Showing posts with label doggerland. Show all posts
Showing posts with label doggerland. Show all posts

Friday, 18 October 2013

Dunwich Horrors: Images from the Suffolk Coast

Just spent a few days away in Dunwich, Suffolk. The village's incredible history is no secret - a major East Anglian port, Anglo-Saxon capital, comparable to London in size, almost completely lost to the sea over the centuries. From a population of thousands, a hundred or so people live there today. It is hidden behind marshes, forests, heathland.

For the horror aficionado, Dunwich also holds other appeals. One of the most famous of the fictional New England towns in the writings of HP Lovecraft takes its name from this lost city: the coastal doom and isolation are particularly appropriate for Lovecraft's work. Another earlier twentieth century author, the British scholar MR James, set many of his influential ghost stories along this stretch of the Suffolk coast, visited Dunwich numerous times, and clearly used aspects of the village for his own fictional locales. Due in no small way to the enormous influence of these two authors in particular, film, television, writing, and even role-playing games have turned to lonely Dunwich for further inspiration over the years, and in turn add to the village's sense of hidden, lurking magick.

Thursday, 6 December 2012

Deep Hole Formi(ng)

An image I found lurking forgotten on my hard-drive. I've babbled on about my fascination with coastal erosion and the lost Doggerland before: this is an unused image from a load I took whilst walking the beach and cliffs at Happisburgh, the village that is being slowly claimed by the sea.

Deep Hole Forming. Sums up quite a lot, in its own small way.



Monday, 26 March 2012

EastScapes on the Road: The Exhibition at the House Gallery, London

A few images of the 'EastScapes: Doggerland' exhibition in the House Gallery, Camberwell. The artists involved were Misa Tamura, Dan Howse, and myself. The experience itself was a bit of a blast, if terrifying for me personally: however, all feedback was really encouraging, and I think the three of us involved were all fairly happy with the results. Anyhow.

Pretty glad to be out of London and back in the eroding bosom of Norfolk, mind.


















Friday, 24 February 2012

EastScapes: Doggerland exhibition - aka 'Ideas Above my Station'



It's been a fairly unproductive few months, blog-wise: the time demands of work and the decrease in the number of sunlit hours aren't particularly conducive to getting out into the region. I've also been working on a project: from March 15th - 22nd, in the House Gallery, Camberwell, I shall be exhibiting a selection of my images alongside works by Misa Tamura and Dan Howse. The show is entitled 'EastScapes: Doggerland,' and the thematic concerns which link the works surround notions of (predominantly coastal) decay and erosion, and our attempts to grasp and rationalise this slow geographical death.

At no time would I ever class myself as a photographer 'proper:' I do not have the equipment or training to ever approach the area of fine art photography. My approach has always had more than a touch of the DIY about it: were it not for the far-less shambolic works by my collaborators, I would refer to this as an 'artless exhibition.' It's not exactly punk, but, you know - taking the detritus and junk that surrounds us as aa springboard for impoverished creativity does sound pretty cool, at least to me.

The House gallery is to be found at

70 Camberwell Church Street
London
SE5 8QZ

March 15th, to the 22nd. Opening hours, 8.30am to 4.30pm. Stop by, take a look.


http://www.house-gallery.co.uk/