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Archives for July 2009

Shots from the hip

Phil Coomes | 09:25 UK time, Friday, 31 July 2009

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Francis Bacon on the Piccadilly Line

In the early '90s, I picked up a book called Shots from the Hip by Johnny Stiletto. The title and technique appealed. Frames grabbed by holding the camera with a wide-angle lens down low and hoping for the best.

Today, everyone holds their camera at arm's length, weird angles and anything goes.

But this was a time of film, and virtually everyone using a 35mm camera looked through the viewfinder. Away from the usual tourist zones, it was rare to see a camera on the streets; today there's one in every pocket.

Shots from the Hip by Johnny StilettoA couple of weeks ago, an e-mail popped into my inbox from Johnny, with a link to his website and the words "A website for people who like photography". It rang a bell; I clicked and, sure enough, there were the pictures I remembered from nearly 20 years ago. I still have the book, and I dug it out again for another look.

Johnny Stiletto was - indeed, is - an alias which adds an air of mystery to the pictures. Who is it who shoots so many photographs of his daily encounters? These are pictures that form a visual diary; they're records of moments that catch his eye; occasionally, they're taken just to fill the time. Have camera, may as well take pictures.

Following publication of the image of on the Piccadilly Line (top), Johnny got a call from picture editor Bruce Bernard, who was a close friend of Bacon, saying it was Francis' favourite picture of himself and could Francis have a print? Johnny remembers that "I had two prints, I signed one for him and Bacon signed one for me."

Some of Johnny's photographs work in their own right, many are very funny, while others benefit from his commentary in which he recalls his thoughts at the time of making the picture.

Today his photographic style is alive and well, he said:

"I'm still using a 35mm camera (film not digital), still using a wide angle, still not using flash and refining the techniques in Shots from the Hip. I'm trying to move towards a man-in-the-crowd view of events. Things that I see that are attractive or quirky, and also the impact of the big things that happen, the 7/7 bombings, Boris Johnson, the Big Bust. The everyday things that hit on me and probably do on everyone else."


Your pictures of the week: Time

Phil Coomes | 16:30 UK time, Wednesday, 29 July 2009

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I've been somewhat busy this week so please accept my apologies for a lack of posts to this blog, but to make up for it here's our weekly gallery of your pictures, on the theme of time, appropriately enough, slightly ahead of schedule.

We received a cracking selection of photos, including some clever photography and some humorous interpretations of a subject that's not that easy to grasp visually.

Do let us know which is your favourite by using the comment box below.

So my congratulations to those whose pictures have been chosen - and if your picture didn't make it, why not send us something for next week?

The theme for the coming week is Wonder.

Interpret this in any way you see fit and send your pictures to us at yourpics@bbc.co.uk or .

Please include the word "Wonder" in the subject line of your message.

The deadline is midnight BST Tuesday 4 August, and remember to add your name and a caption: who, what, where and when should be enough, though the more details you give, the better your chance of being selected.

We will publish a selection of your photos this time next week.

Files should be sent as JPEGs. They shouldn't be larger than 10Mb and ideally much smaller: around 1Mb is fine, or you can resize your pictures to 1,000 pixels across.

Please see our terms and conditions, but remember that the copyright remains with you. The pictures will only be used by the ´óÏó´«Ã½ for the purposes of this project. Finally, when taking photos, please do not endanger yourself or others, take unnecessary risks or infringe any laws.

Any questions or suggestions for future themes, please use the comment form and I'll get back to you.

Your pictures of the week: Stripes

Phil Coomes | 08:29 UK time, Thursday, 23 July 2009

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This week we asked for your pictures on the theme of stripes, and as you will see we had a fantastic response, so much so that this week we have published 12 rather than 10 images in our gallery.

Do let us know which is your favourite by using the comment box below.

So my congratulations to those whose pictures have been chosen - and if your picture didn't make it, why not send us something for next week?

The theme for the coming week is Time.

Interpret this in any way you see fit and send your pictures to us at yourpics@bbc.co.uk or .

Please include the word "Time" in the subject line of your message.

The deadline is midnight BST Tuesday 28 July, and remember to add your name and a caption: who, what, where and when should be enough, though the more details you give, the better your chance of being selected.

We will publish a selection of your photos this time next week.

