Wednesday, 2 September 2015

Reflection on Assignment 4



Love Albert Road - worth a visit?


What did I set out to achieve with this assignment?


To outsiders, Albert Road is often portrayed as a place well worth visiting when in Southsea – described by some as ‘exciting, Bohemian, contemporary, highly diverse and unique to Portsmouth. Certainly not many roads can have had their own Facebook page.


But is this the reality? I wanted to convey what Albert Road is like today ..why would you want to visit and what would you find there? 



I set out to visit  Albert Road on a number of occasions spending approximately two hours each time on different days of the week including the day of  the Daisy Chain Festival. I reckoned that this would provide a number of varied opportunities to capture a sense of place – to show the character of the place and the people who live, work and visit the road.

How I see the essential character of Albert Road

I visited Albert Road on a number of occasions spending approx. two hours each time on different days of the week including the day of  the Daisy Chain Festival. 

To my mind Albert Road is a real mix of the Bohemian ( albeit low key )and everyday which seems to work well for both the occasional and purposeful visitor. The ‘street art’ offers  a variety of visual treats amongst a range of independent shops that both mirror the old style high street, the more trendy  bric a brac / clothing emporiums and eateries. Though quiet during the week, it does have a community feel which really seems comes to life at the weekend; and when the weather is sunny allowing people and shops to spill out on to the pavements.

Did I succeed?

P995 F5.6 @ 1/640  18mm  ISO 100
Only partly, I suspect, as I found it difficult at the end of the day to include as wide a variety of scale as I would have liked.

I would have liked to take a shot from higher up that a first floor terrace and had the tower of the Methodist church in mind only to discover the top windows were all blocked up.





I did manage to capture the use of space and the people that make up Albert Road. And I was also pleased at the response when asking people if I could take their picture which gave me some good portraits.

Any lost opportunities?

I missed one photo opportunity at the tailor shop which I couldn’t realise at a later date. When I called in, I came across a political discussion between a local councillor and a previous local election candidate sat together in front of the counter..I only managed to capture the tailor’s side of the conversation ..though animated it would have been better if I had been able to capture both sides of the conversation…These debates were obviously something which happened every now and then when the councillor popped in but not so  regular a fixture that I could manage to coincide with them.

Another lost opportunity was Albert Road by night - a problem of timing. Apparently when the university students are back the whole night scene changes. It would have been good to have been able to see whether that would have thrown up a different take on things…. 

How might I have approached the assignment with no end-result in mind?

I would have tried to embed myself over a period of time within the Albert Road community much like Chris Killip did for his work ‘What Happened –Great Britain 1970 -1990 at LE  BAL, Paris ( 12 May – 19 August 2012 ). He spent several months immersed in several communities, documenting the disintegration of the industrial past with a poetic and highly personal point of view. 

While I managed to strike up a very interesting conversation with one trader  
( on the last day that she was trading ),talked my way onto another trader’s sun terrace above her shop and into a tattoo emporium, with a little more time I think I could have developed a more personal and in depth approach to the ‘trading’ activities within the road and how they contribute to the unique visitor experience. I would also been able to take more advantage of the real community activities that happen in the Road from time to time.
 



Publishable runners up for Assignment 4


Love Albert Road - take two

These images are the four remaining publishable ones which could also be used to illustrate an in depth travel look at this slightly zany and bohemian Portsmouth tourist destination.


P982:F5.6 @ 1/800  24mm  ISO 200
P982  A slightly different take on street art ...it pays to look up as well as around in Albert Road





P984 Taken from the perspective of a passer-by looking around and up for directions .I thought this could be used as an introductory and scene setting image. It shows the obvious i.e. the road name but hints at unusual shops and a theatrical area..



P987:F5.6 @ 1/15  18mm  ISO 800

P987 Albert Road is all about small businesses making their way with unusual, interesting and sometimes quirky offers that you cannot find easily elsewhere across the city. This is  an interior shot of a disappearing trade..a traditional tailor's shop  which interestingly almost doubles up as a local politics talk shop. 

I met a local councillor sat discussing the Labour leadership elections with the proprietor when I called in ..the debate continued after the councillor left and I started taking pictures. In this image the gap between the figures could have been smaller if I'd asked them to pose for me and might have worked better. That said, the space does draw the eye in to what makes this shop a rare beast indeed ..the tailor's craft.




P983: F5.6 @ 1/60  24mm  ISO 200


P983 is somehow so Albert Road down to the unopened bottle of fizz on the pavement..I saw this bottle arrive by taxi carried by a customer who, it turned out, wanted to mark the last day of 'high street' trading for her favourite Albert Road shop. 
Chatting later to the trader I discovered that she was going over to solely online selling..maybe the footfall for her shop's position on a corner was not paying off sufficiently. Where this might be a better choice for the final selection would be to support the publication's angle that Albert Road as it is now may well disappear as part of the decline of sole 'high street'  traders.




