Archives for posts with tag: Photography

Travel Photographer of the Year

Arctic Horizon. Travel Photographer of the Year 2010 –  Portfolio Winner. Photo: © Quintin Lake

Midnight Mountains. Travel Photographer of the Year 2010 –  Portfolio Winner. Photo: © Quintin Lake

Light & Ice. Travel Photographer of the Year 2010 –  Portfolio Winner. Photo: © Quintin Lake

Silent Light. Light & Ice.Travel Photographer of the Year 2010 –  Portfolio Winner. Photo: © Quintin Lake

I’m delighted to announce that I have won the Amazing Places Portfolio Category of the Travel Photographer of the Year 2010. This prestigious international competition, which attracts thousands of applicants, involves submitting images online then if shortlisted sending fine art prints for final judging. The Portfolio category is based on a series of four images.

STORY BEHIND THE PORTFOLIO

These images were taken during Anglo-Scottish East Greenland expedition in 2006 which was a month long ski journey involving pulling sleds, undertaken with three friends with the aim of climbing new peaks in an unexplored area of East Greenland. The expedition succeeded in 16 first ascents but the real discovery for me was the otherworldly light of the Arctic cased by the midnight sun and the interplay of the palette of pastel colours with the almost-not-there landscape.

Much of the month was either bright blue skies or white clouds – of little photographic interest – but the images in the portfolio were of the sudden moments of drama that punctuated these conditions. For example, the primarily grey photograph, depicting the horizon of light  was taken when we were tent bound for three days on the icecap and the light appeared momentarily just before the storm closed in again.

ANGLO-SCOTTISH EAST GREENLAND EXPEDITION INFO

  • A technical account of the Expedition in the 2009 American Alpine Journal
  • The Expedition Report. Which is also available to view at: The Royal Geographical Society, The British Mountaineering council, Tangent Expeditions, The Mountaineering Council of Scotland, The Alpine Club, The Mount Everest Foundation, Arctic Club, Scottish Arctic Club, and the Danish Polar Centre

BUY FINE ART PRINTS

Prints are available in two sizes:

  • Signed A2 giclee print on cotton fine art paper £295.00 (edition of 25)
  • Signed 90x60cm Lightjet on Aluminium float frame £1200.00 (edition of 7) see example

To order prints either contact me direct of order online here

The last few years have some tremendously good documentary movies about photography and photographers released on DVD. Here’s my pick of the best 10. Click on the cover to see the film in Amazon.co.uk:

Visual Acoustics: Modernism of Julius Shulman [2010]

Essential if you are interested in one of the masters of architectural photography or modernism in LA from the Case study Houses onwards. Very poignant to see Shulman’s archive been shipped to the Getty centre a year before he passed away.

Henri Cartier-Bresson: The Impassioned Eye [2006]


If you are a cartier-Bresson fan like me this is a real treat and goes well beyond the surface in exploring his his oeuvre and plenty of interviews of the man himself discussing his iconic and lesser known work.

The Genius of Photography [2007]


The best filmed introduction to the magic of photography. The BBC at its best in six episodes. Interviews with some of the world’s greatest living photographers including William Eggleston, Nan Goldin, William Klein, Martin Parr, Sally Mann, Robert Adams, Juergen Teller, Andreas Gursky and Jeff Wall.

War Photographer  [2002]


A study of James Nachtwey on assignment in Kosovo, Palestine and Indonesia using a movie camera attached to his SLR its enlightening how the subjects in these harrowing situations are wholly complicit in the image making process. (It should be noted there are no subtitles for the German and Albanian parts in the DVD)

Manufactured Landscapes [2006]


Follows Edward Burtynsky at work in China and Bangladesh and the USA. Filmed by Jennifer Baichwal in a complimentary refined aesthetic to Burtynsky’s work. Beautiful.

Annie Leibovitz – Life Through a Lens [2006]


A documentary about Annie Leibovitz, directed by her sister, Barbara. I wasn’t expecting a film about celebrity culture to have so many intelligent insights.

