Archives for category: Publications / Tearsheets

A technical account of Anglo-Scottish Greenland Expedition is featured in 2009 American Alpine Journal: The World’s Most Significant Climbs.

ISBN: 978-1-933056-09-8

A098

Greenland Expedition

Knud Rasmussens Land, 2006 ascents. In August 2006 Jennifer Escott, Jonathan Hunter, Nick Mills, and I visited Knud Rasmussens Land, landing on the icecap at N 69°38.9′, W 27°44.0′.
This spot was the base camp for an out-going expedition from the Brathay Exploration Group, and we took over some of their vital pieces of kit, such as satellite phone and shotgun.

We planned to divide the expedition into three phases of roughly a week each: one on the icecap, exploring an impressive massif near the drop-off; one pulk-pulling across the icecap; and the third attempting unclimbed peaks around the glacier to the south, down from the icecap. Peaks on the icecap (nunataks) generally rise only a few hundred meters above the ice. Peaks on the lower glacier, although of similar altitude, generally involve climbs of much greater length and commitment, with exposed ridges of snow and friable basalt. From the air these peaks appeared quite challenging.

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Moving south down White Bird Glacier in Knud Rasmussens Land, with Big White Pyramid on the left. The high peak in the distance is Ejnar Mikkelsens Fjeld (3,308m), one of the most impressive on the east coast.

After establishing base camp east of our drop-off point, we ascended three peaks: Lunar Peak (N 69°34.2′, W 27°11.7′, 2,230m), Sunrise Peak (N 69°35.2′, W 27°12.2′, 2,270m), and Bowhead Peak (N 69°33.6′, W 27°29.4′, 2,065m). During our second week we broke the monotony of hauling pulks south along the icecap by tackling unclimbed summits that lay along our route. We first climbed the Four Sisters: Saamik (N 69°23.0′, W 27°35.6′, 2,130m), Seqineq (N 69°24.5′, W 27°34.8′, 2,100m), Sikkersoq (N 69°24.0′, W 27°33.9′, 2,090m), and Sissinnguaq (N 69°24.4′, W 27°33.9′, 2,030m). All were straightforward ascents. As with most other summits we climbed, coordinates and altitude were surveyed by GPS.

Next we climbed the Devil’s Fingers: Promontory Peak (N 69°27.7′, W 27°42.9′, 2,360m), Windslab Peak (N 69°26.7′, W 27°46.8′, 2,310m), and Lion’s Head Peak (N 69°26.2′, W 27°45.1′, 2,340m). We then continued our journey, arriving at the foot of an isolated snow peak, the last on our route before the edge of the ice cap. It provided another straightforward ascent, of Dreamer’s Peak (N 69°26.0′, W 27°45.1′, 2,280m). A day and a half of pulking then brought us to the edge of the icecap.


British Camp 8 at the southern end of the White Bird Glacier. The route up An Stuc (ca 2,190m) is marked. The large snowy peak to the right is the Big White Pyramid (ca 2,250–2,500m), attempted to 100m of the summit by Engel and Spencer (see AAJ 2007).

Our final phase consisted of a week at Camp 8 (N 69°007′, W 28°025′) at the southern end of White Bird Glacier. We were here from August 20 till our pickup on the 28th. This camp was located 10.5km south of the base camp used by Bob Dawson’s British expedition in 2003 (AAJ 2004, p. 253). Our first new summit was Heart Peak (N 69°09.4′, W 28°32.2′, 2,570m; estimated values, not from GPS). It was named after an unusual heart-shaped lake that had formed in the middle of the large glacier separating the Watkins Mountains and the west Knud Rasmussens Range. It lay adjacent to the start of the south ridge, a moderate rock climb up a pinnacled crest, which we used for our ascent. We followed this with ascents of Peak Hubris (N 69°06.2′, W 28°18.5′, 2,225m), Peak Aurora (N 69°06.4′, W 28°17.5′, 2,230m, not from GPS), and the Castle (N 69°06.6′, W 28°17.5′, 2,245m, not from GPS; Scottish 3 traversing below pinnacles). Our last climb was An Stuc (N 69°06.1′, W 28°24.4′, 2,190m, not from GPS; Scottish 2 with the summit pinnacle a British Difficult rock climb). We summited 16 new peaks and travelled 100km of untouched territory. The weather was generally good, with temperatures between 5 and 10°C during mid-day, dropping to as low as –20°C at night.

QUINTINLAKE, U.K.