Files should be sent as JPEGs. They shouldn't be larger than 10Mb and ideally much smaller: around 1Mb is fine, or you can resize your pictures to 1,000 pixels across.

Please see our terms and conditions, but remember that the copyright remains with you. The pictures will only be used by the ´óÏó´«Ã½ for the purposes of this project. Finally, when taking photos, please do not endanger yourself or others, take unnecessary risks or infringe any laws.

Any questions or suggestions for future themes, please use the comment form and I'll get back to you.

Swapping sides

Phil Coomes | 11:00 UK time, Wednesday, 22 July 2009

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Bryan Adams at the Saatchi Gallery in London

Canadian singer Bryan Adams is best known for his music, but he's also pretty good with a camera and his is currently on show at London's Saatchi Gallery until 26 July.

The exhibition contains portraits of a number of celebrities including Jude Law, Elle MacPherson, Lord Attenborough and Amy Winehouse and aims to raise awareness of the importance of healthy hearing and the impact of hearing loss.

It's by no means Adams' first show; in addition to many exhibitions he has published a number of books.

It made me wonder how many other celebrities also enjoy taking the odd snap or two.
Actor is an obvious place to start. He is well known for taking pictures whilst on set using a , capturing those moment between takes that only an actor sees.

Another musician, has also been exhibiting his work for many years, though it's in direct contrast to that of Adams and Bridges work.

A couple of models have also made the leap from one side of the lens to the other, is one.

Looking back a little further there was of course Koo Stark, one time girlfriend of Prince Andrew, who incidentally has also published a book of his pictures. During their time together and was lucky enough to be tutored by photographic master , who later wrote the foreword to her book Contrasts, which was published in 1985.

Anyone know of any others?

The whole story

Phil Coomes | 10:21 UK time, Tuesday, 21 July 2009

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The falling soldier by Robert Capa

So it's a fake. Or at least that's the claim by Spanish newspaper and followed up in amongst others.

Robert Capa's picture (above) is known as the falling soldier and is allegedly of a man's last moments during the Spanish Civil War in September 1936. It's a picture that has confounded critics and historians for many years.

Some argue it's a set up, and others, including Capa's biographer Richard Whelan, state that while the soldiers were posing for the camera a sniper managed to shoot this man, Federico Borrell García.

"There can be no further doubt that The Falling Soldier is a photograph of Federico Borrell García at the moment of his death during the battle at Cerro Muriano on September 5, 1936."

The latest claims however indicate that the pictures were taken 30miles (50km) away from any fighting, and seem to be worthy of further examination. The Spanish newspaper El Periodico has examined two other frames that help identify the location of the pictures and have found there was no fighting at this time in that area. Assuming this is accurate; it would indicate that the picture does not show the death of a soldier.

Does this matter now that the picture is more than 70 years old and no longer a news picture, but a work of art? Yes, of course it does. If it just shows a few men fooling around then it makes the world of difference. But does that ruin Capa's reputation? Most defiantly not.

The picture was initially published in the French magazine, Vu in September 1936 under the headline, How they fell, and later in the July 1937 issue of Life magazine.

Remember this photograph wasn't wired from the heat of battle. Capa's films would have been packaged with captions, shipped off, developed and published, probably before he'd seen a frame.

Omaha beach by Robert CapaFor me at least, this was never Capa's defining picture. If it's real, then it's a great news picture, but to me it has always looked like a man falling over. Unlike so many other pictures he took where you can feel the emotions dripping off the print, this one is remote.

His dictum that you need to get close to get a good picture rings true today. Not just physically, but emotionally too. Everyone has seen his pictures form Omaha beach on D-Day, the one reproduced here being arguably the defining image of the Second World War, but there are many more in the .

He was undeniably a brave photographer, and one that enjoyed the thrill of getting the picture. It should also be remembered that his untimely death in 1954 meant he was never able to address any concerns about the validity of the picture as it wasn't questioned until 1975.

One final thought, and that is that perhaps the falling soldier's legacy is to remind us pictures are not real, indeed all are fabrications to some extent. Yes, they are vital in that they provide a record of historical and personal moments, but they don't tell the whole story, the real story, just fragments of it.


PS. You can also view I created with my colleague Caroline Briggs in which Cynthia Young, the curator of Capa's pictures at the International Center of Photography in New York, talks about Capa's pictures when they were on show at the Barbican in London in October 2008.

