about his new Facebook group "126 Shooters". Next, we have a call in from Malcolm Myers (IG photovalve) about the photographer, Don McCullin. Finally, Mike talks about how documenting your life is important even if it is on a crappy camera!
Last week I had the immense pleasure of sitting feet from the greatness of Don McCullin. I managed to ask the final question of the evening.http://www.howardgreenberg.com/exhibitions/don-mccullin See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Proseguiamo il discorso su Don McCullin con altre due foto. Una foto di guerra e di morte, presa a Cipro nel 1964 e una foto con un sorriso, anche se in un certo contesto.-> tutte le info, le foto dell'episodio, i contatti... sul sito del podcast https://fotoradio.info o sul canale telegram: https://t.me/fotoradioinfo-> per entrare in contatto velocemente c'è Telegram! https://t.me/fotoradio (o altrimenti andate sul sito e trovate altri mille canali: email, whatsapp, facebook...)-> e se pensate che i podcast siano una cosa meravigliosa, a ottobre 2019 c'è il festival del podcasting! https://festivaldelpodcasting.it/
Nato nel 1935 a Londra e cresciuto sotto le bombe, Don McCullin è sempre stato su fronti di guerra per più di 50 anni. In questa prima parte, analizziamo due sue foto, prese a Cipro nel 1964. -> tutte le info, le foto dell'episodio, i contatti... sul sito del podcast https://fotoradio.info o sul canale telegram: https://t.me/fotoradioinfo-> per entrare in contatto velocemente c'è Telegram! https://t.me/fotoradio (o altrimenti andate sul sito e trovate altri mille canali: email, whatsapp, facebook...)-> e se pensate che i podcast siano una cosa meravigliosa, a ottobre 2019 c'è il festival del podcasting! https://festivaldelpodcasting.it/
It is said that we are living in an age of multiple crises—climate change, political upheaval, and mass disenfranchisement. Radical economist Paul Mason offers his diagnosis on our current situation, and why the 2008 financial crisis may not be the watershed moment we think it is.Paul's new book, Clear Bright Future, comes out May 2.Plus: Alex Dean on the Huawei leak, and Sameer Rahim on photographer Don McCullin See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
'Be in command of your own joy'Malcolm Gladwell, The Roches, Don McCullin, Brian Eno, Rick Rubin, David Byrne, Ted Kaptchuk, Richard Sennett
'Be in command of your own joy' Malcolm Gladwell, The Roches, Don McCullin, Brian Eno, Rick Rubin, David Byrne, Ted Kaptchuk, Richard Sennett
Don McCullin is arguably Britain's most famous photojournalist, most well known for his iconic and heart-rending war photography. In this episode, Rob and Nathan visit a powerful retrospective at the Tate Britain of his 50-year career and reflect on how his images shook the world.
The photographers, David Bailey and Don McCullin, came to prominence in the 1960s but their pictures did more than define a decade. Don McCullin's work in Vietnam, Biafra, Northern Ireland, Cyprus and the Middle East have come to epitomise what we mean by war photography and David Bailey's portraits of Jean Shrimpton, Mick Jagger and Catherine Deneuve established a new idiom for glamour. Yet fame has tended to obscure the full range of both men's work. Bailey, for example, has produced a huge volume of images conjuring up a spectral London as well as his portraits while McCulllin has infused the Somerset levels where he now lives with a haunted beauty. As Philip Dodd discovered when he visited David Bailey in his studio and caught up with Don McCullin on the eve of his Tate show both men have vivid memories of the Blitz and were transformed by their experience of National Service. Don McCullin is on show at Tate Britain until May 6th 2019. David Bailey: The Sixties is on show at Gagosian Gallery, Davies Street in London until March 30th. Producer: Zahid Warley
'Art doesn't give a shit'The Modern Lovers, Don McCullin, Anna St. Louis, Jenny Lewis & The Watson Twins, Lucy Rose, John Lennon, Richard Hawley, Golden Gate Jubilee Quartet, Molly Burch, Illuminati Hotties, Arbortist, Tom Waits, Marc Ribot Y Los Cubanos Postizos, David Byrne, Wild Man Fischer with Mark Mothersbaugh, Kiko Mendive, Lou Reed
'Art doesn't give a shit' The Modern Lovers, Don McCullin, Anna St. Louis, Jenny Lewis & The Watson Twins, Lucy Rose, John Lennon, Richard Hawley, Golden Gate Jubilee Quartet, Molly Burch, Illuminati Hotties, Arbortist, Tom Waits, Marc Ribot Y Los Cubanos Postizos, David Byrne, Wild Man Fischer with Mark Mothersbaugh, Kiko Mendive, Lou Reed
Musician David Gray on his upcoming album ‘Gold in a Brass Age’. Plus designer Stefi Orazi discusses her new book ‘Modernist Estates Europe’ and curator Aïcha Mehrez reflects on the work of renowned photojournalist Don McCullin, whose retrospective is on show at Tate Britain.