National Geographic’s The Photographers [1996]


Looking a little out of date now, but fascinating never the less, this documentary follows  veteran photographers for National Geographic on assignment.

What Remains: The Life and Work of Sally Mann [2008]


Enlightening on  many levels as a good documentary film should be and shows footage of her actually taking some of her most famed photographs

Contacts, Vol. 3: Conceptual Photography (2001)


Features Thomas Struth, Wolfgang Tillmans, Roni Horn, Bernd and Hilla Becher, and other contemporary photographers told in their own words.

William Eggleston in the Real World [2005]


I find Eggleston like Tilmans a difficult photographer to appreciate but this film me understand where he’s coming from.

Please add your suggestions to add to this list in the comments below…..

Propaganda images of Hassanal Bolkiah, the Sultan of Brunei, atop the Parade ground & surrounding buildings, Bandar Seri Begawan, Brunei

Sultan Omar Ali Saifuddin Mosque, Bandar Seri Begawan, Brunei. Named after Omar Ali Saifuddien III, the 28th Sultan of Brunei, the mosque as a symbol of the Islamic faith in Brunei dominates the skyline of Bandar Seri Begawan. The building was completed in 1958 and is an example of modern Islamic architecture mixing Renaissance and Italian architectural style. The main dome, is covered in pure gold

VIEW MORE / BUY PRINTS / DOWNLOAD & LICENSE  STOCK IMAGES  of Bandar Seri Begawan (BSB), Brunei here >>

Photography © Quintin Lake, 2010

Men working in the fish market in Sandakan, Sabah, Borneo

Water Village in Kampung Buli Sim Sim in front of apartment blocks, Sandakan, Sabah

Wooden stilt house in the Water Village, Kampung Buli Sim Sim, Sandakan, Sabah

VIEW MORE / BUY PRINTS / DOWNLOAD  & LICENSE  STOCK IMAGES  of  Photographs of Sandakan & Water Village, Sabah, Malaysia here >>

Photography © Quintin Lake, 2010

Pulau Selingan (is one of three island located 40 kilometers north of Sandakan in Sabah, east Malaysia. During the peak season (October) up to 50 turtles come ashore to lay eggs. Marine turtles have been around for 230 million years at least, but due to human activities they have been brought, over the past hundred years, to the brink of extinction.

Green turtle (Chelonia mydas) hatchlings emerge from the sand at

Holding two Green turtle (Chelonia mydas) hatchlings at Pulau Selingan

Turtle tracks head back to sea from the pit the mother turtle dug to lay her eggs at Pulau Selingaan (Island) Turtle Islands National Park, Sabah.

VIEW MORE / BUY PRINTS / DOWNLOAD  & LICENSE  STOCK IMAGES  of  Turtle Island Park, Sabah, Borneo here >>

Photography © Quintin Lake, 2010

Family of Proboscis Monkeys (Nasalis larvatus) by Kinabatangan River, Sabah

Long-tailed or crab-eating Macaque (Macaca fascicularis) by Kinabatangan River, Sabah

Dawn at Kinabatangan River, Sabah

Birds fly over a lone rainforest tree by Kinabatangan River, Sabah

VIEW MORE / BUY PRINTS / DOWNLOAD  & LICENSE  STOCK IMAGES   of Kinabatangan River Wildlife, Sabah, Borneo here >>

Photography © Quintin Lake, 2010

Outdoor Photography Magazine, September 2010

10 Questions interview with Quintin Lake in Outdoor Photography Magazine September 2010 Issue 130

Acclaimed architectural photographer, Quintin Lake, tells Nick Smith how he made the transition from architecture to photography and why geometry really matters

Quintin Lake is recognised as one of the top creative architectural photographers at work today. Before embarking his photographic career, Quintin graduated from the world renowned Architectural Association in London where he held a scholarship and worked at Grimshaw Architects on the Eden project. His architectural training gives him an understanding of the subject, while his photographic approach is characterised by a fastidious attention to detail, which translates into intelligent and refined images.