P985 not only shows a typical Albert Road high end bric a brac business but also how some residents make the best use possible of space by turning the area above their shops into an outdoor living space.


P985 : F8 @ 1/400  24mm  ISO  100

Difficult  to get a shot across the busy road without the visual interference from cars and vans etc. Including some passers-by on foot does add movement and interest to what would have been a rather static image otherwise.





























































Assignment 4 : final images for 'A Sense of Place'


Albert Road - a unique sense of place..

I've chosen these images to represent the curious mix of trading and activity and the  slightly 'bohemian and zany' feel that is Albert Road...



P981: F5.6 @ 1/800  35mm  ISO 200

P981 This view is very much  Albert Road – colourful shopfronts, street level art and 3D art higher up.The small figure draws the eye down to a business dealing in everyday repairs but promoting itself with a vibrant frontage not out of sync with its neighbours. It was taken from the sun terrace above a shop, courtesy of the owner who was rather surprised to be asked to allow me access to her  first floor terrace...a shot influenced by Gursky in that it looks down at a scene though admittedly not from a great height or as panoramic as some of Gursky's work.


Inside Chilli Tattoo
P979: F5.6 @1/30  24mm  ISO 800

P979 I discovered that of the Albert Road shop interiors are as interesting as their outside. This image is not a posed shot though it rather looks like one. I asked permission to take a few shots inside the Chilli Tattoo and these two soon lost interest in what I was doing. I wasn't close enough to hear the conversation - maybe they were discussing a tattoo design? 

 
P984: F8 @ 1/400  24mm  ISO 100

P984 Taken from the perspective of a passer-by looking around and up for directions .I thought this could be used as an introductory and scene setting image. It shows the obvious i.e. the road name but hints at unusual shops and a theatrical area. There are no people here ( where would they be at this angle ? ) but we see an example of using the outside of a building to intrigue and promote trade which is a very Albert Road approach to business.It offers a view of the area's character

Too many landscape pictures which may well not suit the layout of a portrait style publication but this image could be cropped  ( see P984a below). What it would lose in interest might be outweighed by its usefulness as a scene setting introductory image perhaps? Personally I prefer P984 and that is the image included within the final selection.

P984a


P978: F8 @ 1/25  18mm  ISO 100
P997: F5.6 @ 1/160 28mm  ISO 200

I chose P978 as it captures  a family feel showing a young lad rummaging around in a box of 'stuff' which many of us like to do and what Albert Road offers so well. It is in shadow, one of the challenges of focusing on a street that runs north to south but does show the range of stock ignored in favour of the mysterious box of stuff.


P997 This shop above is just so Albert Road in both style and presentation.I chose the image for that reason but also for the way the dress shop window offers a looking glass glimpse of what is behind the viewer - a potential customer checking out the window display.

P980: F5.6 @ 1/1250  24mm ISO 800
Albert Road has a wonderful 'cafe culture ' which makes the most of good weather..I think that the elderly lady here was rather bemused by being asked whether she would mind having her photo taken. Her companion, who may have been her carer, told me quite firmly that she was OK about it as I was a woman whereas had I been a man the answer would have been a colourful 'no'.
I chose this image (P980) for the final selection over other images of how Albert Road cafes use their limited space to create a 'cafe culture image' for its directness.Being on the pavement this kind of outdoor cafe area is more typical in the area than the small more secret courtyard I found behind one cafe (though that might attract a different kind of customer perhaps).


'Drumnation'
P977: F8 @ 1/200  18mm  ISO 100

P977 is cropped right in from a larger group picture. I had cropped the image slightly but then seeing an image taken by Ben Shahn reproduced in Geoff Dyer's work 'The Ongoing Moment (1), I went back to crop the image further. Shahn had taken at least three pictures of a blind accordionist, expanding and contracting the image like the actual instrument. Looking at the image that framed the accordionist tightly so that he dominated the picture, I decided to crop my image so my lead player with his back to us dominates, framed by the two other drummers; their audience partly reflected in the restaurant window.  


P976 : F8 @ 1/250  51mm  ISO 100

P976 Spotted these anonymous figures at the end of a long hot morning pounding up and down the road.They capture that feel of never quite knowing what to expect when walking down Albert Road perfectly.








(1) Ben Shahn  (1932-34) 'Untitled (14th St, New York City 1932-34'.(photograph) in  The Ongoing Moment Edinburgh:Dyer,Geoff,p.30