Wednesday, 27 July 2016

It's all Greek to me!



Can the ancient Greek sculptors teach us about contemporary photography and styles? Lucinda Merriman meets photographer Hannah Chambers to find out why she thinks that they can.

Hannah Chambers, 22, a little shy but determined, graduated from Portsmouth University in 2015 with a 2:1 in Interior Architecture and Design.

Interested in architecture and history from an early age, Hannah explains: “I’ve always been fascinated by classical architecture – Roman and Greek grandeur – soaring Corinthian columns and the drama and beauty of the Greek sculptures.  I love historical buildings that we don’t seem to be able to build now and I’m really interested in their restoration and conservation. It’s interesting to see contemporary architects designing new additions that sympathetically enhance, while not changing the integrity of the building. 

"I love what David Closes did with the 18th century Convent de Sant Francesc in Spain, his fantastic contempoarary auditorium fits perfectly with the original building." 

“I also admired Zahra Hadid, I respected her confidence, determination and style.  Her architecture is very innovative, I like her fluidity and sense of movement. Her designs enhance their surroundings and will be design classics of the future.”

After graduating, Hannah quickly got a job at an exhibition designers and has now moved on to be a 3-D designer conceptual and 2-D shop fitting designer.

Hannah is also a keen photographer, “My dad was always snapping shots which looks effortless but were really good, he taught me a great deal but it was only after doing my degree that my eyes were really opened to the art of photography.  

Ground breaking photographers like Richard Avedon with his series of documentary style shots of ordinary people ‘In the American West’ and Henry Cartier Bresson’s street photography really interests and excites me.  I’m intrigued with his idea of the ‘decisive moment’ when a photographer chooses the exact moment to capture the shot.”

Hannah would like to turn professional at some stage in her career and having had some experience in wedding photography, would like to do more. And it seems that her early appreciation of Greek sculpture is something she thinks can be applied to the photographer’s craft.

“Greek sculpture captured the human form in a way that was new – they considered proportions and poise and presented an idealised perfection of the human body. As a wedding photographer, you are asked to represent the couple at their peak – this is their optimum moment – their crowning glory - they must look like Gods! I want to capture that ‘decisive moment’ for them to keep always.”

“I see wedding photography as a merger of old and new – there’s a long tradition that has to be upheld which dictates which shots need to be taken but I always aim to introduce a new twist or angle that is unexpected. To me it's all about that true moment when someone relaxes and their true personality shines – it’s unguarded, spontaneous and above all real.”

As Zahra Hadid said, “There are 360 degrees, so why stick to one?”


To see more of Hannah's pics, please click here.


Tuesday, 26 July 2016

Gin to make you grin


From cheap Mother’s Ruin to £2,000 a bottle for Watenshi, the World’s most expensive; gin has been part of our culture for over 400 years. Lucinda Merriman visits Warner Edwards, craft distillers in Northamptonshire to find out why ‘boutique brewing’ is such big business.

I had my first G & T in a hotel lounge in Haywards Heath at the age of 40 and being a firm favourite ever since, when an invitation arrived for a tour of our local craft distillery Warner Edwards at Falls Farm in Harrington, Northamptonshire; I was keen to take up the kind offer.

With instructions to meet at the Tollemache Arms pub in Harrington at 2:45pm, ready for the tour at 3:00pm, the majority of the party decided to ignore this simple request arriving in dribs and drabs until 3.15pm. At last however, we were off following partner Tom Warner out through the pub’s front door and off along the road and into a field.

Being a ‘country girl’ and hearing that the distillery was on a farm, I decided to wear suitable footwear but was amused to see a number of our group were clad in high heels unsuitable for a hike through an undulating grass field complete with cows and their pats.

After a hesitant start – people hanging on to one another for support, a few dissenting murmurs about whether the cows were man-eaters, we walked along the top of Falls field with grassy terraces to our left and a stunning view down the valley to our right.  Tom stopped us halfway and began his tour with the history of the farm and the location of three natural springs, used to ‘finish’ their gins.

I was fascinated to learn that we were standing on the remains of huge terraces of a monumental post-medieval garden, which at one time led down to a house and a network of fishponds at the bottom of the valley. There’s not much to see now but taking into account the stunning view and scale of the garden, this must have been a truly amazing sight in it’s heyday.

