Walk to Trinity Chapel Photography by Jonathan Talks

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  • This work is an "Open Edition" Photography, Giclée Print / Digital Print on Paper
  • Dimensions Several sizes available
  • Several supports available (Fine art paper, Metal Print, Canvas Print)
  • Framing Framing available (Floating Frame + Under Glass, Frame + Under Acrylic Glass)
Photography: Black & White, Digital and Photo on Paper. Walk to Trinity Chapel A spring walk along a narrow footpath in a pine woodland. The tree metaphorically connects the earth and the sky. Photography: 23” X 15” Archival print ORIGINAL PRINT - Limited Edition of 50 Crafted Prints (ultraHD[...]
Photography: Black & White, Digital and Photo on Paper.

Walk to Trinity Chapel

A spring walk along a narrow footpath in a pine woodland.
The tree metaphorically connects the earth and the sky.

Photography: 23” X 15” Archival print

ORIGINAL PRINT - Limited Edition of 50 Crafted Prints (ultraHD Photo Print on Fuji Crystal DP II )

Each print is cut and dry mounted on white backboard prior to the mounting of a white front mount. This fine art print meets museum longevity requirements and is carefully hand crafted. Prior to dispatch the print is hand signed and individually numbered. A certificate of authenticity is supplied.

Print Size | 23″ x 15"

Mount Size | 31" x 23″

This title forms a collection which is limited to an edition of 50 prints, individually created by the artist in his Nottingham studio to ensure maximum quality and richness.

Related themes

TreeWoodsNatureLandscapeQuiet

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Personal Statement for Wolverhampton visual anthropological study Wolverhampton is a town in central England that was important in the industrial era, now it is almost a completely different place[...]

Personal Statement for Wolverhampton visual anthropological study

Wolverhampton is a town in central England that was important in the industrial era, now it is almost a completely different place with most of the industry being removed. The old town was so busy that the smoke and fog from the factories used to cover all the buildings in a black carpet of dust and coal, it was known as the “black country”. What is left behind is a shell.
My anthropological study is made from a collection of 600 slides taken between 2001-02; people, industry, commerce, housing; local media and public space were all recorded.
On reflection, the portfolio shows the random nature of photography and why the photographer takes a picture, does he think before, during or after the shutter has been released?
The place of living, the collection of people, open spaces and buildings all combine to create an urban environment. This environment dictates to an extent how we can or cannot live. The work is a document belonging that specific place and time. It is part art, part science.

Statement for colour work

I am overwhelmed by colour. Unlike black and white, where I can control the image and tonal range, both in camera and the darkroom. With colour I am always on the defensive. Many of the images are blurred or out of focus. The information of colour is too much for me to comprehend. Colour is trying to stop me taking a photograph. Am I photographing colour or the subject? Subject matter is random; the colour always wins over my subject. Colour is energy, I cannot shape it, I sunburn easily. The camera machine bends the light onto my negative absorbing the colour. I can only watch the image afterwards, I have no control.

See more from Jonathan Talks

View all artworks
Photography | Several sizes
Not For Sale
Photography | Several sizes
Not For Sale
Photography | Several sizes
Not For Sale
Photography | Several sizes
Not For Sale

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