In episode 42 UNP founder and curator Grant Scott is in his shed considering the sacrifices photographers make to create work and the commitment required from friends and family to support those dedicated to the medium. You can read the full article featuring Don McCullin and Giles Duley mentioned in this week's podcast here www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2019/feb/03/don-mccullin-giles-duley-photography-retrospective-tate-interview Plus this week photographer Brian Griffin 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?' Brian Griffin was born in 1948 and lives and works in London. Considered “the photographer of the decade” by The Guardian in 1989, “the most unpredictable and influential British portrait photographer of the last decades” by the British Journal of Photography in 2005 and “one of Britain's most influential photographers” by the World Photography Organisation in 2015, Brian has worked as a freelance photographer, filmmaker and TV commercials and music video film director since 1972. Brian Griffin has published over thirty books and was awarded the Best Photography book in the World at the Barcelona Primavera Fotografica 1991. Life magazine used his photograph A Broken Frame on the front cover of its supplement The Greatest Photographs Of The 80's. In 1991, after twenty years, he “walked away from photography” and began a career creating advertising commercials and music videos. He returned to photography in 2002 and has had more than fifteen solo shows and four retrospectives since. Brian has won many awards including four ‘Most Outstanding Awards' from the D&AD (Design and Art Direction), and the ‘Freedom of the City of Arles, France'. He won the ‘Best Commercial of the Year' at the Bafta Academy awards in 1992 and his short movie Claustrofoamia received the ‘Golden Monkey Award' for Best Film at the Mons International Short Film Festival in Belgium and the ‘Certificate of Merit' at the Chicago International Film Festival, both in 1995. In September 2013, Brian received the ‘Centenary Medal' from the Royal Photographic Society in recognition of a lifetime achievement in photography. In 2014, he received an Honorary Doctorate by Birmingham City University for his lifetime contribution to the City of Birmingham. Brian Griffin's photographs are held in the permanent collections of major art institutions including the Victoria & Albert Museum, London; the Arts Council of Great Britain, London; the British Council, London; the National Portrait Gallery, London; the Museum Folkwang, Essen; the Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery; the Art Museum Reykjavik, Iceland; the Mast Foundation, Bologna; and the Museu da Imagem, Braga, Portugal. www.briangriffin.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 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 Woke Up This Morning: The Rock n' Roll Thunder of Ray Lowry. 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
Today 12 leaders of Spain’s Catalonia region go on trial, accused of rebellion. The proceedings will lay bare long-running tensions about democracy and unity. As Amy Klobuchar, a Minnesota senator, joins America’s presidential race, we ask whether her centrist tendencies are an advantage or a handicap. And a retrospective of the photographer Don McCullin’s work reveals extremes of human experience and suffering. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Today 12 leaders of Spain’s Catalonia region go on trial, accused of rebellion. The proceedings will lay bare long-running tensions about democracy and unity. As Amy Klobuchar, a Minnesota senator, joins America’s presidential race, we ask whether her centrist tendencies are an advantage or a handicap. And a retrospective of the photographer Don McCullin’s work reveals extremes of human experience and suffering. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Tate Britain has opened its first-ever photography retrospective: a 60-year survey of work by Don McCullin, famed for his depictions of conflict around the world. Robert Bound is joined by Zed Nelson, Kathlene Fox-Davies and Eddy Frankel to discuss it.