Dispatches

Phil Coomes | 09:57 UK time, Monday, 20 July 2009

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Calcutta by Gary Knight

Photographers often lament the passing of the golden age of photojournalism. For 50 years or so in the US and in the UK sold millions of copies each week at a time when the still picture brought the world to the breakfast tables of the Western world.

By the 1960s television began to take over this role and indeed attract much of the advertising revenue that supported the picture magazines, though many newspapers picked up that baton. By the 1990s photographers seeking to get a large number of their images in one magazine were starting to struggle.

The world has changed since those heady days when photographers working for the major newspapers strode the globe, parachuting into the latest story, and in some cases remaining with that story for many years.

They ruled the world of photojournalism, defining what history remembers and indeed what it forgets. Today it's the wire photographers whose pictures dominate our publications, be they on the internet or in print.

With commissioning budgets being cut many photographers are seeking new ways to get their work seen, in the form they want, which is probably why the photographic book is still the holy grail for photographers.

Looking at the UK there have been a number of magazines launched whose aim was to promote quality photojournalism, one that sticks in the mind is Colin Jacobson's Reportage Magazine, and more recently Jon Levy's , which oddly began life on the internet and then expanded into print, fairly successfully it would seem, long may it last.

Dispatches magazinePhotographer Gary Knight also felt he needed a new outlet for his pictures, which could be seen as surprising as he is very successful, published in some of the biggest magazines out there, including Newsweek to which he is a contract photographer. He is also one of the founders of .

Together with ex-Associated Press journalist and publisher Dr Simba Gill they conceived and then launched a new magazine, , just over a year ago, and the fourth edition has recently hit the streets.

The publication is the size of slightly swollen paperback and dressed in brown card, a bit like the school textbooks that had to be covered in brown paper (do they still do that?), anyway, it works, it's a simple design.

Dispatches is not a photographic magazine, the majority of its pages carry high quality journalism on the theme for that issue. America, Iraq and Russia were covered in the first three issues.

The latest, not surprisingly, moves away from one geographic locations and looks at poverty, and for the first time includes pictures by Gary. Previous issues have included the work of , and .

This being a photo blog I want to concentrate on looking at the photographs, and the presentation of the long form essay. The presentation is simple enough; blocks of pictures are run with minimal text, sometimes across the fold, sometimes turned on their side, giving the whole package the feeling of a journal made on the move, a work book if you like.

This feeling increases when looking at the first set of pictures in issue four which are in the form of postcards. They are actually pictures taken by Gary and printed in his hire car, then mailed home. , no trips to far flung locations here, turn a street corner and there's always a story to be had.

Youngstown by Gary KnightOn the back of one card (photo) he writes: "Two houses for sale $800 in Campbell, Youngstown. That makes this house in Ohio six times cheaper than in Cambodia. More chance of a job in Cambodia though."

Simple enough presentation, and not a new idea, but the fact that it follows an essay by Mort which includes interviews from Youngstown that capture the despair, and indeed hope for the future of its residents, makes the pictures very effective.

The photographs are shot in the style of the American vernacular photographers of the 70s such as and have a large format landscape feel, yet this is deceptive as they were shot on a standard digital SLR camera.

Their delivery as postcards, disposable, jumbled on the pages counteracts this notion of value as art. The precious images are almost discarded, just as the lives of those who once lived and worked in the properties have seemingly moved on, for better or worse. There maybe a little poetic license being taken here, by me not Gary, but you get the idea.

The other two photos essays in the latest issue are more traditional black and whites explorations of a and another set . Captions for these can be found on a printed insert at the back of the magazine, but in many ways you don't need them.

The pictures speak for themselves, you can interpret them yourself, get the grey matter working and analyse each frame. It's certainly liberating, not having to read captions on each picture.

You could of course retreat to the accusation that the pictures don't tell us anything of the lives of the individuals, but just reflect their appearance to an outsider and fail to address any of the structures within society that created these conditions. But context adds meaning, and these pictures when seen in the context of Dispatches, alongside the essays do give you a insight into the issues at hand, draw you in and perhaps entice you to seek out more information.

In all the editions the photographer is addressing a subject or place, and then saying this is my take, my view of it, do you get it or do you see something else?

are particularly effective in this way, if you don't know his work , I promise you it will be time well spent.

It's been said many times, but a good photographer has to have something to say.

