Saturday 26 January 2013

Book Review: The Myth of the Airborne Warrior




The Myth of the Airborne Warrior, published by Photoworks, is a set of personal images from the portfolio of Stuart Griffiths.  As a subscriber to the Photoworks magazine I came across this work through one of their articles and was immediately struck by it.

The book contains photos taken by Griffiths during his time as a paratrooper serving in Northern Ireland.  They are casual snaps of his colleges on and off duty and the streets that they patrolled in the late 80's and early 90's.  To break up the images several pages include 'censored' extracts from his personal diary.  The book is sold as a limited run of 500 numbered editions.  Included in this version is a signed numbered 4x6 print and four facsimile documents that include a rules of engagement card and two nationalist posters.



Griffith collaborated with fellow photography student Gordon MacDonald to compile the book.  The original intention was not necessarily to create a historical record of the troubles but more to help Griffith organize his images into a coherent narrative.  The resulting work is an emotional record of the gradual disillusionment of Griffith.  Over- trained and bound by strict rules of engagement Griffith and his colleagues found themselves in a world that was 99% boredom with 1% extreme excitement.  The pictures alone do not convey this story, in fact, I feel that the images themselves are quite weak.  In our current climate soldiers with their mobile phones and compact cameras are taking hundreds of photos that are similar, or better, to ones shown in this book.  Griffiths' has the advantage of serving before the proliferation of war blog photos.  Taken in the 80's his images already have the 'retro' style that is currently popular.  Several of his images have light leaks, are too vibrant or are poorly exposed but these are strengths rather than deficiencies.  The excerpts from his diary really add to the book and provide the much needed narrative.  It is from these that the decline in Griffiths' morale and increasing frustrations can be felt.  Much of the text has been scored through with a thick marker pen as if censored but there is enough visible behind the marker to read, albeit with a bit of effort, what is 'missing'.  I like this technique as I made me feel I was breaking the rules and seeing something secret.



The book finishes with a short essay by MacDonald that charts the creative process behind the book and explains a little of the professional relationship between the two authors.



It is possible to get a look at the full book by clicking HERE.  And no, those aren't my hands and painted fingernails :)

To learn more about Griffiths' work you can follow his blog HERE.

Manzine Magazine has a short but interesting interview with Griffiths HERE and Sean O'Hagan discusses the book for the Guardian newspaper HERE.



Tuesday 15 January 2013

Park Cameras Facebook Competition

Exciting news!  Just found out today that one of my pictures has won second prize in a Facebook photo competition organised by Park Cameras.  The theme was "Christmas" and so I entered an image of a robin in a suitably festive wintry tree.  I must admit that I entered this competition fairly early after it was announced and so forgot about it - there were only two other entries when I entered my shot and I hadn't realised that one of the other ones was also a robin.  I nearly deleted the email telling me I had won one of the two prizes available - a Canon A3+ sized photo printer!

The timing couldn't be more perfect as I am about to print off the final versions of the prints I want to include in my university application portfolio.  The Canon Pixma Pro-100 that Park are sending me has had great reviews and is the new model of the Canon 9000 Mk2 that I currently use.  I'll hopefully get it in the post in the next few days and I'll do a review of it and provide some comparison between that and the older version.

Here is the shot that won the competition and below it my robin picture.  I've had a look through the 200+ entries that Park Cameras received for this competition and picked out a few of my favorites.


Edinburgh Ramsey Garden - Tim Hodges
A truly deserving winner that captured this beautiful spot in amazing light.  This I could easily see being snapped up by manufacturers of Christmas Cards.

Winter Robin - Paul Fox :)

This robin lives right outside the office window where I've worked for the past three years (or at least a long line of similarly looking robins has done so).  Like lots of urban robins he's gotten very brave and doesn't seem to mind humans getting close to him.  This was a particularly cold morning and we had some unusual frost formations here in Shropshire and so I had my Canon G9 with me as it has a great macro mode.  I noticed the robin sat perfectly in the tree above me as I was shooting and chanced a couple of shots of him - this was  the best of the bunch I took.  Thank you Mr Robin for winning me a lovely prize.

The following images are taken from the competition pages.  Because of the automated entry system used by facebook very few of the entries had titles or any details of the photographer - all copyright etc remains with them!

Harsh Winter - Uncredited

Mary - Uncredited
All things Twinkle at Christmas - Jeanette62
Santa - Uncredited


I've really started to enjoy entering these competitions.  Begrudgingly I'd encourage you all to have a go - but that means I'm going to have to up my game to try to beat you.  I've found that you can never really tell what the judges are looking for (or the quality of the other images in the running) for a prize.  Don't be afraid to enter and if you don't expect to win and you can only ever be delighted if your name gets a mention or better still you actually win something.  Over 3000 people 'like' Park Cameras on facebook and they have now all seen the two winning images, more will be on Park's weekly email listing - that's great publicity for any aspiring photographer.