Celebrated photojournalist Don McCullin describes his experiences of war, poverty and suffering across the world during his 50-year career. Part of the Festival of Ideas programme, McCullin talks of sacrifices and consequences that have resulted from his commitment to the camera. Come to the next Festival of Ideas live in the RA's Benjamin West Lecture Theatre – line-up coming soon: https://roy.ac/FOI2019
In this episode of the "For the Joy of Photography" podcast, I discuss photo manipulation -- staged photographs, excessive post processing, and photoshop. When are any of those things acceptable?Links:PetaPixel article and video referenced in Podcast:https://petapixel.com/2018/12/17/are-these-photographers-cheating/Other Links:Photojournalists fired for altering images:https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2544662/Pulitzer-Prize-winning-photographer-fired-admitting-doctored-Syrian-war-rebel-picture-photoshopping-camera-original-image.htmlhttps://www.popphoto.com/news/2011/07/ap-photographer-fired-editing-photohttp://www.nbcnews.com/id/13165165/ns/world_news-mideast_n_africa/t/altered-images-prompt-photographers-firing/#.XBjvoi3MwUFhttp://www.alteredimagesbdc.org/walski/Steve McCurry's "Photoshop Scandal"https://petapixel.com/2016/05/06/botched-steve-mccurry-print-leads-photoshop-scandal/You can watch the episode above or listen to it at your favorite site or on your favorite appiTunes - CLICK HEREGoogle Play - CLICK HEREStitcher - CLICK HERESpotify - CLICK HEREPodcasts. com - CLICK HEREOr you can search for it on you favorite podcast app!
Yesterday was our first day back from a 9-day working vacation in France and Germany and I've got to tell you, I still haven't fully readjusted to East Coast time, but I wanted to talk a little about the trip while it was still fresh in my mind. I spent the bulk of the day yesterday taking a first pass at photos and making notes about the some of the experiences we had and how I would like to see them affecting me moving forward. Overall, I came back incredibly inspired, both in terms of conversations I'd like to record and some new directions and techniques I would like to explore in my own work, both photographically and in my paintings.Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Pocket Casts | Overcast | RSSLegendary conflict photojournalist Don McCullin has released a beautiful new book called The Landscape.Designed in the USSR: 1950-1989 is a terrific look into the design of everyday life in the Soviet Union throughout the Cold War, from toys to propaganda.The current issue of Egoïste magazine — volume 11, number 18 — features an absolutely gorgeous photo essay of Jessica Chastain by Ellen von Unwerth. I love that the magazine isn't bound — it's just a series of loose leaf pages in a cover.Music in this episode: The Wrong Way (Jahzzar) / CC BY-SA 4.0
With only one more episode of OTP left, this week we actually start with a discussion around photography—specifically, focusing on the tools (either hardware or software) you need or will actually use in your creative workflow. Sometimes we get caught up in looking at all of what a camera or piece of software does or is capable of doing without looking at what we actually need it to do. Also, a continuation of last week's discussion where we talk about Don McCullin's view that at least some of his professional life was wasted documenting the human suffering associated with war. Alfred Stanley Johnson is our Photographer of the Week.
With only one more episode of OTP left, this week we actually start with a discussion around photography—specifically, focusing on the tools (either hardware or software) you need or will actually use in your creative workflow. Sometimes we get caught up in looking at all of what a camera or piece of software does or is capable of doing without looking at what we actually need it to do. Also, a continuation of last week’s discussion where we talk about Don McCullin’s view that at least some of his professional life was wasted documenting the human suffering associated with war. Alfred Stanley Johnson is our Photographer of the Week.
This week, a discussion around knowing (or thinking we know) when it's time to change directions, whether in a body of work, a relationship, where to live, etc. Also, what happens when the dream you wanted isn't the reality you get? Plus, according to a federal judge, photos on the internet are fair use...yes, even yours. Don McCullin is our Photographer of the Week.
This week, a discussion around knowing (or thinking we know) when it’s time to change directions, whether in a body of work, a relationship, where to live, etc. Also, what happens when the dream you wanted isn’t the reality you get? Plus, according to a federal judge, photos on the internet are fair use...yes, even yours. Don McCullin is our Photographer of the Week.