Making our way into Falls farmyard, we paused to admire the exterior of the 200-year old converted distilling barn (formerly used as a ‘hospital’ for ailing livestock), before entering and placing our G & T orders – Dry, Elderflower or Rhubarb.  

I opted for the elderflower which had a pleasing blueish hue and tasted light and refreshing – I can’t claim to say that I tasted all the subtle botanicals, which included both dried and fresh elderflower but it was lovely on this hot July afternoon.

Standing in the newly planted ‘botanical garden’ sipping our drinks, Tom enthusiastically explained how he had built it as an homage to his mother and as a source of inspiration for his next gin flavour. Currently they are experimenting with Lemon Balm and hope to launch with this in September.

G & T’s polished off and ‘glowing’ we were soon back in the barn being introduced to ‘Curiosity’ the copperpot still custom built in Germany by Arnold Holstein. Tom explained the gin making process, which is clearly a labour of love and very lucrative given gin sales in the UK are estimated to reach £1 billion this year.

The tour finished with a tasting of four gins: Dry, Elderflower, Rhubarb and Sloe.  Tasting neat gin is in my opinion not the best way to appreciate them but I bravely pushed on and ended up buying both the Dry and the Rhubarb before leaving with a big gin-grin on my face. Cheers!

I took part in a corporate tour with VertoUK, Creative Web & Graphic Design.
Normal tours are held every Wednesday at 7.00pm (minimum of 10 people). 
Tour tickets: £15 per person with £5 redeemable in the distillery shop and a G & T upon arrival.
To make a booking call 01536 710623 or email tours@warneredwards.com

Thursday, 14 July 2016

Beauty or beast?

Appearances can sometimes be deceiving: Lucinda Merriman meets conceptual Illustrator Eleanor Marriott, one of the new wave video game designers, to find out how the horror genre can be an empowering, feminist force.

Meeting Eleanor May Marriott for the first time is certainly a very interesting experience as she fills the room with her off beat vivacious personality. At 21, she’s a cross between Scarlet Johannsson and Sarah Millican – stunningly attractive, with a curious dress sense and a witty self-effacing sense of humour.

Recently graduated in Graphic Communication and Illustration from Loughborough University, you could quickly dismiss her as being like many middle class design graduates – privileged, predictable, blond and dipsey; but appearances can be deceiving, as Ellie is far from what you would expect, having a fascination with the darker side of life.

Adopted as a baby by a farming family in Leicestershire, Ellie was brought up knowing about her biological parents and their reasons for giving her up. "Being adopted doesn’t have much to do with who I am but growing up on a farm has helped me put nature vs nurture in some sort of prospective, as I do believe that rearing an animal or child is the most important and difficult part of the process."

And Ellie suggests that it was this early exposure to the realities of raising livestock that gave her an upbeat and realistic outlook that embraces the horror film and game genres that she so loves.

"I think I'm desensitised to scary things because of watching it for real from an early age, seeing a calf born, sending animals to market - there's no sugar coating on a farm."

Ellie started gaming early having her first XBOX 360 and Halo (science fiction shooter game) at only 7 years old. "I’ve always loved to escape through games and I definitely have a wanderlust and rebellious streak. "I’m fascinated by the idea of inter-dimensional travel, other worlds and paranormal experiences."

It might seem that Ellie wants to escape reality but she refutes this: "I am perfectly happy with who I am now. Everyone from an early age is always asking - who do you want to be, what are you going to do? There’s a lot of pressure to conform and be a success - I have always been a little alternative and want to do it my way; I’m at that age where the future is a big mystery."

Ellie is looking for work as a conceptual 2-D Designer and Illustrator and showed her potential for illustration at her university’s end of year Arts Degree Show where she exhibited a mixture of monsters and a video game concept called 'Presence' about demonic possession.

One disgustingly, disturbing monster featured in her portfolio, Ellie explains: "This grotesque, multi-limbed monster is a combination of  'popular' phobias - spiders, deformity, death and decay - this apparition creates a tension with the viewer which the monster mirrors back through the tension in its skin,  It looks uncomfortable, incomplete - in some ways I think it's a metaphor for being a woman."