Your pictures of the week: Modernity

Phil Coomes | 10:23 UK time, Thursday, 16 July 2009

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Another week passes and it's time for a gallery of your pictures, this week we set you the task of taking photos on the theme of modernity.

As ever, congratulations to those whose pictures have been chosen - and if your picture didn't make it, why not send us something for next week?

The theme for the coming week is Stripes.

Interpret this in any way you see fit and send your pictures to us at yourpics@bbc.co.uk or .

Please include the word "Stripes" in the subject line of your message.

The deadline is midnight BST Tuesday 21 July, and remember to add your name and a caption: who, what, where and when should be enough, though the more details you give, the better your chance of being selected.

We will publish a selection of your photos this time next week.

Files should be sent as JPEGs. They shouldn't be larger than 10Mb and ideally much smaller: around 1Mb is fine, or you can resize your pictures to 1,000 pixels across.

Please see our terms and conditions, but remember that the copyright remains with you. The pictures will only be used by the ´óÏó´«Ã½ for the purposes of this project. Finally, when taking photos, please do not endanger yourself or others, take unnecessary risks or infringe any laws.

Any questions or suggestions for future themes, please use the comment form and I'll get back to you.

Shooting an audio slideshow

Phil Coomes | 10:30 UK time, Wednesday, 15 July 2009

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The days of shooting a news story in a single picture are coming to an end, at least for those of us whose primary output is the web.

For the last seven years or so I have been shooting stories for this website and these often take the form of static picture galleries, one image presented after another to be clicked through by the reader. It's a satisfying format and one that allows the photographer a fair amount of freedom.

A number of years ago the audio slideshow began to appear on both our site and others, the with its large contingent of photographers being a good exponent of the art. To some extent these are cut down versions of good old fashioned audio visual shows with multiple projectors, one of the most well known and best being .

Our own slideshows have developed little since the early days. They are now slightly larger but we still need to add features and indeed expand to the full width of the site, but here I want to talk a little about the making of a slideshow, not the output.

Last week I took a call from the Clare who works on the Business section of the site asking me to re-visit the City of London for Taking the pulse day (15 July), whereby they reflect the views of people around the country on the recession.

The reason I say return, is that last October I shot and produced a in a new way, or at least it was new to us, using just wild track (that is ambient audio), and music overlaid on traditional black and white street photography.

There seemed little point in doing exactly the same again as it doesn't really have anywhere to go journalistically. It was wonderful to shoot (all on a compact camera as it happens) but this time I thought I'd add in a few vox-pops, voices of those I met on the street, as this would match the other content being produced from around the country in video, text and audio form.

I certainly didn't want to create a lot of taking heads, oh so dull and probably best done in video form anyway, so chose to use the voices as a backing track.

Kit wise it's pretty simple: A decent digital audio recorder with a separate microphone (essential) and headphones (again essential so you can actually hear what you record) and of course a camera, this time an SLR with a few lenses.

All this kit makes me fairly easy to spot as I wrestle with the cables that inevitably tie themselves in a knot with my camera strap.

When setting out to produce a series of pictures it's a good idea to layout your story before you start, at least the type of images you are after and what sounds or words you feel can accompany them. These plans will usually fall away as you start to gather the material, but without it the whole process can be a little daunting.

There is of course a balance to be struck between shooting strong pictures and recording the audio. Personally I think you need to concentrate on one or the other at any one time, but this is still very much a work in progress for me, lots to learn, and plenty of room to improve. But that's exciting.

Anyway, spreading my net slightly wider this time I headed to a brokerage in Canary Wharf and then to the financial district in the centre of London, shooting stills and recording ambient sounds and a few voices along the way. A few hours later I returned to the office to download it all and check I had enough material.

I usually check the images with a rough glance and then work on the audio as that can dictate the length of the slideshow. You tend to need a picture every six to eight seconds, so that's a good figure to keep in mind when gathering the material as a 15 second interview will need at least three relevant pictures to cover it. You also need to work to the photos, as any TV journalist will tell you, write to the pictures.

You often find that you can't use all your best pictures though, certainly you need to include as many as you can, but there are moments where you just have to illustrate the audio, and that is fine, just so long as that doesn't happen too often within the production.

Working for a broadcaster often means answering the question why don't you shoot it in video? Well I'd guess most of you reading this are at least interested in the still image and quite possibly keen photographers so maybe you get it already.