In 1968 Norman Lewis wrote an article called Genocide in Brazil. The photographs that accompanied it were by Don McCullin. Lewis later said that this one piece of journalism was the great achievement of his life. It led directly to the creation of Survival International and a change in the law relating to the treatment of indigenous people in Brazil. Lewis is known as a brilliant writer - one of our best, said Graham Greene, 'not of any particular decade of our century'. He's best remembered for A Dragon Apparent and Naples '44. Don McCullin didn't travel with Norman Lewis to Brazil, but they struck up an unexpected friendship. He was like my father, the great photographer says. And in Norman Lewis's later years they worked together in Venezuela, Papua New Guinea and elsewhere. But McCullin didn't read many of his books. "I struggled through Naples '44" he admits. Yet his admiration for the way Lewis opened his eyes to the world remains undimmed. Recorded on location at McCullin's Somerset farmhouse with Norman Lewis's biographer Julian Evans. Matthew Parris presents. The producer in Bristol is Miles Warde.
Howard Brenton discusses his new play Lawrence After Arabia, which examines a little known period of TE Lawrence's life. Back in England, Lawrence wearied by his romanticised public image and disgusted with his country and himself, seeks solace and a place to hide in the home of the Bernard Shaws.Christian Bale stars as a disillusioned Hollywood writer in the new film Knight Of Cups from director Terence Malick. Film critic Kate Muir reviews.91-year-old photographer Dorothy Bohm looks back over her 75-year career at her latest exhibition Sixties London. Born in East Prussia before being sent by her father to England to escape the threat of Nazism, she then became co-founder of The Photographer's Gallery and worked alongside some of the greats, from Henri Cartier-Bresson to Bill Brandt and Don McCullin.Danish artist Olafur Eliasson is most famous for erecting a giant sun in the Tate Modern for his work The Weather Project. He talks about his new book Unspoken Spaces which has collected all his architectural works in public spaces over the past two decades.Presenter: John Wilson Producer: Jack Soper.
Singer Mica Paris remembers Prince who was her friend and mentor, and biographer Matt Thorne and journalist Kevin Le Gendre assess his legacy.As Opera North's Music Director Richard Farnes and General Director Richard Mantle prepare to present six complete productions of the company's much praised "austerity" Ring Cycle, they discuss the art of creating great opera on a budget. The Ring Cycle opens at Leeds Town Hall on 23 April and goes on to tour the Royal Concert Hall in Nottingham, The Lowry in Salford, the Royal Festival Hall in London, and Sage Gateshead.Georgina Harding's latest novel, The Gunroom, opens with a description of the image of Don McCullin's Shell Shocked Soldier. It then becomes a work of fiction which explores the impact of taking that photo on the photographer as he endeavours to escape the horror of what he has seen. Georgina Harding discusses what inspired her to write this story. The Gun Room is out now.
Join Gyles Brandeth introducing THE OLDIE OF THE YEAR at SImpson's on the Strand. Gyles presents prizes to Olivia De Havilland, Jeremy Hutchinson, Aung San Suu Kyi, Molly Meacher, Timothy West & Prunella Scales, Robert Hardy, Germaine Greer, Don McCullin, Lady Colin Campbell and Leon & June. Sponsored by Baillie Gifford, long term investment partners.
Libby Purves meets photographer Don McCullin; Roman Catholic priest Father Ray Kelly; triathlete and coach Fiona Ford and actor Robert Portal. Fiona Ford is a triathlete and coach. In the same week in 2006 she won both World Championship titles at the International Triathlon Union (ITU) and Aquathlon events. Three years ago, while cycling along the London 2012 Olympic bike route, she was hit by a car and badly injured. Doctors told her she would never run again. But thanks to her grit and determination, she is back on her bike, competing in a triathlon. Back on Track by Fiona Ford is published by Meyer and Meyer Sport. Photographer Don McCullin's early association with a North London gang, The Guv'nors, led to the first publication of his pictures. He went on to cover many of the world's worst wars and humanitarian crises of his time from the civil war in the Congo to the Tet offensive at Hue during the Vietnam War. His photographs document the building of the Berlin Wall and the famine that ravaged Biafra in the 1960s. Unreasonable Behaviour: An Autobiography by Don McCullin with Lewis Chester is published by Jonathan Cape. Don McCullin Conflict - People - Landscape is at Hauser And Wirth, Somerset. Father Ray Kelly worked as a civil servant before becoming a Catholic priest 35 years ago. He'd always loved singing but it wasn't until 2014 when he sang Hallelujah while officiating at a wedding that he became an internet sensation. Since then he has signed a record deal and performed on TV shows around the world from the US to Germany and Australia. His second album, An Irish Christmas Blessing, is on Wrasse Records. Robert Portal is an actor who is playing Phileas Fogg in Around the World in 80 Days at St James Theatre. He is also an adventurer himself, rowing 3000 miles across the Atlantic and taking part in the Marathon des Sables - a six-day, 251 km ultramarathon. His theatre and film work includes Communicating Doors, Henry IV, Mr Turner and The King's Speech. Around the world in 80 Days is at the St James Theatre, London. Producer: Paula McGinley.