This seems a pretty bleak interpretation of womanhood but Ellie seems unconcerned - as it she doesn't really take herself or her creations too seriously, cultivating a dark sense of humour, yet thoughtfulness in her work which aims to shock: "I want to subtly wrong-foot people, to create a brooding atmosphere that knocks you off balance - you know when you are walking and suddenly take an invisible step down - it's unnerving."

Ellie explains her creative process: "I draw constantly, sometimes for 5 hours at a time, where spur of the moment ideas pop out of my head straight onto the page.  I often listen to video game sound tracks to help focus my mind, (interestingly they have been shown to help concentration) and become fully immersed to the extent that I must be on autopilot."

Talking about who influences her work, she says: "My mother bought me a book of architectural sketches by John Ruskin which I found very inspirational.  I love his use of line and the detail to his drawings.  There's a great atmosphere of Victorian Gothic melodrama, which I find especially appealing." 

Ellie also takes inspiration from video game artists such as Joe Madureira who created 'Darksiders', an action role playing, hack 'n' slash video game developed by Vigil Games and published by THQ.
Ellie enthuses: "I love the amazing monsters and demons Joe creates and the pacy story line, he has a great eye for composition and form and his environments are just gorgeous." 

So where will this take Ellie in the future and what does she think she can bring to this very masculine genre?  "I hope being female in an industry where the key influencers are men but where increasingly more women are playing and enjoying these type of games will help me create a more accurate representation of what today's women aspires to be.  We need more strong, non-sexualised female leads that will help enforce the idea that women are not victims but can kick butt too!"  

Ellie is certainly of this mould - she's a contradiction - appealing, thought provoking and often quite disturbing but nobody's fool - beauty and beast combined!






Monday, 4 July 2016

Fårö, Fårö away

As a shy 18 year old living in a small Northamptonshire village, who's only experience of 'Abroad' was a weekly glimpse of foreign climes in the company of Cliff Michelmore and a swoon of Hollywood films full of glamorous people, leading fascinating lives in faraway places; I was keen to check-in to this exotic thing called travel and in the summer of '82 my chance to step out into the big beyond fell at my feet in the form of an invitation to stay with a family in Sweden.

Frenzied packing ensued, fond farewells and an excited but extremely nervous teenage arrived in Stockholm.

Meet Henrik (dad - businessman, inclined to road rage), Christina (mum - English teacher who opened my eyes to Apartheid), Martin (big brother - soon to leave for his National Service), Anna (enthusiastic 16 year old who was my 'exchange') and Rufino (scruffy black terrier with a penchant for hedgehogs).

I was ready to be romanced and quite prepared to fall in love with everything and everyone - this was far, far away from my provincial life - I had escaped onto a film set with me as the leading lady!

My opening scene was spent discovering Stockholm - the stunning 13th century Gamla Stan (Old Town), the gargantuan Royal Palace, the 18th century Drottingholm Court Theatre and the Grona Lund amusement park.

While I would like to say that I fully appreciated the diverse culture, sublime architecture and watery beauty of the setting: it was my first experience of a fun park which gave me the biggest buzz!

Without a copy of the script, nothing prepared me for the second week however, spent at the family's summerhouse on Faro.

Taking a car ferry to Visby on Gotland, a drive North to Farosund and another ferry to Faro, one could see why this small 18km long Baltic island is called the Traveller's Island.

Driving off the car ferry we were stopped by the military police as Faro at that time had a strategic military installation and was strictly off-limits to foreigners.  I was rather nervous when my 'special papers' were presented to the officer, who on quickly scanning them, waved us through.
  
We drove through the flat, scrubby landscape with huge Norfolkesque skies to arrive at their white wooden summerhouse surrounded by a beautiful wildflower meadow with a sprinkling of fir trees.

The weather was hot and we walked through flower-flexed pastures, picking huge mushrooms, rode bikes through cool forests and explored the rocky beaches to the West with their ancient Ice Age Monoliths known as Rauks patrolled by the military police and the sandy beaches favoured by nudists to the East of the island.

I was enchanted by this idyll and it seemed fitting that Ingmar Bergman also had a house on the island where I loved every minute of the beauty, mystery and allure - a heady mix for an impressionable teenager!

I was a real traveller and my adventure had just begun!