The still image is just that, still. It's not the real world but a flat representation and as such can open up a new world that allows us to study a split second in a way that the moving world, or image, doesn't. In an earlier post I wrote about the truth of a photograph and one of my readers DanSF4fun commented that a "map is not the territory" just as a picture is not the thing pictured.

There are of course ways to merge video and stills, long the domain of the documentary film maker, and a number of websites and photographers are doing this, creating much longer presentations.

My mind is not yet made up on this, maybe I have a short attention span, but throwing in video for me doesn't always work that well, it needs to be for a reason, not just to show talking heads, conversely stills should not be used just to mask cuts in the video.

It can work though, just look at photographers such as or work for the Guardian from Iraq and Afghanistan, or the work of . These both deal with hard news stories where the visuals are strong, if you have the will to get close enough. But if you are looking for innovative use of stills and video on a wide range of issues then try .

Ultimately it's content that counts, no amount of gimmickry will save a poor story.

Your pictures of the week: Reflections

Phil Coomes | 09:35 UK time, Thursday, 9 July 2009

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It's been a busy week, lots of blog posts and big news stories too. Anyway, it's Thursday so time for a gallery of your pictures, this week we set you the task of taking photos on the theme of reflections.

Do let us know which is your favourite by using the comment box below.

As ever, congratulations to those whose pictures have been chosen - and if your picture didn't make it, why not send us something for next week?

The new theme is "modernity" and was suggested to us by roddylancs a reader of this blog.

Interpret this in any way you see fit and send your pictures to us at yourpics@bbc.co.uk or .

Please include the word "Modernity" in the subject line of your message.

The deadline is midnight BST Tuesday 14 July, and remember to add your name and a caption: who, what, where and when should be enough, though the more details you give, the better your chance of being selected.

We will publish a selection of your photos this time next week.

Files should be sent as JPEGs. They shouldn't be larger than 10Mb and ideally much smaller: around 1Mb is fine, or you can resize your pictures to 1,000 pixels across.

Please see our terms and conditions, but remember that the copyright remains with you. The pictures will only be used by the ´óÏó´«Ã½ for the purposes of this project. Finally, when taking photos, please do not endanger yourself or others, take unnecessary risks or infringe any laws.

Any questions or suggestions for future themes, please use the comment form and I'll get back to you.

The family album

Phil Coomes | 09:17 UK time, Wednesday, 8 July 2009

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A family have tea in a beach hut

As time passes I find that my eye turns more often to pictures that depict little moments in people's lives. Photographs that capture the tales of a life passing, dreams realised, and those that just got away.

The family album is something we all treasure and is often cited as the item we'd grab if we were allowed to keep only one possession.

Yet, I'd guess we have all seen old family albums for sale at auction, in charity shops or at photographic fairs, and this seems odd, personal pictures so out of context, images of loved ones no longer remembered. How do they get there and what stories do they hold?

Dawn Parsonage is also interested in this field. Indeed she likes to collect things, pictures and children's books anyway. She is the proud owner of a large collection of children's books that were once owned by the late Spike Milligan, including one with an inscription from Peter Sellers.

Fascinating stuff, but of course my interest lies in her growing collection of old family photo albums, not her family you understand, those of strangers.

I asked Dawn to explain why she is drawn to collect other people's pictures:

"I'm fascinated by photography and social history so old photo albums are the perfect marriage of the two. They're windows into a day, a moment, a captured fraction of a second a long time ago that can tell you so much about the person and the time they lived in.

"I've been collecting old photo albums for 10 years now. It all started with a 1930s album and diary of a Brownie leader and her antics on camping trips I found in a market for £8. Some of the pictures are beautiful, some comical and some surprisingly modern.

"After that I kept my eye out for other interesting albums with images that were more than just the snaps on the beach, or pictures of the new baby. I love images that tell a story, which have humour; images that show the personality of the subject or the photographer, bringing the moment to life again.

"I think it's so sad that all these images could so easily have been lost. When I see a ripped album page I wonder what moments have already gone forever, and how long it will be until the photographs I work so hard to create and capture today are forgotten and lost too. I guess there's part of me that holds onto other people's memories and moments to give them a second life.

"I love photographers such as Robert Capa, and I guess these albums do a similar thing to his work, documenting life, but the difference being these were never published.