Here’s episode 25 of the PetaPixel Photography Podcast. You can also download the MP3 directly and subscribe via iTunes or RSS! Call 1-206-333-9308, leave a comment in this post, or use our voicemail widget for feedback/questions for the show. In This Episode If you subscribe to the PetaPixel Photography Podcast in iTunes, please take a moment to rate and review us and help us move up in the rankings so others interested in photography may find us. Pratik Naik of Solstice Retouch opens the show. Thank you Pratik. Legendary war photographer Don McCullin says digital photography can't be trusted. (#) Samsung officially drops its camera business from the UK. (#) The media misidentifies a Moroccan woman labeling her as a Paris suicide bomber. (#) Did Sigma really reject Canon's advances? (#) Holga cameras officially come to an end. RIP Holga. (#) It took 60 years, but World Press Photo finally has a code of ethics. (#) VCSO cuts the price of its film simulation software in half...and it's permanent. (#) Instagram looks to be adding one of the most-requested features...multiple user switching. (#) "The Dogist" (aka Elias Weiss Friedman) hits 1.5 million Instagram followers. (#) Connect With Us Thank you for listening to the PetaPixel Photography Podcast! Connect with me, Sharky James on Twitter, Instagram and Facebook (all @LensShark) as we build this community. Leave us an audio question through our voicemail widget or call us at 1-206-333-9308. Alternatively, you can comment below or via social media. But we’d love to play and answer your question on the show! You can also cut a show opener for us to play on the show! As an example: “Hi, this is Matt Smith with Double Heart Photography in Chicago, Illinois, and you’re listening to the PetaPixel Photography Podcast with Sharky James!”
Our weekly look at all things photographic with Sarah Jacobs and PhotoShelter co-founder Allen Murabayashi. Get the podcast: http://bit.ly/ilovephoto Watch the broadcast: http://bit.ly/ilovephotoyt 0:55 10 magazine covers you should see beside Kim Kardashian 4:19 The Metropolitan Museum Butt Checks Kim 5:30 David Brandon Geeting Doesn’t Retouch His Butt Photos 7:22 Keira Knightley Poses Nude, demands no Photoshop 9:54 Cass Bird Photographs Plus Size Models for Vogue 12:12 Larry Sultan at LACMA 14:11 Don McCullin’s lost Berlin Wall photos 15:50 The first photo of a human 16:55 The first photo taken from a comet 18:48 Amalia Ulman manipulated you on Instagram 21:47 Fader’s 15 year archive on VSCO 23:12 Hans Eijkebloom’s People of the 21st Century 24:55 Exactitudes 26:37 The Ethics of Retouching 30:14 Martin Schoeller’s Portraits 32:28 Martin Schoeller shoots Taylor Swift for TIME 35:14 Kids attempt to use film cameras
John McCarthy and Suzy Klein meet veteran photographer Don McCullin to talk about wars zones, life in Somerset and how being born and raised in Finsbury Park shaped his life. John Wildey is a seventy seven year old grandfather who took over the controls to land a plane when the pilot took ill. Felicity Warner is a soul midwife who helps people have a peaceful death. There are tales of homelessness from the streets of London, Claudia Winkleman shares her Inheritance Tracks and we hear how the helmet belonging to a young soldier killed in Vietnam ended up for sale in Portobello Market. We take a trip on a train run by children in Budapest and find out if the Quiff, the hairstyle so beloved of the Teddy Boys is about to make a comeback.Produced by Maire Devine.