View Expedition report here Download PDF of feature here

Gallery of arctic landscape photographs from the expedition here

Buy 2009 American Alpine Journal from Amazon UK here

Facade of Galleria Fashion Store, Seoul, South Korea

Facade of Galleria Fashion Store, Seoul, South Korea. Photo: Quintin Lake

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Example Spread from Hannover Re Annual Report

Lights above Nanjing East Road, Shanghai, China

Lights above Nanjing East Road, Shanghai, China. Photo: Quintin Lake

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Example Spread from Hannover Re Annual Report

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Detail Roof tiles Dubrovnik, Croatia. Photo: Quintin Lake

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Example Spread from Hannover Re Annual Report

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Bamboo fence next to Nijo Castle, Kyoto, Japan. Photo: Quintin Lake

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Example Spread from Hannover Re Annual Report

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Hannover Re Annual Report Cover 2008

German design agency Anzinger Wüschner Rasp selected my architectural texture photographs from Dubrovnik, Shanghai, Seoul and Kyoto to illustrate the international nature of the business of Hannover Re, one of the leading reinsurance groups in the world, in their 2008 Annual Report. The previous year’s annual report featured photographs by Yann Arthus-Bertrand.View the photographs on the Hanover re website here. Download a PDF of the report in German here and English here.

See more architectural photography including the images featured here in my book Drawing Parallels: Architecture Observed

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Drawing Parallels: Architecture Observed by Quintin Lake is now available for order at amazon.co.uk

Author Quintin Lake was on hand to sign copies of his new book to a crowd of 130 people including architects, photographers, designers, and supporters.

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People gathering outside 11 Shepherd Market during the launch of Drawing Parallels: Architecture Observed at Papadakis Studio, Shepherd Market, London

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The publishing team:
Hugh Cumming, Quintin Lake, Alexandra Papadakis & Sarah Roberts

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Drawing Parallels: Architecture Observed by Quintin Lake is now available for preview and order at Papadakis Publisher

THE FIFTH SEASON: SUBLIME IN THE CITY

By Quintin Lake

featured in the book Cinematic Architecture 1993-2008

Cinematic Architecture Book, Quintin Lake, The Fifth Season

A few years ago I travelled with some friends one summer to the arctic. For two month we travelled through this reduced landscape leaving our homes in the city. We moved through the ever-changing light and the constant horizon. Kant wrote that the sublime is the moment before fear, feeling overwhelmed and yet using the power of the mind to stay grounded. Occasionally the wind would blow the snow with such force that there were no forms from which to take a bearing.

Cinematic Architecture Book, Quintin Lake, The Fifth Season

It sometimes seems bizarre when our desires are so ephemeral, that we live and move in such fixed forms. I yearn for a space of the fifth season within the city: a horizon and no walls, a house constructed of light, whose presence takes one by surprise. and responds to the seasons.

Cinematic Architecture Book, Quintin Lake, The Fifth Season

The house of the fifth season is located beyond the houses in a position of lightness where the possibilities of a new horizon can be seen. In the city the light sits perched on a raised structure, its form is created with a laser-light projection. The ephemeral edges are barely visible during the day. At night the reflective coating of the sky mesh screen glows with the laser light. The seasons of nature and the mind are the house. The layered transparent interior filters the city. The house has become the horizon.

Text & Photography © Quintin Lake, 2009

Pascal Schoning, Photography by Rubens Azevedo

Pascal Schoening with Cinematic Architecture Book. Photo: Rubens Azevedo

The book looks at 17 years of Architectural Association Diploma Unit 3 work and the past present and future of cinematic architecture.

Buy the Book on Amazon

Editors: Pascal Schoning, Julian Loffler & Rubens Azevedo. Design Stephan Doesinger. Published by AA publications

Featured content by Quintin Lake:

THE FIFTH SEASON: SUBLIME IN THE CITY

Photograph and design of the Cinematic House installation
from the chapter OF CLOUDS AND SHADOWS by Ron Kenley

Buy Cinematic Architecture 1993-2008 from Amazon UK here

Photograph of Briey: Cité Radieuse by Le Corbusier
from the chapter BRIEY CONVERSATIONS

Buy Cinematic Architecture 1993-2008 Book from Amazon UK

Cinematic Architecture Book, Quintin Lake

Photograph from Briey: Cité Radieuse or Unité d’habitation by Le Corbusier from the book Cinematic Architecture in the chapter BRIEY CONVERSATIONS, Pascal Shoning, Rubens Azevedo, Julian Loffler

BUY PRINTS/LICENSE more images of  Unité d’habitation Briey, Le Corbusier Building here

Buy Cinematic Architecture 1993-2008 Book from Amazon UK

Photography © Quintin Lake, 2009