Quintin’s clients include architects, interior designers, various publishers and magazines. His new book Drawing Parallels: Architecture Observed is a source of architectural inspiration from around the world, with material drawn from travels in over 60 countries. Quintin is a member of The Association of Independent Architectural Photographers, as well as a fellow of the Royal Geographical Society and the Royal Society of Arts.

1 When did you realise you were going to become a photographer?
I was an architect before I became a photographer and I used a camera
as a sketchbook for ideas. Gradually, I became more interested in the images, rather than just using a camera as a tool.

2 What was your first camera?
It was one of those rotating disc cameras with which I used to take blurry pictures of my thumb when I was ten. But while learning photography as a teenager I used a Praktica SLR film camera. I became a ‘Canon person’ when I was about 20.

3 What formal training do you have?
I studied architecture for seven years and did modules on photography during that time. I learned what I needed to learn to do the job.

4 How important is it to specialise?
I think it’s important from some clients’ perspectives, but as an artist I don’t think so. I have different portfolios to show different clients in architecture and other areas; it’s called market segmenting, I think.

5 What is the best assignment you’ve been on?
Going to Pripyat, a large deserted city within the 30km ‘zone of alienation’ around the Chernobyl reactor. It was the most focused shooting I’ve ever done and a very harrowing time. It’s an entire city with no people in it; no one will live there for hundreds of years.

6 What’s the worst thing about being a professional photographer?
On the commercial architecture side it’s waiting for the sun to come out. Clients don’t want pictures with grey skies. Also, there’s keeping the work coming in. If ever I got an assignment that lasted more than a couple of weeks that would feel like incredible stability.

7 Film or digital? Why?
Digital. Half of the creative process is taking the shot, and the other half is the post-production. Commercially it can be a chore, but if it is an artistic image this is where you refine it and make it your own.

8 What’s the most important thing you’re learned from another photographer?
Cartier-Bresson had it right when he said it was the mind, the heart and the eye that meet in the moment. But geometry is vital. No matter what else is going on in the image; I think the viewer reacts to it first graphically.

9 What does photography mean to you?
It encapsulates the enigma of life. It seems so simple as a still image and yet it can have infinite meaning with a unique visual language. In terms of my own life, it’s an excuse to keep a childlike curiosity.

10 What makes a great photograph?
It just grabs you and you know you’ve been grabbed. It’s an emotional thing.

Quintin – IN BRIEF
Age: 34
Time as pro: Ten years
Where based: Oxford
Specialities: Architecture, documentary and expedition
Studio or home: All on location, but post-production at home
Digital or film: Digital
Website: www.quintinlake.com

In Quintin’s kit bag
Cameras: Canon 5D, Canon 5D MkII
Lenses: Canon 16-35mm f/2.8 L, Canon TS-E 24mm f/3.5, Canon 24-105mm f/4 L, Canon 100-400mm f/4.5-5.6 L IS

Quintin Lake’s new book Drawing Parallels: Architecture Observed is available from all good bookshops. RRP £25 www.papadakis.net

Hotel Polissia Terrace, Pripyat

Pripyat: 21 Years after Chernobyl. A silver birch tree grows through the floor on the terrace of Hotel Polissia. The hammer and sickle is visible atop the distant building. 50×33cm, Edition of 25 + 1 A/P

Foto8 Summershow 2010, Exhibition Catalogue Cover

Foto8 Summershow 2010, Exhibition Catalogue

150 images were chosen for exhibition from Over 2500 individual images were received from photographers representing the six continents. From landscape and portraiture to documentary and fashion and everything in between, the Summershow celebrates the photographic talent of established names and aspiring photographers alike.

The Foto8 Summershow 2010 runs from 26 July to 4 September Buy Exhibition Catalogue

HOST GALLERY
1-5 Honduras Street
London EC1Y 0TH
UK

The image is for sale at £355 framed or £295 unframed in an edition of 25

VIEW MORE IMAGES from Pripyat (Pripiat) 21 years after Chernobyl

Foto8 Summershow 2010 at Host Gallery Honduras Street, London

Foto8 Summershow 2010 at Host Gallery Honduras Street, London

Foto8 Summershow 2010 at Host Gallery Honduras Street, London

Photography © Quintin Lake