Novelist Anne Tyler chooses a self portrait by the pioneering photographer Charles R Savage. Presented by Mark Lawson. The interview is accompanied by selected clips from the BBC archive: Brian May on TR Williams; Joanna Pitman on Eadweard Muybridge; Will Gompertz on a family photograph of The Queen, aged 2; Don McCullin on photographing war zones and Harry Benson on photographing the moment that Bobby Kennedy was shot. For full archive details go to: http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p016p5mb/profiles/anne-tyler
The Christmas TV ratings - who's really come out on top? What are going to be the most pressing issues for the BBC's new DG ? Plus as a film about veteran war photographer Don McCullin is released, we examine the role of photojournalists with Sarah Baxter Editor of the Sunday Times Magazine and photojournalist Sean Smith. And following the death of cricket commentator Christopher Martin-Jenkins the Telegraph's radio critic Gillian Reynolds talks about the art of sports commentary. Presented by Steve Hewlett Produced by Beverley Purcell.
At the age of 30, the British photographer, Don McCullin, travelled to Asia for his second ever war assignment - Vietnam. His graphic photographs of the fighting made his reputation and influenced public opinion in the West. But even now, McCullin is still pained by his experiences in Vietnam. PHOTO: Don McCullin with his iconic photo of a US marine. (AFP/Getty Images)
Writer and curator David Mellor speaks about the work of Don McCullin, one of the most important war photographers of the late twentieth century, whose photographs are celebrated for depicting wartorn regions with clarity and honesty
John Wilson talks to four leading photographers of the same generation whose careers began in the 1960s and whose images have become classics of their time, from the pages of Vogue magazine to the Vietnam war, and the death of Bobby Kennedy. David Bailey, Don McCullin, Terry O'Neill and Harry Benson discuss their approach to their new craft at a time when magazines and newspapers were beginning to change the way they used images, and offer tips on how to take the perfect photograph. David Bailey discusses his approach to getting the best out of his fashion models in the studio, Terry O'Neill reflects on the changing role of photography and the arrival of the culture of celebrity; Don McCullin revisits the Vietnam war and its lasting effect on him as a photographer, and Harry Benson remembers the night he was standing next to presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy when he was shot, and describes the challenge of getting his images of the dying senator. Producer Jerome Weatherald.
Ian Rankin talks to Mariella Frostrup about his latest crime thriller The Impossible Dead, and world famous photographer Don McCullin gives us his five of the best books
Noel Gallagher goes solo; photographer Don McCullin; Morgan Spurlock's Greatest Movie Ever Sold; Steve Coogan on Alan Partridge's memoirs; actor Paddy Considine and Nicky Wire from Manic Street Preachers.
With John Wilson. Singer-songwriter Noel Gallagher dominated the musical landscape of the 1990s in the band Oasis, alongside his brother Liam. After a final acrimonious split with the band, Gallagher is set to release his first solo album: High Flying Birds. He talks about how the modern music industry baffles him, and why he had to say no to Simon Cowell. Is the art market impervious to the current economic turmoil? As wealthy collectors gather at the Frieze Art Fair in London, art market watchers Godfrey Barker and Sarah Thornton attempt to follow the money. The war photography of Don McCullin is the subject of a new exhibition at the Imperial War Museum in London. Shaped by War brings together McCullin's frontline work from across the world, including East and West Berlin, the Middle East, Northern Ireland, Biafra, and his classic images from the wars in Vietnam and Cambodia. Don McCullin discusses his 50 years avoiding bullets in search of the picture that captures the story in a fraction of a second. Producer Georgia Mann.
Don McCullin has won an enormous reputation for his photographic coverage of the many wars which have torn the world apart in the last 20 years.In conversation with Roy Plomley, he talks about his exceedingly dangerous career and about his travels, which have even taken him to a desert island, and, in light of this experience, he chooses the eight records he would like to have for a prolonged island sojourn.[Taken from the original programme material for this archive edition of Desert Island Discs]Favourite track: Symphony No 3 in C Minor by Camille Saint-Saëns Book: One year of issues of the Times Luxury: Mirror
Don McCullin has won an enormous reputation for his photographic coverage of the many wars which have torn the world apart in the last 20 years. In conversation with Roy Plomley, he talks about his exceedingly dangerous career and about his travels, which have even taken him to a desert island, and, in light of this experience, he chooses the eight records he would like to have for a prolonged island sojourn. [Taken from the original programme material for this archive edition of Desert Island Discs] Favourite track: Symphony No 3 in C Minor by Camille Saint-Saëns Book: One year of issues of the Times Luxury: Mirror