"In my bookshelves I have the album of a sailor who travelled to the Far East and proud of his ship, the Glaswegian who tried to document his city with the modern technology of photography, the woman who was amazed by the life sized inflatable elephant hovering over the corner shop and a picture of a hideous dress lovingly made and never worn again. I'd love to share all of these images and stories somehow, ideally getting a book together in the future.

"I not only collect these images but I also take photographs in the old way too, with a twin lens camera with no light meter. I guess the exposure the same way as they would have done for most of the images from my albums; this has so far worked well due to the latitude of black and white negative film.

"I love the silence and unobtrusive nature of my old camera, the preciousness of each image in this day of digital. There's something about old techniques that feel warmer, with more of an atmosphere to it, although it's difficult to put you're finger on why I love it so much really."

Portrait of a man in Devon by Dawn ParsonageIndeed, how long before the photographs we all take are forgotten and lost too, and if you follow that through to its conclusion, how long before our lives are forgotten and cast aside at a car boot sale.

It's not just pictures of people, places too, photographs of record that are abandoned without any captions.

Pictures can be cruel, all photographs are in some ways about death, the moment that will never come again, mantelpieces dotted with children's faces, long grown and now hidden in the world.

Clarisse d'Arcimoles, who has just completed a photography course at Central Saint Martins College in London, has attempted to turn back the clock, . The details are exquisite, and each frame took days to plan, yet for all that she notes that "what is being reconstructed is no longer reachable".

These frozen moments also play an important part in shaping our own history and can over time begin to shape our memories. Do we remember the event as it happened, or do we remember it because there is a picture of it?

That of course doesn't only apply to personal pictures, but also the grand moments of history, those split seconds caught by the lens that define whether a moment is important or not, but maybe that's a post for another time.

A memorable moment

Phil Coomes | 09:13 UK time, Tuesday, 7 July 2009

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Battersea Power Station

Jeff Overs, a photographer here at ´óÏó´«Ã½ News, has won first prize in the features category of competition which showcases the outstanding press photographs taken for and used by the UK media.

The image of Battersea Power Station (above) was one of 7,877 photographs entered from which 146 pictures made the final cut in 16 categories.

I asked Jeff to explain how he came to take the picture, he said:

"It was a memorable moment because I had a road accident at that location. I had seen the 'English garden' hoarding before, but always on grey days, and had thought to myself that I would stop sometime when it was sunny.

"That day (a year ago this week) I was driving past and saw the cumulus clouds and blue sky - so I indicated and filtered into the right turn lane. Suddenly a white delivery van hurtled over the slight hill behind me and came smashing into the back of my car, shunting me along the street and causing quite a bit of damage to my vehicle.

"After the exchange of details, and having photographed the accident as evidence (it was his fault by the way) I decided to stay a while and photograph the view across the road.

"I saw the jogger coming into view so put on a polarizing filter and took the picture shown, all the while standing next to my damaged car by the pavement. I waited a while and took others but this was the best frame. If I hadn't been in slight shock from the RTA I might have stuck around longer!

"The effect of the polarizing filter added to the surreal hoarding image with repeating topiary garden pattern makes it look like a composite Photoshop image - it isn't!"

I offer my congratulations to Jeff and the other winners. or they are on display at the National Theatre in London until 31 August.

Documenting a community

Phil Coomes | 15:42 UK time, Monday, 6 July 2009

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Ada and Elfed Griffiths

As you can imagine we get sent many pictures and photo essays and it's a joy to flick through and see what's arrived. Some images stand out, and one that did is the one above by Ed Gold. It's a picture I'd be happy to look at time and again and one I felt worth posting to my blog.

The picture shows Ada and Elfed Griffiths, part of a small Welsh community in Patagonia, and this enticed me to find out a little more.

Documentary photographer Ed Gold has an interesting approach to his stories and to say he likes to get close to his subjects is perhaps an understatement. His latest project has meant a three year stay in South America where he has been documenting a small Welsh community in Patagonia, descendents of the original group who arrived in 1865.

Prior to that Ed was based in for a number of years Anglesey documenting rural communities in Wales. Oddly enough though, Ed is from Essex and doesn't speak Welsh, but a television programme on the community in Patagonia was enough to convince him he should head in that direction.

