About the Book
This stream has two personalities: a formal landscaped channel, modelled in the sixties to flow through the heart of the new campus, and the remnant of the original “natural” channel. The transition between them is marked by a weirpool, pentagonal in shape and about 25 square metres in area, where the stream reappears from a conduit which takes it underneath a nearby building. The level of water in the pool and its strength of flow depend on the time of year, and the recent weather. Large quantities of natural and other debris can build up over the year, and an “island” of leaves, twigs and weed emerges as the water level falls, which is periodically dredged out.
The photographs in the sequence are all of this single pool, and were made between 1999 and 2005. They were taken at the same time of day (around 12:30 pm), and from one of three possible viewpoints, each roughly ten feet above the water's surface. Part of this work was exhibited in the Hartley Library of the University of Southampton (under the title “Dry Light”, 24 November 2004 – 28 February 2005) and an early version of the sequence was selected by the Southern Arts photographic website Fotonet-South as an online exhibition in 2001. The original edition of this book was self-published under my short-lived Shepherd's Crown imprint in 2006: I have now revisited and revised the sequence, taking advantage of the “layflat” format to show combinations that were previously impractical.
Features & Details
- Primary Category: Arts & Photography Books
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Project Option: Standard Landscape, 10×8 in, 25×20 cm
# of Pages: 32 - Publish Date: Apr 05, 2020
- Language English
- Keywords pentagonal, water, southampton university
About the Creator
Mike Chisholm is an independent artist-photographer, based in Southampton, UK. Mike was born and raised in Stevenage, a New Town 30 miles north of London. He was educated at local state schools, then studied at Balliol College Oxford, the University of East Anglia, and University College London. For thirty years he worked as a librarian in the higher education sector (Bristol and Southampton universities) but now concentrates on photographic and writing projects. In recent years he has exhibited his photographs, digital images, and bookworks internationally in several one-man and group shows. His blog, IDIOTIC HAT, is widely read and regarded by many as a must-read source of photographic inspiration, ironic wisdom and amusement. Or so he says.