His original intention was to stay for a month, but that soon turned into a year and then more, eventually driven by the prospect of publishing a book of his pictures from Patagonia.

Ed is currently in New York, I wonder which road he'll take next.

You can see more of , and if you've got a project you think I should look at, then please drop me a line via e-mail.

Your pictures of the week: Black

Phil Coomes | 09:38 UK time, Thursday, 2 July 2009

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Many thanks again to all of you who submitted pictures this week.

This time, we asked you to send photos on the theme of black. Inevitably, there were a lot of strong black and white photos and we had a large number to choose from, making selection difficult.

Anyway, I've tried to give a balance to the picture gallery and .

Which is your favourite? Let us know what you think by using the comment box below.

As ever, congratulations to those whose pictures have been chosen - and if your picture didn't make it, why not send us something for next week?

The new theme is "Reflections" and was suggested by Alice Gur-Arie, a reader of this blog.

Interpret this in any way you see fit and send your pictures to us at yourpics@bbc.co.uk or .

Please include the word "Reflections" in the subject line of your message.

The deadline is midnight BST Tuesday 7 July, and remember to add your name and a caption: who, what, where and when should be enough, though the more details you give, the better your chance of being selected.

We will publish a selection of your photos this time next week.

Files should be sent as JPEGs. They shouldn't be larger than 10Mb and ideally much smaller: around 1Mb is fine, or you can resize your pictures to 1,000 pixels across.

Please see our terms and conditions, but remember that the copyright remains with you. The pictures will only be used by the ´óÏó´«Ã½ for the purposes of this project. Finally, when taking photos, please do not endanger yourself or others, take unnecessary risks or infringe any laws.

Any questions or suggestions for future themes, please use the comment form and I'll get back to you.

Faces of revolution

Phil Coomes | 14:34 UK time, Wednesday, 1 July 2009

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Candles are seen with photos of Neda Agha Soltan at a rally in New York, USA

Pictures of protest in themselves are now commonplace and easy to find on the internet - yet without that extra spark, that individual story, they do little more than covering the first base of still photography: simply stating that this happened and this is what it looked like to the photographer, a matter of record.

Wide shots of thousands marching can mean very little and it's easy to make a small crowd seem larger in a picture; a simple figure in text captures the scale of a demonstration just as well.

Often the most powerful pictures focus on the personal, an individual. These pictures can be visually strong with an eye-grabbing composition, or in the heat of the moment, as with many news pictures, just snatched moments where the content is so strong that the framing is secondary.

At the extreme end of the spectrum is the death of a protestor, something that, if recorded on film, can move into the public realm and become a beacon for those who are fighting for one cause or another.

A few notable examples taken on protests that spring to mind include the death of Carlo Giuliani who was shot dead by an Italian policeman in Genoa during demonstrations at the G8 in 2001 and among others.

To go further back , captured by photographer Malcolm Browne in 1963, or in 1989 and earlier this year in London, .

In recent days, the face that has stuck in the mind is that of Neda Agha-Soltan who was killed during the current unrest in Iran following contested elections in June.

The exact details of her death are not yet known but Neda's fiance, about the circumstances of her death:

"She was near the area (of the demonstration), a few streets away, from where the main protests were taking place, near the Amir-Abad area. She was with her music teacher, sitting in a car and stuck in traffic. She was feeling very tired and very hot. She got out of the car for just for a few minutes. And that's when it all happened."

It's hard to write about such a personal moment from a distance. Neda's death is undeniably a tragic one, and there has been much written on her life in recent days, but it's the role the photograph of her last moment is now playing that I want to explore.

A rally in New York, USAThe picture, a frame grabbed from a video has two voices: the personal tragedy for both Neda and her family, and the other its widespread use as a political tool.

The image has now spread around the globe and is mostly seen on placards accompanied with the slogan, "I am Neda", a rallying point for Iranian opposition supporters around the world.

As with Neda's image, some of the examples above made their way to placards and political literature, and were sometimes moulded and used in a variety of contexts to meet different ends.

Every picture, be it of conflict or of peace, creates a line of trust between photographers and photographed - but once the image is out there, it's almost impossible to control.

As photographers, whether professional or amateur, we borrow the likeness (to use that Victorian term) of our subject, and even with the best intentions have to accept that every time we press the shutter, we are stepping into someone's personal space, something we should do as honestly as we can.

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